Mechanistic modeling of ophthalmic, nasal, injectable, and implant generic drug products: A workshop summary report

Author:

Tan Ming‐Liang1ORCID,Chandran Sajeev2,Jereb Rebeka3ORCID,Alam Khondoker1ORCID,Bies Robert4ORCID,Kozak Darby1,Walenga Ross1,Le Merdy Maxime5,Babiskin Andrew1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Office of Research and Standards, Office of Generic Drugs Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, US Food and Drug Administration Silver Spring Maryland USA

2. Advanced Drug Delivery Research and IVIVC/Biopharmaceutics, Pharmaceutical R & D, Lupin Ltd. Pune India

3. Clinical Development Sandoz Development Centre Ljubljana Slovenia

4. Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences State University of New York at BuffaloBuffalo New York USA

5. Simulations Plus, Inc. Lancaster California USA

Abstract

AbstractFor approval, a proposed generic drug product must demonstrate it is bioequivalent (BE) to the reference listed drug product. For locally acting drug products, conventional BE approaches may not be feasible because measurements in local tissues at the sites of action are often impractical, unethical, or cost‐prohibitive. Mechanistic modeling approaches, such as physiologically‐based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling, may integrate information from drug product properties and human physiology to predict drug concentrations in these local tissues. This may allow clinical relevance determination of critical drug product attributes for BE assessment during the development of generic drug products. In this regard, the Office of Generic Drugs of the US Food and Drug Administration has recently established scientific research programs to accelerate the development and assessment of generic products by utilizing model‐integrated alternative BE approaches. This report summarizes the presentations and panel discussion from a public workshop that provided research updates and information on the current state of the use of PBPK modeling approaches to support generic product development for ophthalmic, injectable, nasal, and implant drug products.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Modeling and Simulation

Reference22 articles.

1. Generic Drug User Fee Amendments (GDUFA) Science and Research Priority Initiatives for Fiscal Year (FY).2022Accessed July 14 2022.https://www.fda.gov/media/154487/download

2. Regulatory utility of mechanistic modeling to support alternative bioequivalence approaches. September 30–October 1 2021. Accessed November 30 2022.https://complexgenerics.org/PBPK2021/Video recording for Day 1 Session 3 Presentations and Panel Discussion can be found athttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2d7htVFSe2U

3. Regulating Generic Ophthalmologic Drug Bioequivalence—Envisioning Accessibility for Patients

4. Application of Mechanistic Ocular Absorption Modeling and Simulation to Understand the Impact of Formulation Properties on Ophthalmic Bioavailability in Rabbits: a Case Study Using Dexamethasone Suspension

5. Protocol for evaluation of topical ophthalmic drug products in different compartments of fresh eye tissues in a rabbit model

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