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Demonstrating Bioequivalence of Locally Acting Orally Inhaled Drug Products (OIPs): Workshop Summary Report

Authors :
Leslie Hendeles
Tushar Shah
Mei-Ling Chen
Dale P. Conner
Neil Parikh
Richard C. Ahrens
Gur Jai Pal Singh
Richard N. Dalby
Partha Roy
Beth L. Laube
Michael Riebe
Badrul A. Chowdhury
Lawrence X. Yu
Anthony J. Hickey
Julie D. Suman
Dennis O'Connor
Sandra Suarez Sharp
Prasad Peri
Janet Woodcock
Paul Lucas
Gary R. Pitcairn
Sau L. Lee
Günther Hochhaus
Bing Li
David A. Parkins
David Christopher
Wallace P. Adams
Svetlana Lyapustina
Kevin Fitzgerald
Marjolein Weda
Source :
Journal of Aerosol Medicine and Pulmonary Drug Delivery. 23:1-29
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Mary Ann Liebert Inc, 2010.

Abstract

This March 2009 Workshop Summary Report was sponsored by Product Quality Research Institute (PQRI) based on a proposal by the Inhalation and Nasal Technology Focus Group (INTFG) of the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists (AAPS). Participants from the pharmaceutical industry, academia and regulatory bodies from the United States, Europe, India, and Brazil attended the workshop with the objective of presenting, reviewing, and discussing recommendations for demonstrating bioequivalence (BE) that may be considered in the development of orally inhaled drug products and regulatory guidances for new drug applications (NDAs), abbreviated NDAs (ANDAs), and postapproval changes. The workshop addressed areas related to in vitro approaches to demonstrating BE, biomarker strategies, imaging techniques, in vivo approaches to establishing local delivery equivalence and device design similarity. The workshop presented material that provided a baseline for the current understanding of orally inhaled drug products (OIPs) and identified gaps in knowledge and consensus that, if answered, might allow the design of a robust, streamlined method for the BE assessment of locally acting inhalation drugs. These included the following: (1) cascade impactor (CI) studies are not a good 2 predictor of the pulmonary dose; more detailed studies on in vitro/in vivo correlations (e.g., suitability of CI studies for assessing differences in the regional deposition) are needed; (2) there is a lack of consensus on the appropriate statistical methods for assessing in vitro results; (3) fully validated and standardized imaging methods, while capable of providing information on pulmonary dose and regional deposition, might not be applicable to the BE of inhaled products mainly due to the problems of having access to radiolabeled innovator product; (4) if alternatives to current methods for establishing local delivery BE of OIPs cannot be established, biomarkers (pharmacodynamic or clinical endpoints) with a sufficiently steep dose-response need to be identified and validated for all relevant drug classes; and (5) the utility of pharmacokinetic studies for evaluating "local pulmonary delivery" equivalence deserves more attention. A summary of action items for seminars and working groups to address these topics in the future is also presented.

Details

ISSN :
19412703 and 19412711
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Aerosol Medicine and Pulmonary Drug Delivery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....86dc2aa79d33dd0264d56e7e75057aa6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/jamp.2009.0803