| Literature DB >> 29748754 |
Kristof Vandekerckhove1, Andreas Seidl2, Hiten Gutka3, Manish Kumar4, Gyöngyi Gratzl5, David Keire6, Todd Coffey7, Henriette Kuehne8.
Abstract
Leading regulatory agencies recommend biosimilar assessment to proceed in a stepwise fashion, starting with a detailed analytical comparison of the structural and functional properties of the proposed biosimilar and reference product. The degree of analytical similarity determines the degree of residual uncertainty that must be addressed through downstream in vivo studies. Substantive evidence of similarity from comprehensive analytical testing may justify a targeted clinical development plan, and thus enable a shorter path to licensing. The importance of a careful design of the analytical similarity study program therefore should not be underestimated. Designing a state-of-the-art analytical similarity study meeting current regulatory requirements in regions such as the USA and EU requires a methodical approach, consisting of specific steps that far precede the work on the actual analytical study protocol. This white paper discusses scientific and methodological considerations on the process of attribute and test method selection, criticality assessment, and subsequent assignment of analytical measures to US FDA's three tiers of analytical similarity assessment. Case examples of selection of critical quality attributes and analytical methods for similarity exercises are provided to illustrate the practical implementation of the principles discussed.Keywords: CQA; QTPP; biosimilars; comparability; tiering
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29748754 DOI: 10.1208/s12248-018-0230-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AAPS J ISSN: 1550-7416 Impact factor: 4.009