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Why Bioequivalence of Highly Variable Drugs is an Issue

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Title: Why Bioequivalence of Highly Variable Drugs is an Issue


1
Why Bioequivalence of Highly Variable Drugs is an
Issue
  • Charles E. DiLiberti
  • Vice President, Scientific Affairs
  • Barr Laboratories, Inc.
  • Presentation to the Advisory Committee for
    Pharmaceutical Sciences
  • April 14, 2004

2
Definition of Highly Variable Drugs (HVDs)
  • Any drug whose rate and extent of absorption
    shows large dose-to-dose variability within the
    same patient
  • Commonly understood to include those drugs whose
    intrapatient coefficient of variation (Cmax
    and/or AUC) is approximately 30 or more

3
Current Bioequivalence Criteria
  • Comparison between test and reference product
  • Use natural log transformation of Cmax and AUC
  • Criterion 90 confidence intervals about
    geometric mean test/reference ratios for both
    Cmax and AUC must fall within 80 125
  • Applies to all systemically acting drugs (i.e.,
    not locally acting) with measurable blood or
    urine levels without regard to the drugs
    inherent variability
  • Same criteria used by pioneer firms to support
    formulation changes

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5
Why Alternative Acceptance Criteria Are Needed
for HVDs
  • Reduce human experimentation (number of
    participants) in BE studies
  • Prohibitive size of BE studies for some HVDs
    means no generic is available many American
    patients go untreated/undertreated
  • Changing criteria to reduce number of
    participants in BE studies on HVDs can be
    accomplished without compromising safety/efficacy
  • 80 125 BE criteria not universally implemented
    worldwide

6
Foreign BE Criteria
Country/Region AUC 90 CI Criteria Cmax 90 CI Criteria
Canada (most drugs) 80 125 none (point estimate only)
Europe (some drugs) 80 125 75 133
South Africa (most drugs) 80 125 75 133 (or broader if justified)
Japan (some drugs) 80 125 Some drugs wider than 80 125
Worldwide (WHO) 80 125 acceptance range for Cmax may be wider than for AUC
7
Types of Drugs That Are Highly Variable
  • Includes many therapeutic classes
  • Includes both newer and older products
  • Potential savings to patients in the billions of
    dollars if generics are approved
  • Examples atorvastatin, esomeprazole,
    pantoprazole, clarithromycin, paroxetine (CR),
    risedronate, metaxalone, itraconazole,
    balsalazide, acitretin, verapamil, atovaquone,
    disulfiram, erythromycin, sulfasalazine, etc.

8
Fed BE Studies
  • Confidence interval criteria now required for BE
    studies under fed conditions
  • General paucity of information on variability
    under fed conditions
  • Some drugs show much more variability under fed
    conditions than fasting conditions, making them
    HVDs (e.g., esomeprazole, pantoprazole,
    tizanidine)
  • May be more HVDs than generally appreciated

9
Why Current 80-125 Criteria Are Not Appropriate
For HVDs
  • Current criteria are appropriate for drugs with
    low to moderate variability because dose-to-dose
    variability within a patient is comparable to the
    width of the criteria
  • Current criteria are not appropriate for HVDs
    because dose-to-dose variability within a patient
    is much larger than the width of the criteria
  • HVDs are wide therapeutic index drugs i.e.,
    have shallow dose response curves, and wide
    safety margins
  • Modifying BE acceptance criteria for HVDs to
    reduce the number of participants in BE studies
    can be accomplished while maintaining assurance
    of safety and efficacy

10
Different HVDs May Require Different Approaches
One Size Does Not Fit All
11
Example 1 HVDs Not Subject to Significant
Accumulation at Steady State
  • Half-life short with respect to dosing interval
  • Examples omeprazole, tizanidine, azathioprine
  • Consider reference-scaled criteria for both Cmax
    and AUC
  • Dose-to-dose variability within a patient not
    smoothed out at steady state for either Cmax or
    AUC
  • Drug exhibits wide dose-to-dose variations in
    blood levels irrespective of chronic dosing
  • Same logic applies to HVDs not dosed chronically

12
Example 2 HVDs Subject to Significant
Accumulation at Steady State
  • Chronically used and with half-life long with
    respect to dosing interval
  • Examples itraconazole, metaxalone, acitretin
  • Consider reference scaling criteria for Cmax only
  • Steady state T/R for AUC same as under single
    dose conditions (assuming linear kinetics) but
    variability in AUC will be reduced at steady
    state ? drug may not have highly variable AUC at
    steady state
  • T/R for Cmax will be closer to unity at steady
    state than under single dose conditions, so
    adjusting criteria for Cmax could be accomplished
    without impacting assurance of safety/efficacy

13
Example 2 HVDs Subject to Significant
Accumulation at Steady State (contd)
  • Alternatively, could permit demonstration of
    bioequivalence with multiple dose steady state
    study
  • Not suitable for all drugs due to safety
    concerns, e.g., toxic drugs, inclusion of
    females, etc.

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18
Special Considerations
19
Parallel Studies for Long Half-Life Drugs
  • For long half-life drugs, crossover studies may
    not be feasible, necessitating parallel designs
  • Powering parallel studies depends on
    between-subject variability, not within-subject
    variability
  • Between-subject variability is often large,
    necessitating large BE studies on such products,
    as for HVDs
  • High between-subject variability does not
    necessarily imply high within-subject variability
    (HVD) instead it may be due to interindividual
    differences in absorption/metabolism (e.g.,
    genetic polymorphism)
  • Multiple dose steady state studies generally not
    feasible
  • Consider reference-scaled criteria

20
Pooling Data from Multiple Dosing Groups
  • Large n required for HVDs often requires two or
    more dosing groups
  • FDA currently requires a statistical test for
    poolability of data from multiple dosing groups
    (group x treatment interaction)
  • If interaction term is significant, then the
    groups may not be pooled
  • If the groups may not be pooled, each group is
    evaluated on its own for confidence interval
    criteria, and is likely to fail due to
    underpowering
  • This procedure results in discarding (and having
    to repeat) about 5 of studies based on random
    chance alone
  • Even if there were some underlying explanation
    for the statistical significance (e.g.,
    differences in demographics among the dosing
    groups), there is no reason not to use the data
    from all dosing groups (they would be useable if
    the same subjects had been dosed in a single
    group)

21
Conclusions
  • While current BE acceptance criteria are
    appropriate for drugs with ordinary variability,
    they are not appropriate for HVDs
  • Current BE acceptance criteria make it difficult
    or impossible to develop generic equivalents to
    some HVDs, effectively denying treatment to many
    patients
  • Practical, scientifically sound, alternative BE
    acceptance criteria could be implemented for HVDs
    to reduce BE study size while maintaining
    assurance of safety and efficacy
  • Different approaches may be needed for different
    types of drugs, depending particularly on
    accumulation following multiple dosing
  • Other, related situations (e.g., parallel
    studies, multiple dosing groups) should be
    considered in conjunction with any changes to
    acceptance criteria for HVDs
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