Food‐Drug Effects and Pediatric Drug Development Studies Submitted to the US Food and Drug Administration, 2012‐2022

Author:

Tunehag Kayla R.1ORCID,George Blessy2ORCID,Samuels Sherbet3,Vo Karen4,Arya Vikram3,Abulwerdi Gelareh3,Burckart Gilbert J.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Pharmacotherapy and Experimental Therapeutics Eshelman School of Pharmacy University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill NC USA

2. Office of New Drugs Center for Drug Evaluation and Research US Food and Drug Administration Silver Spring MD USA

3. Office of Clinical Pharmacology Center for Drug Evaluation and Research US Food and Drug Administration Silver Spring MD USA

4. College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences Washington State University Spokane WA USA

Abstract

AbstractFood effect (FE) studies characterize food‐drug interactions that may alter the efficacy or safety of a drug, but these studies are not conducted in pediatric patients. Pediatric patients have substantial physiologic, anatomic, and dietary differences from adults, which may result in differences in their FE considerations. Therefore, the objective of this study was to identify oral drug products approved for use in pediatric patients aged <6 years with an FE observed in adults. Additional objectives were to summarize the therapeutic areas, pharmacokinetic effects, and labeling instructions that resulted from these studies. Publicly available data were searched for products studied in pediatric patients and approved for use by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) from 2012 to 2022. Of the 102 oral drug products approved for use in patients aged <6 years, 43 recommended the consideration of food intake in the drug labeling. These included drug products recommended to be taken with food (n = 21, 49%) or without food (n = 14, 33%). Each of the 14 drug products recommended to be taken without food are approved for use in pediatric patients aged <2 years. The products approved for use in pediatric patients aged <2 years comprised the highest proportion with area under the plasma concentration‐time curve extrapolated to infinity (AUCinf, n = 35, 75%) and maximum serum concentration (Cmax, n = 45, 80%) affected by food. Close monitoring is warranted during the postapproval period for products identified as having a significant FE in adults and that are approved for use in pediatric patients aged <6 years. Promising tools for predicting pediatric FE may include physiologically based pharmacokinetic absorption modeling.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference21 articles.

1. Food and drug interactions: its side effects

2. Influence of food on paediatric gastrointestinal drug absorption following oral administration: a review;Batchelor HK;Children (Basel),2015

3. U.S. Food and Drug Administration.Reviews of Pediatric Studies Conducted under BPCA and PREA from 2012 – Present. Accessed January 20 2024.https://www.fda.gov/drugs/development‐resources/reviews‐pediatric‐studies‐conducted‐under‐bpca‐and‐prea‐2012‐present.

4. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Center for Health Statistics.CDC growth charts: United States. Accessed January 20 2024.https://www.cdc.gov/growthcharts/.

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