Title: Dermatopharmacokinetics (DPK)
1Dermatopharmacokinetics (DPK)
- Dale P. Conner, Pharm.D.
- Division of Bioequivalence
- Office of Generic Drugs, CDER, FDA
2Background
- Bioequivalence (BE)
- Current BE Methods for Topical Products
3Definition of Bioequivalence
- Pharmaceutical equivalents whose rate and extent
of absorption are not statistically different
when administered to patients or subjects at the
same molar dose under similar experimental/clinica
l conditions
4Purpose of BE
- Therapeutic equivalence (TE)
- Bioequivalent products can be substituted for
each other without any adjustment in dose or
other additional therapeutic monitoring. - The most efficient method of assuring TE is to
assure that the formulations perform in an
equivalent manner.
5Model of Oral Dosage Form Performance
Pharmacokinetic Measurement
Clinical/PD Measurement
Dosage Form Performance
Therapeutic Effect
Gut Wall
Drug in Solution
Blood
Site of Activity
Dosage Form
ln Dose
Dose
6Model of Topical (Skin) Dosage Form Performance
Pharmacokinetic Measurement
Clinical/PD Measurement
Dosage Form Performance
DPK
Therapeutic Effects
Site of Activity
Drug In Tissue
Blood
Systemic Effects
Dosage Form
7Model of Topical (Skin) Dosage Form Performance
Pharmacokinetic Measurement
Clinical/PD Measurement
Dosage Form Performance
DPK
Therapeutic Effects
Site of Activity
Drug In SC
Blood
Systemic Effects
Dosage Form
Drug In Follicles
Drug In Other
8Current Methods BE Methods for Topical Products
- BE Study with Clinical End-points
- Expensive
- Insensitive to differences in formulation
performance - BE Study with Pharmacodynamic End-points
- Limited to only a few classes of compounds
(glucocorticoids) - In Vitro Drug Release
9Clinical/PD Dose-Response
Clinical/PD Response
Log Dose
Topical Dermatologic Corticosteroids In Vivo
Bioequivalence (www.fda.gov/cder/guidance/old098fn
.pdf)
10Description of DPK Method
- Theory
- Pharmacokinetic approach applied to drug
concentrations in stratum corneum (SC) - Method
- Tape stripping is used to remove successive
layers of SC after topical drug administration - Uptake and elimination from SC are determined
- Differences in formulation performance (BE) are
determined at the same time in the same
individual
11History
- Workshops - AAPS/FDA
- May 1989
- March 1990
- December 1991
- FDA/Industry Conference March 1992
- Advisory Committee (GDAC) - BE/DPK April 1992
- Bio-International, Bad Homburg, Germany May 1992
12History
- Workshop - AAPS/FDA on SUPAC and DPK May 1993
- EUFEPS Nuremburg Conference December 1995
- Bio-International, Tokyo, Japan April 1996
- Workshop - AAPS/FDA on BE of Topicals September
1996 - Trade Association Meetings April 1997 and
December 1997
13History
- Advisory Committee (ACPS) - BE/DPK December 1997
- Advisory Committee (DODAC) - BE/DPK March 1998
- Draft Guidance June 18, 1998
- Joint Advisory Committee (ACPS and DODAC)
October 23, 1998 - Expert Member and SGE meeting July 30, 1999
14History
- Expert Members and Representatives from ACPS and
DODAC October 23, 1999 - Symposium - AAPS Annual Meeting November 1, 2000
- Joint Advisory Committee (ACPS and DODAC)
November 17, 2000
15Issues
- Is the DPK method an appropriate approach for
establishing bioequivalence of topical drug
products? - Are results and conclusions derived from the DPK
method consistent within and between
laboratories? - Can DPK methodology be established in any
laboratory or CRO with a reasonable amount of
time, effort and expense?