Title: FDA
1FDAs Critical Path to Medical Product
DevelopmentOpportunities for Generic Drugs
- Lawrence X. Yu, Ph. D.
- Director for Science
- Office of Generic Drugs
- Food and Drug Administration
Advisory Committee for Pharm. Science October 19,
2004
2The Critical Path for Medical Product Development
- Ensuring Safety
- Demonstrating Medical Utility
- Industrialization Process
3President Bush on Health Care There are other
ways to make sure drugs are cheaper. One is to
speed up generic drugs to the marketplace,
quicker. October 8
Presidential Debate
4FDAs Critical Path Initiative
- Janet Woodcock, M.D. (June 4, 2004)
- A serious attempt to bring attention and focus to
the need for targeted scientific efforts to
modernize the techniques and methods used to
evaluate the safety, efficacy and quality of
medical products as they move from product
selection and design to mass manufacture.
5Definition of a Generic Drug
A drug product that is therapeutically equivalent
to a brand-name drug Comparable to a brand-name
drug product in dosage form, strength, route of
administration, quality and performance
characteristics, and intended use.
- FDAs Critical Path
- Ensuring Safety
- Demonstrating Medical Utility
- Industrialization Process
Bioavailability/ Bioequivalence
6FDAs Critical Path - OGD
- Bioavailability/Bioequivalence Modeling and
Prediction - Bioequivalence of Locally Acting Drugs
- Product Design, Characterization, and in vitro
Performance Testing
7e-ADME Predicting Bioavailability and
Bioequivalence
8Biopharmaceutics Classification System
Guidance for Industry Waiver of In Vivo
Bioavailability and Bioequivalence Studies for
Immediate Release Solid Oral Dosage Forms Based
on a Biopharmaceutics Classification System US
Department of Health and Human Services Food and
Drug Administration Center for Drug Evaluation
and Research (CDER) August 2000
- Waiver for BCS Class III drugs
- Excipient effect
- Transporters
- BCS Class boundaries
- Solubility
- Permeability
Molecular Pharm. 1356-362 (2004) J. Pharm. Sci.
931375-81(2004) Eur. J. Pharm. Sci.
22297-304(2004)
9Compartmental Absorption and Transit (CAT) Model
- An in silico mechanistic model describes
- How a drug gets into the blood
- How much it gets into the blood
- How fast it gets into the blood
- Research at OGD continues to identify critical
bioavailability/ bioequivalecne factors
Int. J. Pharm. 270221-227 (2004) Molecular
Pharm. In press
10Quantitative Structure Bioavailability
Relationship (QSBR) Model
QSBR Model
Rat
Dog
Pharm. Res. 17639-644 (2000)
11Predicting Bioavailability/ Bioequivalence
- Biopharmaceutics Classification System
- Classification refinement and waiver extension
- Compartmental Absorption and Transit Model
- Understand critical absorption factors
- QSBR Model
- Very promising not widely used (due to )
12Bioequivalence Methods for Locally Acting Drugs
- Key Scientific Challenges
- Topical Dermatological
- Nasal Spray and Inhalation
- Gastrointestinal, vaginal, and ophthalmic
- Often require clinical testing
- Target research to provide a scientific basis for
in vitro or in vivo bioequivalence methods
13Locally Acting Drugs
Site of Action
Dose
Effect
Plasma concentration is usually not relevant
to local delivery bioequivalence
Plasma
Concentration
- 21 CFR 320.24 allows alternatives
- in vivo pharmacodynamics
- in vivo clinical comparisons
- in vitro comparisons
- other appropriate approaches
Need for OGD Research Program
14Clinical Bioequivalence Studies
- Test, reference, placebo arms in patients
- 90 confidence interval on test reference cure
rate - Estimated CVs 100
N Cure Test Cure Ref 90CI
728 50 48 -12,16
453 46 40 -8,20
447 29 27 -9,13
15Bioequivalence of Locally Acting Drugs
- Barrier to generic competition
- Barrier to product improvement
- Need to demonstrate BE after formulation change
or in product development - Clinical endpoints have high variability
- Inefficient detection of formulation differences
- Unnecessary human testing
16Product Design and Characterization
- Same drug substance
- Pharmaceutical solid polymorphism
- Same dosage form
- Topical products
- Product quality
- Quality standards
- Adhesion tests for transdermal products
- Nasal and inhalation products
- Novel drug delivery systems
17Product Performance Testing
18Product Performance Testing
- Role of Dissolution Testing
- A quality control tool
- Monitor batch-to-batch consistency of the drug
release from a product - An in vivo performance test
- An in vitro surrogate for product performance
that can guide formulation development and
ascertain the need for bioequivalence tests
Are these goals consistent?
19Process Identification, Simulation, and
Optimization Tools
- Historically, pharmaceutical production involves
the manufacture of the finished product using
batch processes, followed by excessive laboratory
testing and analysis to verify its quality - Process identification, simulation, and
optimization tools need to be developed for
pharmaceutical batch processes so that any
manufacturing process failure can be readily
identified and corrected - Product quality is assured by high quality of
starting materials, robust manufacturing
processes, and limited laboratory testing and
analysis
20Future Directions
- Continue to build world class scientific
expertise in predicting bioavailability/
bioequivalence and process optimization - Prioritize scientific efforts
- Pursue collaborations
- Within FDA (OTR, CBER, CDRH)
- With academia (U of Michigan, U of Kentucky, Ohio
State U, U of Maryland, and CSM) - With NIST and other government agencies
- With industry
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