| Literature DB >> 30151612 |
Sandra Suarez-Sharp1, Michael Cohen2, Filippos Kesisoglou3, Andreas Abend3, Patrick Marroum4, Poonam Delvadia5, Evangelos Kotzagiorgis6, Min Li5, Anna Nordmark7, Nagesh Bandi3, Erik Sjögren8,9, Andrew Babiskin10, Tycho Heimbach11, Shinichi Kijima12, Haritha Mandula5, Kimberly Raines5, Paul Seo5, Xinyuan Zhang13.
Abstract
This publication summarizes the proceedings of day 3 of a 3-day workshop on "Dissolution and Translational Modeling Strategies Enabling Patient-Centric Product Development." Specifically, this publication discusses the current approaches in building clinical relevance into drug product development for solid oral dosage forms, along with challenges that both industry and regulatory agencies are facing in setting clinically relevant drug product specifications (CRDPS) as presented at the workshop. The concept of clinical relevance is a multidisciplinary effort which implies an understanding of the relationship between the critical quality attributes (CQAs) and their impact on predetermined clinical outcomes. Developing this level of understanding, in many cases, requires introducing deliberate but meaningful variations into the critical material attributes (CMAs) and critical process parameters (CPPs) to establish a relationship between the resulting in vitro dissolution/release profiles and in vivo PK performance, a surrogate for clinical outcomes. Alternatively, with the intention of improving the efficiency of the drug product development process by limiting the burden of conducting in vivo studies, this understanding can be either built, or at least enhanced, through in silico efforts, such as IVIVC and physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) absorption modeling and simulation (M&S). These approaches enable dissolution testing to establish safe boundaries and reject drug product batches falling outside of the established safe range (e.g., due to inadequate in vivo performance) enabling the method to become clinically relevant. Ultimately, these efforts contribute towards patient-centric drug product development and allow regulatory flexibility throughout the lifecycle of the drug product.Entities:
Keywords: IVIVC/IVIVR; PBPK absorption modeling and simulation; clinically relevant specifications; dissolution; safe space
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30151612 DOI: 10.1208/s12248-018-0252-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AAPS J ISSN: 1550-7416 Impact factor: 4.009