Listed on
(Coverage)
JCR2020-2023
SJR2013-2020;2022-2023
CiteScore2012-2023
SCIE2020-2024
CC2020-2024
SCOPUS2017-2024
MEDLINE2016-2024
DOAJ2017-2024
EMBASE2016-2024
OA Info.
OA |
oa mark
based on the information
- 2017;2018;2019;2020;2021;2022;2023;2024;2025;
|
Keywords |
pharmacodynamics, quantitative pharmacology, pharmacokinetics, systems biology |
Review Process |
Anonymous peer review |
Journal info. pages |
|
Licences |
CC BY, CC BY-NC, CC BY-NC-ND |
Copyrights |
No |
DOAJ Coverage |
Added on Date : 2013-02-27T18:08:05Z |
Subject(s) |
Medicine: Therapeutics. Pharmacology |
Country
USA
Aime & Scopes
CPT: Pharmacometrics & Systems Pharmacology is a cross-disciplinary journal devoted to publishing advances in quantitative (e.g., modeling and simulation) methods as applied in pharmacology, physiology and therapeutics in humans. The journal welcomes original research articles, reviews and tutorials that bridge the following areas: pharmacometrics, modeling and simulation as applied to the design and evaluation of clinical trials, systems pharmacology modeling, particularly with a mechanistic link to human (patho)physiology, disease modeling, “population” or mixed-effects pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics (PKPD) modeling, modeling and simulation to support translational research, physiologically-based pharmacokinetics (PBPK), model-based meta-analyses of clinical trials, mechanism-based pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic modeling, computational pharmacology, bioinformatics, comparative efficacy, effectiveness and cost-effectiveness. Systems pharmacology may involve the application of systems biology approaches to study drug activities, targets and effects. The discipline is often defined with reference to engineering and pharmacological principles as the quantitative analysis of the dynamic interactions between drugs and a biologic system that aims to understand the behavior of the system as a whole. The common focus will be on quantitative methods that improve our understanding of pharmacology and therapeutics in humans.