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BA/BE in paediatric population: what may be extrapolated from findings in adults?. Henning H. Blume, PhD SocraTec R&D , Oberursel/Germany Concepts in Drug Research and Development henning.blume@socratec-pharma.de. AGAH Interactive Workshop Bonn , February 25-26, 2013.
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BA/BE in paediatric population: what may be extrapolated from findings in adults? Henning H. Blume, PhD SocraTec R&D,Oberursel/Germany Concepts in Drug Research and Development henning.blume@socratec-pharma.de AGAH Interactive Workshop Bonn, February 25-26, 2013
substanceseparatedfrom product gut lumen bloodvessel tissue enterocytes delivery absorption absorption/distribution biopharmaceutics(drug product) pharmacokinetics(drug substance) BA/BE: impact of dosage form on drug absorption? The world of biopharmaceutics dissolveddrug
Determinants for systemic exposure What is the rate determining process? Drug absorption(penetration membrane) Drug delivery (release from product) • Drug substance properties • physicochemical properties • e.g. affinity for transporters • Drug formulation properties • dissolution in various media • gastric residence and GI transit Solubilityaccording BCS Release characteristics "high" "low" IR form MR form BCS biowaiverpossible formulationessential impact lesscritical significantimpact likely
… and what about paediatric population ?? The general concept of BA/BE • Understanding BA/BE • surrogate parameter for efficacy and safety … • … healthy subjects representative for therapeutic conditions • essential quality characteristics (batch-to-batch, shelf-life) • Generally accepted: extrapolation of findings • from healthy subjects … • … to patient population • … to elderly people • between gender (females vs. males) • from fasted to fed administration (in case of IR forms)
What is "special" in children? • Long development process • changes in drug disposition • drug distribution (body water, plasma protein binding) • enzyme activity/hepatic metabolism • renal excretion & total clearance • Focuson drug absorption • most essential for BA/BE • changes in GI tract …… with potential impact • pH in (empty) stomach (HCl) • gastric emptying/residence • (small) intestinal transit • secretion of bile salts
Relevant changes in absorption? • Information on physiological changes … • change in gastric pH… • impact of gastric emptying (?) • intestinal transit and bile secretion • … rationale for differences in product BA? • all information drug (substance) exposure related … • improvement/reduction in pH-dependent solubility (e.g. in the stomach) • certain differences in exposure between children and adults possible … • … to be considered in definition of appropriate paediatric dose • data indicating differences between formulations not reported • lack in published bioequivalence studies in paediatric population … • … however, might BE studies in children be suggested/mandatory? other routes of administration
Additional BA/BE studies in children? • Product development: entire BA programme in adults • in-vivo characterisation and optimisation of formulation • candidate selection, in particular specific forms for children • administration conditions: food effect, rationale for labelling • certain open issue • optimisation of dosing schedule • Generic development of paediatric medicinal products • basis for MAA: BE assessment in adults • Why studies in adults preferable? • investigations in healthy subjects possible(paediatric studies in Europe only in patients) • number of samples not limiting for profiling • advanced conditions to detect differences between formulations EMA Q&A document (PKWP, 2012)
Efficacy/safety extrapolation • Areas/goals for intended extrapolation • from adults to paediatric patients • between the different age groups in paediatric population:… normally from older to younger paediatric patients • between indications, as long as PK not affected by • diseases (of the different indications) • commonly used concomitant medication(s) • Limitations of extrapolation • PK-based approach insufficient, if … • … blood levels do not (or differently) correspond with efficacy • … locally applied, locally acting drugs • … other routes of administration, e.g. nasal, transdermal, … • … novel indications (in paediatric patients, not in adults) • in such cases dose finding in paediatric patients necessary
PK approach for extrapolation • similar exposure (adults/children) produce similar efficacy • if no such relationship PK/PD biomarkers might be used … • … predictability value for paediatric population to be justified
PK surrogate for efficacy/safety • Study design • should be established based on knowledge from adults • PK characteristics (dose-/time-dependency; route of elimination, …) • route of administration & therapeutic index • specificities in paediatric population & patients • sparse sampling, small volumes (analytical sensitivity) • necessity of multiple dosing, determination of active (!) metabolites • control group (established PK), historic comparison possible • Example: paediatric development of montelukast • clinical conditions & development concept • asthma similar disease in adults and paediatric patients … • … similar exposure should guarantee adequate efficacy & tolerability • dose selection should be based on exposure comparison • "chrono-adjusted" evening (QD) administration suggested
Montelukast: chewing tablets • Drug substance characteristics • BCS Class-IV drug • poor solubility in all media • absolute BA: 64% • mass-balance: 86% faeces, 2% urine Okumu et al., Pharm. Res., 2008 • PK studies (one in adults, two in paediatric patients) • s.d. adults: 2, 5, 10 mg chewable tablets and 10 mg FCT • s.d. paediatric patients: 6 and 10 mg FCT (multiples of 2 mg) • s.d./m.d.paediatric patients: 5 mg chewable tablet (15 days) • Assessment of dose proportionality • determination of dose normalized exposure • comparison of results in adults and paediatric patients • comparison between dosage forms (FCT vs. chewable tablet)
Results dose proportionality Knorr et al., J. Clin. Pharmacol., 1999 Study in children • Findings • proportionality demonstrated for AUC and Cmaxin adults (CT) Study in adults • FCT: significantly lower exposure (-17% AUC, -33% Cmax) • suggested paediatric dose: 5 mg CT (= AUC 10 mg adults)
Development chewable FDC tablets • AIDS treatment: stavudine, lamivudine & nevirapine • well established in adults as FDC tablets (Thailand) • no specific paediatric form, administered in solution(s) • goal: development of FDC chewable tablets (by government) • Basis for approval • m.d. (four weeks) BE study in paediatric patients • free combination (in solution) vs. FDC (7 mg/30 mg/50 mg), both BID • body weight adjusted dosing (6-8 kg: 1 tablets; 8-16 kg: 1.5-2 tablets;16-23 kg: 2.5-3 tablets; 23-30 kg: 3.5-4 tablets) • study in two stages (N=8/35) as tablets never dosed to humans before • sparse sampling (seven samples per twelve hours postdose) • total and peak exposure, trough values
Study outcome Plasma profiles (at steady state) Stavudine Nevirapine Lamivudine Vanprapar et al., Paediatr. Infect. Dis. J., 2010 • Biopharmaceutics • stavudine: BCS Class-I …… biowaiver possible • lamivudine: BCS Class-III …… impact of excipients likely • nevirapine: BCS Class-II …… formulation determined BA Pharmacokinetic results
Study outcome Plasma profiles (at steady state) Stavudine Nevirapine Lamivudine Pharmacokinetic results • Conclusions/consequences • study programme in adults • biowaiver for stavudine • modification of formulation … … adjusting total exposure? • MAA: substitution indication?
Conclusions: extrapolation possible? • Bioavailability • concept: entire investigational programme in adults • assumption: findings transferable to paediatric patients • goals: • product development & optimisation of formulation • candidate selection for further product development • specification of administration conditions, e.g. food effect • Bioequivalence • BE assessment for generic MAA conducted in healthy adults • PK extrapolation • assessment of dose proportionality in healthy adults … • … exposure comparison between children and adults … • … in order to define efficacious dose for paediatric patients
BA/BE in paediatric population: what may be extrapolated from findings in adults? Henning H. Blume, PhD SocraTec R&D,Oberursel/Germany Concepts in Drug Research and Development henning.blume@socratec-pharma.de AGAH Interactive Workshop Bonn, February 25-26, 2013
BA/BE in formulation development • Conventional concept/programme • investigations during formulation development • assessment of total and peak exposure, characterisation of profiles • selection of development candidates (pilot studies) • determination of absorption from oral cavity (e.g. in case of ODT) • assessment of bioequivalence (generic MAA) • investigation of food interactions – drug substance and product • goal(s): appropriate quality, adequate efficacy, safety • Additional studies needed for paediatric population? • characterisation of children-specific formulations, e.g. ODT • consideration of physiological specificities, e.g. • changes in gastric pH impact on drug dissolution/absorption? • maturation of bile secretion impact on solubility, food-effects? • gastric emptying, intestinal transit residence at absorption site?