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Considerations for the Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 Second‐Based Comparative Clinical Endpoint Bioequivalence Studies for Orally Inhaled Drug Products

Authors :
Jieon Lee
Kairui Feng
Denise S. Conti
Ross Walenga
Michael Wientjes
Hezhen Wang
Bryan Newman
Liangfeng Han
Sneha Dhapare
Elizabeth Bielski
Andrew Babiskin
Fang Wu
Mark Donnelly
Myong‐Jin Kim
Wenlei Jiang
Markham C. Luke
Lanyan Fang
Liang Zhao
Source :
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics. 112:982-989
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

Herein, we present the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Office of Research and Standards' current thinking, challenges, and opportunities for comparative clinical endpoint bioequivalence (BE) studies of orally inhaled drug products (OIDPs). Given the product-associated complexities of OIDPs, the FDA currently uses an aggregate weight-of-evidence approach to demonstrate that a generic OIDP is bioequivalent to its reference listed drug. The approach utilizes comparative clinical endpoint BE or pharmacodynamic BE studies, pharmacokinetic BE studies, and in vitro BE studies to demonstrate equivalence, in addition to formulation sameness and device similarity. For the comparative clinical endpoint BE studies, metrics based on forced expiratory volume in the first second (FEV

Details

ISSN :
15326535 and 00099236
Volume :
112
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c925cfdc9f41d56c03ffa53e6c4684ee
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/cpt.2553