| Literature DB >> 29316611 |
Tatsuro Hoshino1, Nanami Muto2, Shinsuke Tsukada3, Takatoshi Nakamura4,5, Hikoichiro Maegawa6.
Abstract
Since the publication of "Application Guideline for Western Traditional Herbal Medicines as OTC Drugs" in 2007, only two European ethnopharmaceuticals, Vitis vinifera L., folium extract (Antistax) and Vitex agnus-castus L., fructus extract (Prefemin), have been approved as OTC drugs in Japan. In this review, we describe the current regulation of Western ethnopharmaceuticals in Japan, summarize our regulatory experiences and discuss the scientific and regulatory issues involved.Entities:
Keywords: OTC; Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency (PMDA); herbal medicine; regulation
Year: 2018 PMID: 29316611 PMCID: PMC5874568 DOI: 10.3390/medicines5010003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicines (Basel) ISSN: 2305-6320
Data-package of Antistax and Prefemin in Japan, and comparison of the data requirements for Western traditional herbal medicines as OTC drugs.
| Contents of the Data Submitted for Application | Antistax | Prefemin | Western Traditional Herbal Medicines as an OTC Drug (1) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A. Origin or background of discovery, conditions of use in foreign countries | Origin or background of discovery | ○ | ○ | ○ |
| Conditions of use in foreign countries | ○ | ○ | ○ | |
| Therapeutic group, comparisons with other drugs, and related information. | ○ | ○ | ○ | |
| B. Manufacturing methods, standards and test methods | Chemical structure, physicochemical properties, and related information. | ○ | ○ | ○ |
| Manufacturing methods | ○ | ○ | ○ | |
| Standards and test methods | ○ | ○ | ○ | |
| C. Stability | Long-term storage tests | ○ | ○ | ○ |
| Tests under severe conditions | × | × | ○ | |
| Accelerated tests | ○ | ○ | ○ | |
| D. Pharmacological action | Primary pharmacodynamics | ○ | ○ | ○ |
| Secondary pharmacodynamics, Safety pharmacology | × | ○ | ○ | |
| Other pharmacological action | × | ○ | △ | |
| E. Absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion | Absorption | × | × | ○ |
| Distribution | × | × | ○ | |
| Metabolism | × | × | ○ | |
| Excretion | × | × | ○ | |
| Bioequivalency | × | × | × | |
| Other ADME | × | × | △ | |
| F. Acute, subacute, and chronic toxicity, teratogenicity, and other type of toxicity | Single dose toxicity | ○ | ○ | ○ |
| Repeated dose toxicity | ○ | ○ | ○ | |
| Genotoxicity | ○ | ○ | ○ | |
| Carcinogenicity | × | × | △ | |
| Reproductive toxicity | ○ | ○ | ○ | |
| Local irritation | × | × | △ | |
| Other toxicity | × | × | △ | |
| G. Clinical studies | Clinical trial results | ○ | ○ | ○ |
| H. Package insert | Package insert | ○ | ○ | ○ |
In principle, ○ means that the indicated data is required. × means that the indicated data is not required. △ indicate necessity of the indicated data depending on characteristics of applicant products. (1) In the case of products with new active ingredients.
Summary of clinical trials.
| No. | Region | Study Design | Population | Number of Subjects | Dose (mg/Day) as Red Vine Leaf Extract | Summary of Dosage and Administration Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Foreign | Multicenter randomized Placebo-controlled double-blind | Patients with chronic venous insufficiency (Widmer class I and II) (aged 25 to 75 years) | 260 | Placebo | Once a day, 12 weeks |
| 360 | ||||||
| 760 | ||||||
| 2 | Japan | Open-label | Patients have various symptoms due to reflux vein disorder * (aged 20 years and older) | 180 | 360 | Once a day, 12 weeks |
* Symptoms of “weight feeling/fatigue (dullness), tightness, tingling feeling, pain, hot feeling, itching”.
Efficacy of Antistax in the trial 1.
| Group | Changing Limb Volume Using Water Displacement in 12 Weeks after Administration |
|---|---|
| Placebo group ( | +33.7 ± 96.1 g |
| 360 mg/day group ( | −42.2 ± 74.6 g |
| 720 mg/day group ( | −66.2 ± 108.9 g |
Summary of primary pharmacodynamics tests.
| Effect | Test System | Group | Test Method | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-edematous effect | Red vine leaf extract (1) 100 mg/kg, 1000 mg/kg, water (control group) | The effect on histamine-induced paw edema was examined. | Edema was suppressed in both extract treatment groups. | |
| Red vine leaf extract (1) 10 mg/kg, 100 mg/kg, water (control group) | The effect on carrageenan-induced paw edema was examined. | Edema was significantly suppressed in the 100 mg/kg group. | ||
| Red vine leaf extract (1) 10 mg/kg, 100 mg/kg, water (control group) | The effect on egg white edema of rats paw was examined. | Edema was slightly suppressed in the 100 mg/kg group. | ||
| Antihistaminic effect | Red vine leaf extract (1) 10−4, 3 × 10−4, 10−3 g/mL | The effect of histamine on smooth muscle contraction was examined. | The contraction of the ileum was suppressed in a dose-dependent manner, and a significant antihistaminic effect was observed at 3 × 10−4 g/mL or more. | |
| Effect on the blood coagulation system | Red vine leaf extract (1) 10, 100 mg/kg, water (control group) | The effect on bleeding time was examined. | Bleeding time was significantly prolonged at 100 mg/kg compared with the control group. | |
| Red vine leaf extract (2) 6, 20, 60 µL/mL | The effect on arachidonic acid-induced platelet aggregation was examined. | Platelet aggregation was inhibited in dose-dependent manner, and a significant inhibitory effect was observed at 60 µL/mL. |
(1) Concentrated red vine leaf extract (Residue after drying, which is about 60% of extract); (2) Extracts from 5 g of red vine leaves per 200 mL of water.
Summary of clinical trials.
| No. | Region | Study Design | Population | Number of Subjects | Dose (mg/Day) as Chest Berry Extract | Summary of Dosage and Administration Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Foreign | Multicenter randomized Placebo-controlled double-blind | Patients with PMS (aged 18 to 44 years) | 178 | Placebo | Once a day 3 menstruation cycles |
| 20 | ||||||
| 2 | Multicenter randomized Placebo-controlled double-blind (dose response study) | Patients with PMS (aged 18 years and older) | 162 | Placebo | Once a day 3 menstruation cycles | |
| 8 | ||||||
| 20 | ||||||
| 30 | ||||||
| 3 | Japan | Open-label | Patients with PMS (aged 18 to 44 years) | 69 | 20 | Once a day 3 menstruation cycles |
Efficacy of Prefemin in the trial 1.
| Primary Endpoint | Average of Baseline | Average of Changes from Baseline | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20 mg/Day | Placebo | 20 mg/Day | Placebo | ||
| 6 Symptom total VAS score (mm) | 263 | 256 | −128.5 | −78.1 | 0.001 |
Summary of primary pharmacodynamics tests.
| Effect | Test System | Group | Test Method | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dopaminergic receptor binding activity (D2 receptor) | Chest berry extract 5 lots | [3H]–spiperone (1) binding inhibition test | The IC50 (µg/mL) of 5 lots was almost equivalent (40 to 69), and each extract lot was shown to have dopaminergic receptor binding activity (D2 receptor). | |
| Stimulatory effects of dopamine D2 receptor | Chest berry extract group (70 µg/mL), chest berry extract (70 µg/mL) + spiperone (3 × 10−9, 3 × 10−8 or 3 × 10−7 mol/L) group, control group | Examination of stimulatory effect on dopamine D2 receptor with suppression of [3H]-choline release by electrical stimulation | Chest berry extract inhibited the release of [3H]-choline and this effect was inhibited by spiperone, so this extract showed stimulatory effects of dopamine D2 receptor. | |
| Other pharmacological effect via the dopamine receptor | Chest berry extract (0.001–10 µg/mL) | 7-hydroxy [3H]–DPAT (2) binding inhibition test | Chest berry extract was shown to have dopaminergic receptor binding activity (D3 receptor). | |
| Effects on electroencephalogram and momentum in rat | Chest berry extract (10, 25, 50 mg/kg) | Chest berry extract was orally administered to examine the brain waves and momentum of the frontal cortex and the striatum | Brain waves changed with chest berry extract, and momentum was increased (suppressed momentum decrease with time). Dopamine D2 receptor antagonists inhibited changes in brain waves in the frontal cortex, but changes in brain waves and momentum in the striatum were uninhibited. These results suggest that the effect in the frontal cortex were mediated through the dopamine D2 receptor. However, the effect in the striatum were mediated through receptors other than dopamine D2 receptor. |
(1) Dopamine D2 receptor antagonist; (2) Dopamine D3 receptor ligand.
Comparison of criteria for standards and test methods of herbal extracts in Japanese Guidance with EU guideline and US guidance.
| Criteria | Japanese Guidance[ | EMA Guideline [ | FDA Guidance [ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Properties | ○ (Appearance, smell, taste) | ○ (containing organoleptic characters) | ○ (Appearance) |
| Identification test | ○ | ○ | ○ |
| Moisture content | × | ○ | × |
| Assay (content) | ○ | ○ | ○ |
| Impurity test | ○ (heavy metal, arsenic, residual pesticide) | ○ (residual solvents, heavy metals, microbial limit, mycotoxins, pesticides) | ○ (residual pesticides, elemental impurities, residual solvents, radioisotope, microbial limit, adventitious toxins) |
| Loss on drying | ○ | × | ○ |
| Biological assay | × | × | ○ |
| Mass balance (1) | × | × | ○ |
| Total Ash | ○ | × | × |
| Acid-insoluble ash | ○ | × | × |
| Extract content | ○ | × | × |
In principle, ○ means required criteria, or criteria to be set. × means unnecessary criteria or not mentioned. (1) Quantifying other class of compounds (e.g., lipid, protein) that contribute to the mass balance of the botanical substance.