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BCS-based biowaivers: Extension to paediatrics

Authors :
Talia Flanagan
Nikoletta Fotaki
James Mann
Joana Martir
Source :
Martir, J, Flanagan, T, Mann, J & Fotaki, N 2020, ' BCS-based biowaivers: extension to paediatrics ', European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, vol. 155, 105549 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejps.2020.105549
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

A BCS-based biowaiver allows extrapolation of drug product bioequivalence (when applicable) based on the BCS class of the drug and in vitro dissolution testing. Drug permeability and solubility considerations for adult BCS might not apply directly to paediatric subpopulations and bridging of adult and paediatric formulations should be undertaken with caution.The aims of this study were to: (i.) identify compounds which would change drug solubility classification in the paediatric population, and (ii.) to assess the risk of extending BCS-based biowaiver criteria into paediatric products of these compounds. Amoxicillin, prednisolone, and amlodipine were selected as the model compounds.Dissolution studies of IR formulations of these compounds were conducted with USP II (paddle) and mini-paddle apparatus, in media of three pHs (pH 1.2, 4.5 and 6.8). Three dissolution setups were tested: (1) ‘typical’ BCS-based biowaiver conditions, (2) “BE” setup derived from BE study protocols (volume: 250 mL), and (3) “paediatric” setup based on representative volume for the paediatric population (50 mL).Results revealed that extension of regulated BCS-based biowaiver criteria for paediatric application is not as simple as scaling down volumes. It was further shown that BCS-based biowaiver criteria should not be applied when there is the risk of change of the drug solubility class, from the adult to paediatric populations.A deeper knowledge of the paediatric gastrointestinal environment is still lacking and would assist in refining the biopharmaceutical tools needed to appropriately evaluate formulation performance across age groups. This would potentially reduce the number of clinical studies required and speed up formulation development.

Details

ISSN :
09280987
Volume :
155
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....aaf5083dda3f9892832951fd6f9608d4