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A Survey of the Regulatory Requirements for the Waiver of In Vivo Bioequivalence Studies of Generic Products in Certain Dosage Forms by Participating Regulators and Organisations of the International Pharmaceutical Regulators Programme

Authors :
Eduardo Agostinho Freitas Fernandes
Alfredo Garcia Arieta
Kohei Shimojo
Ryosuke Kuribayashi
Ivana Abalos
Chantal Walther
Li-Feng Hsu
Wen-Yi Hung
Andrew Tam
Zulema Rodríguez Martínez
Clare Rodrigues
Erwin Guzmán Aurela
Diego Alejandro Gutierrez Triana
Aya Myoenzono
Sang Aeh Park
Jayoung Kim
April C Braddy
Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos
Craig Simon
Henrike Potthast
Matthias Shona Roost
Joy Van Oudtshoorn
Christopher Crane
Ben Jones
Kwansoo Kim
Source :
Journal of Pharmacy & Pharmaceutical Sciences, Vol 24 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The requirements to waive in vivo bioequivalence studies for immediate release solid oral dosage forms based on the Biopharmaceutics Classifications System (BCS) are well known, and biowaivers[1] for other types of oral dosage forms based on pre-defined criteria may also be acceptable. Similarly, biowaivers for dosage forms such as injectable products may also be allowed if certain criteria are met. The current paper summarises the biowaiver requirements for oral solutions and suspensions, soft gelatin capsules and injectable products (intravenous injections, subcutaneous and intramuscular injections, emulsions for injection and micellar solutions for injection) among the participants of the Bioequivalence Working Group for Generics (BEWGG) of the International Pharmaceutical Regulators Programme (IPRP). A review of the requirements indicated that there was a trend towards convergence when the dosage form became less complex; however, the most common approach used by each of the jurisdictions was a case-by-case approach given that most jurisdictions do not have well defined guidelines to support all possible scenarios. Even in the simplest case of intravenous solutions, the acceptability of qualitative changes in excipients differ between the IPRP members. Notwithstanding the differences, the dissemination of the information is a first step towards regulatory convergence regarding biowaivers for certain dosage forms and should be useful for pharmaceutical companies currently developing generic medicinal products for IPRP jurisdictions.

Details

ISSN :
14821826
Volume :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of pharmacypharmaceutical sciences : a publication of the Canadian Society for Pharmaceutical Sciences, Societe canadienne des sciences pharmaceutiques
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fd0478ea0dd9a1c93beb2add328c38e4