Bioequivalence of Locally Acting Gastrointestinal Acting Drugs: Scientific Considerations - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 30
About This Presentation
Title:

Bioequivalence of Locally Acting Gastrointestinal Acting Drugs: Scientific Considerations

Description:

What role should biorelevant dissolution play in developing BE ... SGF USP plus surfactant (e.g. 0.1% Triton X) plus perhaps pepsin. Postprandial stomach ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:171
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: jpo77
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Bioequivalence of Locally Acting Gastrointestinal Acting Drugs: Scientific Considerations


1
Bioequivalence of Locally Acting Gastrointestinal
Acting Drugs Scientific Considerations
  • James E. Polli
  • University of Maryland
  • July 23, 2008

2
Low Solubility Immediate Release Dosage Forms of
Locally-acting GI Drugs
  • What role should biorelevant dissolution play in
    developing BE recommendations for low solubility
    locally acting drugs that treat GI conditions?
  • What role should systemic pharmacokinetics play
    in developing BE recommendation for low
    solubility locally acting drugs that treat GI
    conditions?

3
In Vitro Studies in Assessing IR BE for
Systemically-acting Oral Products
  • 1. Reduce costs
  • Avoid in vivo studies where BE is self-evident,
    where biopharmaceutic data anticipates BE, and
    where in vivo BE study type II error is high
  • 2. More directly assess product performance
  • In vitro studies allow for focus on product
    performance, which is dissolution and absorption.
  • Conventional BE testing suffers from
    complications (e.g. HVD) due to its indirect
    approach.
  • 3. Offer benefits in terms of ethical
    considerations
  • Better embraces No unnecessary human testing
    should be performed
  • Can result in faster development

Polli, J.E. (2008) In Vitro Studies Are
Sometimes Better than Conventional Human
Pharmacokinetic In Vivo Studies in Assessing
Bioequivalence of Immediate-release Solid Oral
Dosage Forms. AAPS J.
4
Differing Goals
  • Formulation performance evaluation
  • Bioequivalence means the absence of a
    significant difference in the rate and extent to
    which the active ingredient or active moiety in
    pharmaceutical equivalents or pharmaceutical
    alternatives becomes available at the site of
    drug action when administered at the same molar
    dose under similar conditions in an appropriately
    designed study. CFR Title 21 Part 320
  • Possible tests include pharmacokinetic studies,
    pharmacodynamic studies, clinical studies, and in
    vitro studies
  • Clinical safety/efficacy evaluation

5
Differing Goals
  • Formulation performance evaluation is at least as
    discriminating as clinical safety/efficacy
    evaluation
  • BE assures clinical safety and efficacy
  • BE test is at least as accurate and precise as
    comparative clinical studies

6
Bioequivalent versusSafe and Effective
Not safe and effective
BE
Safe and effective
7
Issues inDrug M Clinical Studies
  • Efficacy and/or tolerability of test and placebo
    are sometimes close
  • Rates of improvement and underlying variability
  • Variables
  • disease severity
  • instrument to measure efficacy
  • definition of the primary end point
  • Despite numerous studies investigating the
    effect of drug M dose on clinical efficacy, it
    remains unclear whether a dose-response for drug
    M exists. Other larger studies have not
    consistently shown a dose response for drug M
    above doses of 1.5 g/d.
  • Sandborn WJ. Oral drug M therapy in ulcerative
    colitis what are the implications of the new
    formulations?. Journal of Clinical
    Gastroenterology. 42338-44, 2008.

8
Locally-acting Drugs
  • Do locally-acting drugs know they are not suppose
    to be systemically-acting ?

9
BE of Most Products(i.e. Systemic Exposure)
  • Conventional human pharmacokinetic in vivo BE
    study
  • For orally administered products, site of action
    in systemic tissue extends beyond plasma
  • Extrapolation assumption
  • Extrapolate forward from plasma data
  • Same A, hence same ADME, and hence
    therapeutically equivalent

10
Extrapolation vs Interpolation
drug dissolution
drug dissolution
Question 1
drug in plasma
drug in tissue
drug in plasma
Question 2
drug in tissue
Assume drug dissolution required for drug action
11
BE of Locally-acting GI Products
  • Conventional human pharmacokinetic in vivo BE
    study?
  • For such orally administered products, site of
    action precedes plasma
  • Interpolation assumption (or extrapolate back
    and/or extrapolate forward)?
  • Interpolate between dissolution and plasma data
  • Extrapolate forward from (in vitro) dissolution ?
  • Extrapolate back from plasma data ?

12
Plasma Concentration and Formulation Performance
  • Indicative of formulation performance?
  • Do similar plasma profiles assure similar
    concentration at site of action?
  • How do you know where drug is released?
  • Total exposure, peak exposure, and early exposure
  • To use plasma only, probably need a minimum level
    of systemic exposure
  • Plasma alone would not differentiate between
  • Product 1 performs (with no systemic exposure)
  • Product 2 completely fails to release

13
Plasma Concentration and Formulation Performance
  • Indicative of formulation performance?
  • Local excipient effects not captured by plasma
    profiles?
  • Metabolite issues

14
In Vitro Dissolution and Formulation Performance
  • Indicative of formulation performance?
  • In vivo dissolution is the primary factor in
    luminal tissue exposure
  • In vitro dissolution testing must reflect
    relevant in vivo parameters
  • Relevant parameters depend upon drug and
    formulation
  • Low solubility drugs are more complex
  • Do similar in vitro dissolution profiles assure
    similar concentration at site of action?

15
Clinical Studies andFormulation Performance
  • Indicative of formulation performance?
  • Comparative clinical studies can fail to be
    sensitive to formulation differences, including
    bioinequivalent situations

16
Establishment of Biomarkers for Local Delivery to
the GI Tract
  • Potential biomarker
  • In vitro dissolution
  • Plasma concentration
  • Target/evidence
  • In vivo dissolution
  • Local tissue level
  • Plasma concentration
  • Formulation design

17
Establishment of Biomarkers for Local Delivery to
the GI Tract
  • To accept combined in vitro dissolution and
    plasma concentration as BE method for different
    formulations, requires interpolation assumption
  • To accept plasma concentration as sole BE method
    for different formulations, requires
    extrapolate-back assumption
  • To accept in vitro dissolution alone as BE
    method, compare in vitro dissolution to in vivo
    dissolution or local tissue level
  • or to plasma concentration in an IVIVC-like
    approach using fast, medium and slow formulations
  • IVIVCs for MR formulations are considered
    formulation specific
  • What about IR products?

18
Intestinal Luminal Microdialysis
  • In pigs, glycerol, lactate and glucose in the
    intestinal lumen and mucosa were measured by
    microdialysis
  • Release of lactate into the intestinal lumen may
    be useful for monitoring intestinal ischemia.
  • E. Solligard et al. Gut barrier dysfunction as
    detected by intestinal luminal microdialysis.
    Intensive Care Medicine. 301188-94, 2004.

19
Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
  • Imaging of compounds labeled with 11C, 13N, 15O
    or 18F
  • e.g. distribution of 18F-deoxyglucose to brain
  • PET attributes
  • Absolute quantification in vivo, even after
    microdose
  • Resolutions of lt 5mm in tissues
  • Scaling from preclinical to clinical
  • Pharmacologically identical to non-radiolabeled
    drug
  • Considered non-invasive
  • Short half-lives of radionuclides
  • 11C, 13N, 15O, and 18F, are 20min, 10min, 2min,
    and 1.8hr, respectively
  • Major limitation to formulation studies

20
Roles of Dissolution Testing
  • Formulation development tool
  • May purposely provide a challenging media
    conditions
  • Biomimetic test (use biorelevant dissolution
    media)
  • Intends to mimic gastrointestinal luminal
    conditions (e.g. composition, physiochemical
    characteristics)
  • e.g. FaSSIF-V2
  • Quality control test
  • e.g. RLD regulatory method
  • Bioequivalence surrogate
  • e.g. the BCS panel method justified via IVIVC
    analysis

21
Low Solubility Drugs
  • More challenging
  • Ionization effects
  • Increased solubility in micellar solutions
  • Solubility and dissolution in in vivo fluid
    generally much larger than aqueous solubility

22
Possible Biorelevant Dissolution Media
  • Preprandial stomach
  • SGF USP (pH 1.2) without enzyme
  • SGF USP plus surfactant (e.g. 0.1 Triton X) plus
    perhaps pepsin
  • Postprandial stomach
  • Ensure Plus bovine milk 3.5 fat
  • Preprandial jejunum
  • FaSSIF
  • Fasted State Simulated Intestinal Fluid
  • Postprandial jejunum
  • FeSSIF
  • Fed State Simulated Intestinal Fluid

23
Updated Biorelevant Media
  • Jantratid E, Janssen N, Reppas C, and Dressman
    JB. Dissolution Media Simulating Conditions in
    the Proximal Human Gastrointestinal Tract An
    Update. Pharm Res 251663-7695, 2008.
  • The aim of this study was to update the
    compositions of biorelevant media to represent
    the composition and physical chemical
    characteristics of the gastrointestinal fluids as
    closely as possible while providing physical
    stability during dissolution runs and short-term
    storage.
  • Fasted stomach (denoted FaSSGF from recent
    publication)
  • Postprandial stomach (denoted FeSSGF new medium)
  • Fasted upper small intestine (denoted FaSSIF-V2
    modified from FaSSIF)
  • decreased lecithin, lower osmolality, and
    substitution of maleate for phosphate buffer,
    NaCl rather than KCl
  • Fed upper small intestine (denoted FeSSIF-V2
    modified from FeSSIF)
  • pH increased from 5.0 to 5.8, lower osmolality,
    decreased sodium taurocholate and lecithin, added
    glyceryl monooleate, maleate rather than
    phosphate buffer, NaCl rather than KCl

24
Drug X Dissolution Profiles in Various Media at
100 rpm
25
Synthetic Surfactants
  • Validation of the correspondence of results in
    media containing synthetic surfactants with those
    containing bile components is necessary on a
    case-by-case basis.
  • T Zoeller and S Klein. Simplified Biorelevant
    Media for Screening Dissolution Performance of
    Poorly Soluble Drugs. Dissolution Technologies
    Nov. 8-13, 2007.

26
Solubilization vs Diffusion
  • To assess the contributions of surfactant-mediated
    solubility and micellar diffusivity on the
    ability of surfactant to enhance drug
    dissolution.

Balakrishnan, A., Rege, B.D., Amidon, G.L., and
Polli, J.E. (2004) Surfactant-mediated
dissolution contributions of solubility
enhancement and relatively low micelle
diffusivity. J. Pharm. Sci. 932064-2075.
27
Enhancement of griseofulvin solubility and
dissolution by SDS and CTAB
28
Data
  • For low solubility drugs, regulatory requirement
    for dissolution in specific media?
  • e.g. BCS media with SLS
  • Dissolution Test Method Report
  • Contains the justification for a particular
    dissolution test method to serve as the QC
    dissolution test

29
Summary for Low Solubility IR Locally-acting GI
Drugs
  • In vitro studies have potential to sometimes
    better serve as BE tests than in vivo studies
  • Low solubility drugs are more difficult
  • No universal in vitro test
  • Biorelevant dissolution media refers to designed
    media (with future promise)
  • More research needed
  • Data needed for a proposed (set of) media

30
Summary for Low Solubility IR Locally-acting GI
Drugs
  • What role should biorelevant dissolution play in
    developing BE recommendations for low solubility
    locally acting drugs that treat GI conditions?
  • In general, in vitro dissolution only cannot be
    suggested to serve as the BE test for low
    solubility drugs
  • What role should systemic pharmacokinetics play
    in developing BE recommendation for low
    solubility locally acting drugs that treat GI
    conditions?
  • Given current options beyond clinical study, an
    apparent necessity
  • On a drug-by-drug basis, has potential to be as
    reliable as PK studies used for systemically
    acting drugs
  • What role should combined dissolution and PK
    play?
  • Potentially very strong case since data addresses
    formulation performance
  • Requires interpolation assumption and
    justification for the proposed dissolution test
    across differing formulations
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com