TY - JOUR VL - 29 EP - 1494 ID - eprints1031 N2 - The barriers between systems engineering and medicine are slowly eroding as recently it has become evident that medicine has a lot to gain from systems technology. In particular, the drug administration problem can be cast as a control engineering problem, where the objective is to keep the drug concentration at certain organs in the body close to desired set-points. A number of constraints render the problem rather challenging. For example, hard constraints may be posed on drug concentration, because if it exceeds an upper limit, the effects of the drug are adverse and toxic. In this paper we show that a popular method in control engineering can be used for determining the optimal drug administration. Specifically, the Model Predictive Control (MPC) technology can be adopted for taking optimal decisions regarding regulation of drug concentration in the human body, while posing constraints on both drug concentration and drug infusion rate. SP - 1490 SN - 1570-7946 PB - Elsevier A1 - Sopasakis, Pantelis A1 - Patrinos, Panagiotis A1 - Giannikou, Stefania A1 - Sarimveis, Haralambos JF - Computer Aided Chemical Engineering UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-444-54298-4.50077-5 Y1 - 2011/// KW - Model Predictive Control; PBPK models; Drug administration AV - none TI - Physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling and predictive control: an integrated approach for optimal drug administration ER -