97 results on '"Gustavo Mendes, Lima Santos"'
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2. Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos Joins the Simulations Plus Regulatory Fellowship Program
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Simulations Plus Inc. ,Independent regulatory commissions ,Simulation methods ,General interest ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
LANCASTER: SIMULATIONS PLUS, INC. has issued the following news release: Simulations Plus, Inc. (Nasdaq: SLP), a leading provider of modeling and simulation software and services for pharmaceutical safety and efficacy, [...]
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- 2022
3. Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos Joins the Simulations Plus Regulatory Fellowship Program
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Simulations Plus Inc. ,Computer software industry ,Software ,Independent regulatory commissions ,Simulation methods ,Software quality ,Business ,Business, international - Abstract
Ex-Anvisa General Manager will contribute to global regulatory strategies involving pharmacometrics LANCASTER, Calif. -- Simulations Plus, Inc. (Nasdaq: SLP), a leading provider of modeling and simulation software and services for [...]
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- 2022
4. The role of a genetically stable, novel oral type 2 poliovirus vaccine in the poliomyelitis endgame
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Sue Ann Costa Clemens, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Isabela Gonzalez, and Ralf Clemens
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vaccine-preventable disease ,poliomyelitis ,health policy ,poliovirus vaccines ,outbreaks ,Medicine ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Poliovirus infection causes paralysis in up to 1 in 200 infected persons. The use of safe and effective inactivated poliovirus vaccines and live attenuated oral poliovirus vaccines (OPVs) means that only two pockets of wildtype poliovirus type 1 remain, in Afghanistan and Pakistan. However, OPVs can revert to virulence, causing outbreaks of circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus (cVDPV). During 2020–2022, cVDPV type 2 (cVDPV2) was responsible for 97–99% of poliomyelitis cases, mainly in Africa. Between January and August 2022, cVDPV2 was detected in sewage samples in Israel, the United Kingdom and the United States of America, where a case of acute flaccid paralysis caused by cVDPV2 also occurred. The Pan American Health Organization has warned that Brazil, the Dominican Republic, Haiti and Peru are at very high risk for the reintroduction of poliovirus and an additional eight countries in Latin America are at high risk, following dropping vaccination rates (average 80% coverage in 2022). Sabin type 2 monovalent OPV has been used to control VDPV2 outbreaks, but its use could also lead to outbreaks. To address this issue, a more genetically stable, novel OPV2 (nOPV2) was developed against cVDPV2 and in 2020 was granted World Health Organization Emergency Use Listing. Rolling out a novel vaccine under the Emergency Use Listing in mass settings to contain outbreaks requires unique local regulatory and operational preparedness.
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- 2023
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5. Autorização para uso off-label pode não ser benéfica para o Sistema Único de Saúde
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Rosângela Caetano, Luciane Cruz Lopes, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, and Claudia Garcia Serpa Osorio-de-Castro
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Medicine ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2023
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6. Incorporação e uso de medicamentos no Sistema Único de Saúde: mudanças e riscos com os novos atos normativos do Ministério da Saúde
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Rosângela Caetano, Luciane Cruz Lopes, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, and Claudia Garcia Serpa Osorio-de-Castro
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Medicine ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2023
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7. A Survey of the Criteria Used for the Selection of Alternative Comparator Products by Participating Regulators and Organizations of the International Pharmaceutical Regulators Programme
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Andrew Tam, Alfredo Garcia-Arieta, Ivana Abalos, Eduardo Agostinho Freitas Fernandes, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Zulema Rodriguez Martinez, Milly Divinsky, Rami Kariv, Henrike Potthast, April C. Braddy, Clare Rodrigues, Erwin Guzman Aurela, Liliana Carolina Arevalo Gonzalez, Diego Gutierres Triana, Ben Jones, Choongyul Ahn, Hyuna Kim, So Hee Kim, Ryosuke Kuribayashi, Aya Myoenzono, Kohei Shimojo, Joy van Oudtshoorn, Cornelia Bigler, Ricarda Meincke, Matthias S. Roost, Chantal Walther, Li-feng Hsu, Christopher Crane, and Tony Jarman
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Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,RS1-441 - Abstract
The safety and efficacy of a generic product are partly based on demonstrating bioequivalence to the innovator product; however, when the innovator product is no longer available as a comparator product, a survey conducted within the Bioequivalence Working Group for Generics (BEWGG) of the International Pharmaceutical Regulators Programme (IPRP) indicated that the criteria for selecting an alternative comparator product varies. For most members of the BEWGG, an existing marketed generic that was approved based on a comparison with the locally registered innovator product can be used, contingent on criteria that ranges from allowing any generic to be used, to allowing only specific criteria-defined generics to be used. Notwithstanding the acceptability of a generic as an alternative comparator, it is not always the preferred comparator for several jurisdictions. Some jurisdictions require the use of a locally sourced alternative innovator comparator (e.g., the same medicinal ingredient manufactured by a different company) or a foreign innovator comparator. Unlike the other members of the BEWGG, the European Union (EU) has no such options available, rather mechanisms are in place to allow manufacturers to develop a new comparator. The criteria described herein regarding the use of an alternative comparator product can also be applied to scenarios where a specific strength of a series of strengths or an innovative fixed dose combination are discontinued. The results of the survey demonstrate that while criteria for selecting alternative comparator products are not harmonized among the BEWGG participants, the common concern for all jurisdictions is to select a comparator product that meets the safety and efficacy standards of the original innovator product.
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- 2022
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8. Requirements for Additional Strength Biowaivers for Modified Release Solid Oral Dosage Forms in International Pharmaceutical Regulators Programme Participating Regulators and Organisations: Differences and Commonalities
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Matthias Shona Roost, Henrike Potthast, Chantal Walther, Alfredo García-Arieta, Ivana Abalos, Eduardo Agostinho Freitas Fernandes, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Zulema Rodríguez Martínez, Andrew Tam, Clare Rodrigues, Diego Alejandro Gutierrez Triana, Erwin Guzmán Aurela, Nayive Rodríguez Rodríguez, Sang Aeh Park, Jayoung Kim, Rami Kariv, Milly Divinsky, Ben Jones, Ryosuke Kuribayashi, Aya Myoenzono, Miho Kasuga, Joy van Oudtshoorn, Jo-Feng Chi, Wen-Yi Hung, Li-Feng Hsu, Christopher Crane, Tony Jarman, and April Braddy
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Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,RS1-441 - Abstract
This article describes an overview of waivers of in vivo bioequivalence studies for additional strengths in the context of the registration of modified release generic products and is a follow-up to the recent publication for the immediate release solid oral dosage forms. The current paper is based on a survey among the participating members of the Bioequivalence Working Group for Generics (BEWGG) of the International Pharmaceutical Regulators Program (IPRP) regarding this topic. Most jurisdictions consider the extrapolation of bioequivalence results obtained with one (most sensitive) strength of a product series as less straightforward for modified release products than for immediate release products. There is consensus that modified release products should demonstrate bioequivalence not only in the fasted state but also in the fed state, but differences exist regarding the necessity of additional multiple dose studies. Fundamental differences between jurisdictions are revealed regarding requirements on the quantitative composition of different strengths and the differentiation of single and multiple unit dosage forms. Differences in terms of in vitro dissolution requirements are obvious, though these are mostly related to possible additional comparative investigations rather than regarding the need for product-specific methods. As with the requirements for immediate release products, harmonization of the various regulations for modified release products is highly desirable to conduct the appropriate studies from a scientific point of view, thus ensuring therapeutic equivalence.
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- 2021
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9. Current Regulatory Requirements for Biosimilars in Six Member Countries of BRICS-TM: Challenges and Opportunities
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Hasumati Rahalkar, Alan Sheppard, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Chitralekha Dasgupta, Sonia Mayra Perez-Tapia, Carlos A. Lopez-Morales, and Sam Salek
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BRICS-TM ,biosimilar ,emerging economies ,marketing authorisation ,regulatory agency ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Background: The aim of the study was to identify, interpret, and compare the current perspectives of regulatory agencies in six member countries of BRICS-TM (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Turkey, and Mexico) on the different criteria used for biosimilar development and marketing authorisation process.Methods: A semi-quantitative questionnaire was developed covering the organisation of agency, biosimilar development criteria and marketing authorisation process and sent to seven regulatory agencies covering the BRICS-TM countries. All data was kept anonymous and confidential. Data processing and analysis was carried out; descriptive statistics were used for quantitative data and content analysis was employed to generate themes for qualitative data.Results: Out of the seven regulatory agencies included in the study, six representatives provided the responses. The perspectives of these six regulatory agencies varied on a number of aspects relating to the review criteria for biosimilar development and licencing process. The most prevalent model for data assessment is the “full review” of a marketing authorisation application. There is lack of a standard approach across the agencies on sourcing of the reference biological product, in vivo toxicity studies and confirmatory clinical studies. Most agencies restrict interaction with biosimilar developers and any scientific advice is non-binding. The marketing authorisation approval depends on scientific assessment of the dossier, sample analysis and GMP certification. The agencies do not issue any public assessment report specifying the summary basis of biosimilar approval.Conclusion: Regulatory agencies across the six emerging economies are steadily improving the regulatory mechanism in the area of biosimilars. However, there remains scope for increasing the effectiveness and efficiency of the processes by encouraging open and transparent interaction with developers, adopting a flexible approach toward accepting advanced analytical data in lieu of clinical studies and enhancing regulatory reliance amongst agencies. This will help to simplify the new biosimilar development programmes and make them more cost-effective.
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- 2021
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10. 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
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Alfredo Garcia Arieta, Craig Simon, Andrew Tam, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Eduardo Agostinho Freitas Fernandes, Zulema Rodríguez Martínez, Clare Rodrigues, Sang Aeh Park, JaYoung Kim, Kwansoo Kim, Ryosuke Kuribayashi, Aya Myoenzono, Kohei Shimojo, Chantal Walther, Matthias S. Roost, Wen-Yi Hung, Li-feng Hsu, Christopher Crane, April C. Braddy, Joy van Oudtshoorn, Diego Alejandro Gutierrez Triana, Erwin Guzmán Aurela, Ben Jones, Henrike Potthast, and Ivana Abalos
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Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,RS1-441 - 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.
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- 2021
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11. The Requirements for Additional Strength Biowaivers for Immediate Release Solid Oral Dosage Forms in International Pharmaceutical Regulators Programme Participating Regulators and Organisations: Differences and Commonalities
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Christopher Crane, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Eduardo Agostinho Freitas Fernandes, Craig Simon, Andrew Tam, Diego Gutierrez Triana, Henrike Potthast, Ryosuke Kuribayashi, Yusuke Okada, Aya Myoenzono, Ivan Omar Calderon, zulema Rodriguez, ben Jones, Sang Aeh Park, So Young Eum, Clare Rodrigues, Joy van Oudsthoorn, Arno Nolting, Chantal Walther, Matthias S Roost, Wen-yi Hung, April C Braddy, and Alfredo Garcia-Arieta
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Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,RS1-441 - Abstract
In relation to the registration of generic products, waivers of in vivo bioequivalence studies (biowaivers) are considered in three main cases: certain dosage forms for which bioequivalence is self-evident (e.g. intravenous solutions), biowaivers based on the Biopharmaceutics Classification System and biowaivers for additional strengths with respect to the strength for which in vivo bioequivalence has been shown. The objective of this article is to describe the differences and commonalities in biowaivers for additional strengths of immediate release solid oral dosage forms between the participating members of the International Pharmaceutical Regulators Program (IPRP). The requirements are based on five main aspects; the pharmacokinetics of the drug substance, the manufacturing process, the qualitative and quantitative composition of the different strengths, and the comparative dissolution profiles. For the pharmacokinetic aspects, many regulators/agencies have the same requirements. All strengths must be manufactured with the same process, although a few regulators/agencies accept small differences. In relation to the formulation aspects, the data required breaks down into three major approaches based initially on one of those of the EU, the USA or Japan, but there are some differences in these three major approaches with some country specific interpretations. Most regulators/agencies also have the same requirements for the dissolution data, though there are some notable exceptions.
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- 2020
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12. A Survey of the Regulatory Requirements for the Acceptance of Foreign Comparator Products by Participating Regulators and Organizations of the International Generic Drug Regulators Programme
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Alfredo Garcia Arieta, Craig Simon, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Iván Omar Calderón Lojero, Zulema Rodríguez Martínez, Clare Rodrigues, Sang Aeh Park, Ji Myoung Kim, Ryosuke Kuribayashi, Yusuke Okada, Arno Nolting, Chantal Pfäffli, Wen-Yi Hung, Christopher Crane, April C Braddy, Joy van Oudtshoorn, Diego Gutierrez Triana, and Mitch Clarke
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Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,RS1-441 - Abstract
The acceptance of foreign comparator products is the most limiting factor for the development and regulatory assessment of generic medicines marketed globally. Bioequivalence studies have to be repeated with the local comparator products of each jurisdiction because it is unknown if the comparators of the different countries are the same product, with the consequent duplication of efforts by regulators and industry alike. The regulatory requirements on the acceptability of foreign comparator products of oral dosage forms differ between countries participating in the Bioequivalence Working Group for Generics of the International Pharmaceutical Regulators Programme. Brazil, Colombia, the European Union member States, Japan, Mexico, South Korea and the United States only accept bioequivalence studies with their local comparator. In contrast, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Singapore, South Africa, Switzerland and Taiwan accept studies with foreign comparators under certain conditions. Canada limits its use to highly soluble drugs with a wide therapeutic range in immediate release products. Australia requires a comparison of the quantitative composition. In contrast, there are fewer restrictions on the acceptance of foreign comparators in New Zealand, Singapore, South Africa, Switzerland and Taiwan. For the WHO Prequalification of Medicines and for developing generics of the essential medicines the WHO lists comparators from different countries. In conclusion, there is currently no consensus amongst regulators on the acceptability of foreign comparator products.
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- 2019
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13. 2021 White Paper on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis: Mass Spec of Proteins, Extracellular Vesicles, CRISPR, Chiral Assays, Oligos; Nanomedicines Bioanalysis; ICH M10 Section 7.1; Non-Liquid & Rare Matrices; Regulatory Inputs (<u>Part 1A</u> – Recommendations on Endogenous Compounds, Small Molecules, Complex Methods, Regulated Mass Spec of Large Molecules, Small Molecule, PoC & <u>Part 1B</u> - Regulatory Agencies' Inputs on Bioanalysis, Biomarkers, Immunogenicity, Gene & Cell Therapy and Vaccine)
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Surinder Kaur, Stephen C Alley, Matt Szapacs, Amanda Wilson, Eugene Ciccimaro, Dian Su, Neil Henderson, Linzhi Chen, Fabio Garofolo, Shawna Hengel, Wenying Jian, John F Kellie, Anita Lee, John Mehl, Joe Palandra, Haibo Qiu, Natasha Savoie, Diaa Shakleya, Ludovicus Staelens, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Giane Sumner, Jan Welink, Robert Wheller, Y-J Xue, Jianing Zeng, Jinhui Zhang, Huiyu Zhou, Jian Wang, Scott Summerfield, Olga Kavetska, Lieve Dillen, Ragu Ramanathan, Mike Baratta, Arindam Dasgupta, Anna Edmison, Luca Ferrari, Sally Fischer, Daniela Fraier, Sam Haidar, Kathrin Heermeier, Christopher James, Allena Ji, Lina Luo, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Noah Post, Anton I Rosenbaum, Sune Sporring, Sekhar Surapaneni, Stephen Vinter, Katty Wan, Eric Woolf, Seongeun (Julia) Cho, Elham Kossary, Sandra Prior, Mohsen Rajabi Abhari, Catherine Soo, Yow-Ming Wang, Abbas Bandukwala, Elana Cherry, Isabelle Cludts, Soma Ghosh, Shirley Hopper, Akiko Ishii-Watabe, Susan Kirshner, Kevin Maher, Kimberly Maxfield, Joao Pedras-Vasconcelos, Yoshiro Saito, Dean Smith, Therese Solstad, Daniela Verthelyi, Meenu Wadhwa, Leslie Wagner, Günter Waxenecker, Haoheng Yan, and Lucia Zhang
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Medical Laboratory Technology ,Clinical Biochemistry ,General Medicine ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,Analytical Chemistry - Abstract
The 15th edition of the Workshop on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis (15th WRIB) was held on 27 September to 1 October 2021. Even with a last-minute move from in-person to virtual, an overwhelmingly high number of nearly 900 professionals representing pharma and biotech companies, contract research organizations (CROs), and multiple regulatory agencies still eagerly convened to actively discuss the most current topics of interest in bioanalysis. The 15th WRIB included 3 Main Workshops and 7 Specialized Workshops that together spanned 1 week in order to allow exhaustive and thorough coverage of all major issues in bioanalysis, biomarkers, immunogenicity, gene therapy, cell therapy and vaccines. Moreover, in-depth workshops on biomarker assay development and validation (BAV) (focused on clarifying the confusion created by the increased use of the term “Context of Use – COU”); mass spectrometry of proteins (therapeutic, biomarker and transgene); state-of-the-art cytometry innovation and validation; and, critical reagent and positive control generation were the special features of the 15th edition. This 2021 White Paper encompasses recommendations emerging from the extensive discussions held during the workshop, and is aimed to provide the bioanalytical community with key information and practical solutions on topics and issues addressed, in an effort to enable advances in scientific excellence, improved quality and better regulatory compliance. Due to its length, the 2021 edition of this comprehensive White Paper has been divided into three parts for editorial reasons. This publication (Part 1A) covers the recommendations on Endogenous Compounds, Small Molecules, Complex Methods, Regulated Mass Spec of Large Molecules, Small Molecule, PoC. Part 1B covers the Regulatory Agencies' Inputs on Bioanalysis, Biomarkers, Immunogenicity, Gene & Cell Therapy and Vaccine. Part 2 (ISR for Biomarkers, Liquid Biopsies, Spectral Cytometry, Inhalation/Oral & Multispecific Biotherapeutics, Accuracy/LLOQ for Flow Cytometry) and Part 3 (TAb/NAb, Viral Vector CDx, Shedding Assays; CRISPR/Cas9 & CAR-T Immunogenicity; PCR & Vaccine Assay Performance; ADA Assay Comparabil ity & Cut Point Appropriateness) are published in volume 14 of Bioanalysis, issues 10 and 11 (2022), respectively.
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- 2022
14. Incorporation and use of medicines in the Brazilian Unified National Health System: changes and risks of new Ministry of Health legislation
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Rosângela Caetano, Luciane Cruz Lopes, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, and Claudia Garcia Serpa Osorio-de-Castro
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Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health - Published
- 2023
15. A Survey of the Regulatory Requirements for BCS-Based Biowaivers for Solid Oral Dosage Forms by Participating Regulators and Organisations of the International Generic Drug Regulators Programme
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Joy Elizabeth van Oudtshoorn, Alfredo García-Arieta, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Christopher Crane, Clare Rodrigues, Craig Simon, Ji Myoung Kim, Sang Aeh Park, Yusuke Okada, Ryosuke Kuribayashi, Chantal Pfäffli, Arno Nolting, Iván Omar Calderón Lojero, Zulema Rodríguez Martínez, Wen-Yi Hung, April C. Braddy, Nancy Arciniegas Leal, Diego Gutierrez Triana, Mitch Clarke, and Peter Bachmann
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Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,RS1-441 - Abstract
Purpose: The Biopharmaceutics Classification System (BCS) based biowaiver is a scientific model which enables the substitution of in vivo bioequivalence studies with in vitro data as evidence of therapeutic equivalence subject to certain conditions. Despite being based on the same principles, BCS-based biowaivers are interpreted and regulated differently among international regulatory agencies. In this survey, the Bioequivalence Working Group (BEWG) of the International Generic Drug Regulators Programme (IGDRP) compared the criteria for BCS-based biowaivers applied by the participating regulators and organisations. Methods: Differences and similarities regarding solubility, permeability, dissolution, excipients and fixed-dose combination products, were identified and compared in a detailed survey of each participant’s criteria for BCS-based biowaivers. These criteria were determined based upon the participants’ respective regulatory guidance documents, policies and practices. Results: This review has, with the exception of two participants who do not accept BCS-based biowaivers, revealed that most IGDRP participants interpret the BCS principles and conditions similarly but notable differences exist in the application of these principles. Conclusion: Although many similarities exist, this review identifies several opportunities for greater convergence of regulatory requirements amongst the surveyed jurisdictions. This article is open to POST-PUBLICATION REVIEW. Registered readers (see “For Readers”) may comment by clicking on ABSTRACT on the issue’s contents page
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- 2018
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16. 2020 White Paper on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis: BAV Guidance, CLSI H62, Biotherapeutics Stability, Parallelism Testing, CyTOF and Regulatory Feedback (<u>Part 2A</u> – Recommendations on Biotherapeutics Stability, PK LBA Regulated Bioanalysis, Biomarkers Assays, Cytometry Validation & Innovation <u>Part 2B</u> – Regulatory Agencies’ Inputs on Bioanalysis, Biomarkers, Immunogenicity, Gene & Cell Therapy and Vaccine)
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Andrew P Mayer, Jinhui Zhang, Sam Haidar, Sandra Nuti, Shyam Sarikonda, Therese Solstad, Megan McCausland, Fabian Junker, Elana Cherry, Susan M. Spitz, Tahseen Mirza, Anna Edmison, Patrick Faustino, Yan Zhang, Rafiq Islam, Steven Eck, Christèle Gonneau, Fabio Garofolo, Nilufer Tampal, Kevin Maher, Lisa Patti-Diaz, Kun Peng, Alberto Robert, Yow-Ming Wang, Rachel Palmer, Marcela Araya, Lakshmi Amaravadi, Alison Joyce, Daniela Verthelyi, Giane Sumner, Andrew Exley, Sally Fischer, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Michael McGuinness, Yoshiro Saito, Alessandra Vitaliti, Naveen Dakappagari, Daniel Baltrukonis, Christina Satterwhite, Gregory Hopkins, Gregor Jordan, Akiko Ishii-Watabe, Arindam Dasgupta, David Lanham, Priscila Camillo Teixeira, Mitra Azadeh, Stephen Vinter, Sumit Kar, Lucia Zhang, Linda Terry, Michael Nathan Hedrick, João Pedras-Vasconcelos, Shabnam Tangri, Florian Neff, Natasha Savoie, Weili Yan, Matthew Andisik, Mohsen Rajabi Abhari, Richard Siggers, Lindsay King, Diaa Shakleya, Isabelle Cludts, Nisha Palackal, Meiyu Shen, Ulrike Sommer, Sylvie Bertholet, Susan Kirshner, Cherie Green, Christine Grimaldi, Susan Stojdl, Kristina McGuire, Vilma Decman, Jose Estevam, Suman Dandamudi, Seema Kumar, Richard Wnek, Catherine Soo, Haoheng Yan, Jan Welink, Rebecca Elliott, and Abbas Bandukwala
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0303 health sciences ,Bioanalysis ,Immunogenicity ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Scientific excellence ,Harmonization ,General Medicine ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,Regulatory authority ,03 medical and health sciences ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Engineering management ,Biopharmaceutical ,White paper ,Business ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
The 14th edition of the Workshop on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis (14th WRIB) was held virtually on June 15-29, 2020 with an attendance of over 1000 representatives from pharmaceutical/biopharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, contract research organizations, and regulatory agencies worldwide. The 14th WRIB included three Main Workshops, seven Specialized Workshops that together spanned 11 days in order to allow exhaustive and thorough coverage of all major issues in bioanalysis, biomarkers, immunogenicity, gene therapy and vaccine. Moreover, a comprehensive vaccine assays track; an enhanced cytometry track and updated Industry/Regulators consensus on BMV of biotherapeutics by LCMS were special features in 2020. As in previous years, this year's WRIB continued to gather a wide diversity of international industry opinion leaders and regulatory authority experts working on both small and large molecules to facilitate sharing and discussions focused on improving quality, increasing regulatory compliance and achieving scientific excellence on bioanalytical issues. This 2020 White Paper encompasses recommendations emerging from the extensive discussions held during the workshop, and is aimed to provide the Global Bioanalytical Community with key information and practical solutions on topics and issues addressed, in an effort to enable advances in scientific excellence, improved quality and better regulatory compliance. Due to its length, the 2020 edition of this comprehensive White Paper has been divided into three parts for editorial reasons. This publication covers the recommendations on (Part 2A) BAV, PK LBA, Flow Cytometry Validation and Cytometry Innovation and (Part 2B) Regulatory Input. Part 1 (Innovation in Small Molecules, Hybrid LBA/LCMS & Regulated Bioanalysis), Part 3 (Vaccine, Gene/Cell Therapy, NAb Harmonization and Immunogenicity) are published in volume 13 of Bioanalysis, issues 4, and 6 (2021), respectively.
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- 2021
17. Applications of Physiologically Based Biopharmaceutics Modeling (PBBM) to Support Drug Product Quality: A Workshop Summary Report
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Evangelos Kotzagiorgis, Shinichi Kijima, Om Anand, Yang Zhao, Sandra Suarez-Sharp, Talia Flanagan, Min Li, Baoming Ning, Poonam Delvadia, Shefali Kakar, Amitava Mitra, Greg Rullo, Jennifer B. Dressman, Neil Parrott, Erik Sjögren, Banu S. Zolnik, Shereeni Veerasingham, Paul A. Dickinson, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Tycho Heimbach, Haritha Mandula, Christophe Tistaert, Fang Wu, Kimberly Raines, Satish Sharan, Xavier Pepin, and Andrew Babiskin
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Research Report ,Process management ,Computer science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Harmonization ,02 engineering and technology ,Models, Biological ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,Biopharmaceutics ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Quality (business) ,Pharmaceutical industry ,media_common ,business.industry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Clinical formulation ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,Solubility ,New product development ,Drug product ,Regulatory agency ,0210 nano-technology ,business - Abstract
This report summarizes the proceedings for Day 3 of the workshop titled "Current State and Future Expectations of Translational Modeling Strategies toSupportDrug Product Development, Manufacturing Changes and Controls". From a drug product quality perspective, patient-centric product development necessitates the development of clinically relevant drug product specifications (CRDPS). In this regard, Physiologically Based Biopharmaceutics modeling (PBBM) is a viable tool to establish links between in-vitro to in-vivo data, and support with establishing CRDPS. The theme of day 3 was practical applications of PBBM to support drug product quality. In this manuscript, case studies from US FDA, EMA and pharmaceutical industry on applications of PBBM in drug product quality are summarized which include 1) regulatory agency's perspectives on establishing the safe space and achieving study waivers, 2) model-informed risk assessment on the effects of acid reducing agents, bridging of dissolution methods, food effect, and formulation selection, and 3) understanding clinical formulation performance. Breakout session discussions focused on four topics - 1) terminologies related to physiologically based modeling in support of drug product quality, 2) regulatory harmonization on evidentiary standards, 3) CRDPS approaches and 4) bridging between biorelevant and quality control (QC) dissolution methods.
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- 2021
18. 2020 White Paper on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis: BMV of Hybrid Assays, Acoustic MS, HRMS, Data Integrity, Endogenous Compounds, Microsampling and Microbiome (<u>Part 1</u> – Recommendations on Industry/Regulators Consensus on BMV of Biotherapeutics by LCMS, Advanced Application in Hybrid Assays, Regulatory Challenges in Mass Spec, Innovation in Small Molecules, Peptides and Oligos)
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Luca Ferrari, Wenkui Li, Christopher P. Evans, Lieve Dillen, Noah Post, Jens Sydor, Jinhui Zhang, Susan Stojdl, Boris Gorovits, Jason Boer, Anita Lee, Mark G. Qian, Natasha Savoie, Kevin P. Bateman, Brian Dean, Allena J. Ji, Jiang Wu, Amanda Wilson, Michael H. Buonarati, Jian Wang, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Daniel S Spellman, Hendrik Neubert, Hui Zhang, Scott G. Summerfield, Eric Yang, Nilufer Tampal, Parya Nouri, Christopher J Beaver, Anna Edmison, Christine Fandozzi, Troy Voelker, Jenny Zhang, Fabio Garofolo, Michael McGuinness, Sam Haidar, Bill Mylott, Stephen Vinter, Arindam Dasgupta, Patrick Faustino, Daniela Fraier, Wenying Jian, Tahseen Mirza, Sune Sporring, Diaa Shakleya, Timothy V Olah, Eric Woolf, Stephen C. Alley, Nicola Hughes, Suman Dandamudi, Hongbin Yu, Phillip Sundman, Rebecca Elliott, Lina Luo, and Jan Welink
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Bioanalysis ,Oligonucleotide ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Endogeny ,General Medicine ,Computational biology ,Biology ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,01 natural sciences ,Small molecule ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Microbiome ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics - Abstract
The 14th edition of the Workshop on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis (14th WRIB) was held virtually on June 15–29, 2020 with an attendance of over 1000 representatives from pharmaceutical/biopharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, contract research organizations, and regulatory agencies worldwide. The 14th WRIB included three Main Workshops, seven Specialized Workshops that together spanned 11 days in order to allow exhaustive and thorough coverage of all major issues in bioanalysis, biomarkers, immunogenicity, gene therapy, cell therapy and vaccine. Moreover, a comprehensive vaccine assays track; an enhanced cytometry track and updated Industry/Regulators consensus on BMV of biotherapeutics by Mass Spectrometry (hybrid assays, LCMS and HRMS) were special features in 2020. As in previous years, this year's WRIB continued to gather a wide diversity of international industry opinion leaders and regulatory authority experts working on both small and large molecules to facilitate sharing and discussions focused on improving quality, increasing regulatory compliance and achieving scientific excellence on bioanalytical issues. This 2020 White Paper encompasses recommendations emerging from the extensive discussions held during the workshop and is aimed to provide the Global Bioanalytical Community with key information and practical solutions on topics and issues addressed, in an effort to enable advances in scientific excellence, improved quality and better regulatory compliance. Due to its length, the 2020 edition of this comprehensive White Paper has been divided into three parts for editorial reasons. This publication covers the recommendations on (Part 1) Hybrid Assays, Innovation in Small Molecules, & Regulated Bioanalysis. Part 2A (BAV, PK LBA, Flow Cytometry Validation and Cytometry Innovation), Part 2B (Regulatory Input) and Part 3 (Vaccine, Gene/Cell Therapy, NAb Harmonization and Immunogenicity) are published in volume 13 of Bioanalysis, issues 5, and 6 (2021), respectively.
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- 2021
19. Reliance: a smarter way of regulating medical products - The IPRP survey
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Petra Doerr, Agnes Saint-Raymond, Nobumasa Nakashima, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Nick Orphanos, Georgios Balkamos, and Marie Valentin
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Internationality ,business.industry ,International Cooperation ,General Medicine ,Public relations ,Trust ,Marketing authorization ,Health Services Accessibility ,Regulatory authority ,Medical product ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Drug and Narcotic Control ,Humans ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,business ,Drug Approval - Abstract
Introduction: A survey was conducted among national regulatory authorities' members of the International Pharmaceutical Regulators Programme (IPRP) to collect and share experiences of reliance approaches. Reliance allows formally, or informally, one regulatory authority to use assessments made by other regulatory authorities while remaining responsible for the final decision. Reliance is an essential concept to increase the efficiency of the global regulatory oversight of medical products by national regulatory authorities.Areas covered: This article describes the findings and recommendations from the IPRP survey. It shows that reliance in the area of medical product oversight is broadly accepted. The first part presents the acceptance and reasons for accepting reliance including the need for trust, then gives examples of the most common areas for reliance, and explains the difference between unilateral or reciprocal reliance. Finally, the article analyzes the lessons learned including challenges and opportunities for reliance on regulatory authorities to facilitate patient access in their jurisdictions.Expert opinion: Regulatory reliance facilitates regulatory approvals and allows to use resources in a more efficient way and ultimately serves patients by facilitating earlier access to quality-assured, safe, and effective medicines.
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- 2020
20. 2021 White Paper on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis: Mass Spec of Proteins, Extracellular Vesicles, CRISPR, Chiral Assays, Oligos; Nanomedicines Bioanalysis; ICH M10 Section 7.1; Non-LiquidRare Matrices; Regulatory Inputs (
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Surinder, Kaur, Stephen C, Alley, Matt, Szapacs, Amanda, Wilson, Eugene, Ciccimaro, Dian, Su, Neil, Henderson, Linzhi, Chen, Fabio, Garofolo, Shawna, Hengel, Wenying, Jian, John F, Kellie, Anita, Lee, John, Mehl, Joe, Palandra, Haibo, Qiu, Natasha, Savoie, Diaa, Shakleya, Ludovicus, Staelens, Hiroshi, Sugimoto, Giane, Sumner, Jan, Welink, Robert, Wheller, Y-J, Xue, Jianing, Zeng, Jinhui, Zhang, Huiyu, Zhou, Jian, Wang, Scott, Summerfield, Olga, Kavetska, Lieve, Dillen, Ragu, Ramanathan, Mike, Baratta, Arindam, Dasgupta, Anna, Edmison, Luca, Ferrari, Sally, Fischer, Daniela, Fraier, Sam, Haidar, Kathrin, Heermeier, Christopher, James, Allena, Ji, Lina, Luo, Gustavo Mendes, Lima Santos, Noah, Post, Anton I, Rosenbaum, Sune, Sporring, Sekhar, Surapaneni, Stephen, Vinter, Katty, Wan, Eric, Woolf, Seongeun Julia, Cho, Elham, Kossary, Sandra, Prior, Mohsen Rajabi, Abhari, Catherine, Soo, Yow-Ming, Wang, Abbas, Bandukwala, Elana, Cherry, Isabelle, Cludts, Soma, Ghosh, Shirley, Hopper, Akiko, Ishii-Watabe, Susan, Kirshner, Kevin, Maher, Kimberly, Maxfield, Joao, Pedras-Vasconcelos, Yoshiro, Saito, Dean, Smith, Therese, Solstad, Daniela, Verthelyi, Meenu, Wadhwa, Leslie, Wagner, Günter, Waxenecker, Haoheng, Yan, and Lucia, Zhang
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Extracellular Vesicles ,Vaccines ,Nanomedicine ,Cell- and Tissue-Based Therapy ,Humans ,Biomarkers ,Mass Spectrometry - Abstract
The 15th edition of the Workshop on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis (15th WRIB) was held on 27 September to 1 October 2021. Even with a last-minute move from in-person to virtual, an overwhelmingly high number of nearly 900 professionals representing pharma and biotech companies, contract research organizations (CROs), and multiple regulatory agencies still eagerly convened to actively discuss the most current topics of interest in bioanalysis. The 15th WRIB included 3 Main Workshops and 7 Specialized Workshops that together spanned 1 week in order to allow exhaustive and thorough coverage of all major issues in bioanalysis, biomarkers, immunogenicity, gene therapy, cell therapy and vaccines. Moreover, in-depth workshops on biomarker assay development and validation (BAV) (focused on clarifying the confusion created by the increased use of the term "Context of Use - COU"); mass spectrometry of proteins (therapeutic, biomarker and transgene); state-of-the-art cytometry innovation and validation; and, critical reagent and positive control generation were the special features of the 15th edition. This 2021 White Paper encompasses recommendations emerging from the extensive discussions held during the workshop, and is aimed to provide the bioanalytical community with key information and practical solutions on topics and issues addressed, in an effort to enable advances in scientific excellence, improved quality and better regulatory compliance. Due to its length, the 2021 edition of this comprehensive White Paper has been divided into three parts for editorial reasons. This publication (Part 1A) covers the recommendations on Endogenous Compounds, Small Molecules, Complex Methods, Regulated Mass Spec of Large Molecules, Small Molecule, PoC. Part 1B covers the Regulatory Agencies' Inputs on Bioanalysis, Biomarkers, Immunogenicity, GeneCell Therapy and Vaccine. Part 2 (ISR for Biomarkers, Liquid Biopsies, Spectral Cytometry, Inhalation/OralMultispecific Biotherapeutics, Accuracy/LLOQ for Flow Cytometry) and Part 3 (TAb/NAb, Viral Vector CDx, Shedding Assays; CRISPR/Cas9CAR-T Immunogenicity; PCRVaccine Assay Performance; ADA Assay Comparabil ityCut Point Appropriateness) are published in volume 14 of Bioanalysis, issues 10 and 11 (2022), respectively.
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- 2022
21. A Baseline Analysis of Regulatory Review Timelines for ANVISA: 2013–2016
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Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Varley Dias Sousa, Daniela Marreco Cerqueira, Lawrence Liberti, Prisha Patel, Renata de Lima Soares, and Neil McAuslane
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Process management ,media_common.quotation_subject ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,01 natural sciences ,010104 statistics & probability ,03 medical and health sciences ,Government Agencies ,0302 clinical medicine ,Agency (sociology) ,Milestone (project management) ,Regulatory review times ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Quality (business) ,0101 mathematics ,Regulatory benchmarking ,Baseline (configuration management) ,Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (miscellaneous) ,Retrospective Studies ,Original Research ,media_common ,Flexibility (engineering) ,Agência Nacional de Vigilância Sanitária (ANVISA) ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Timeline ,Benchmarking ,Mandate ,Optimizing Efficiencies in Regulatory Agencies (OpERA) ,Business ,Brazil - Abstract
Background The Brazilian health regulatory agency (Agência Nacional de Vigilância Sanitária, ANVISA) has embarked on transformational initiatives to fulfill its mandate to provide timely access to safe, effective, and quality therapeutics. A new Brazilian law was enacted to provide the agency with greater flexibility. Optimizing Efficiencies in Regulatory Agencies (OpERA) is a regulatory-strengthening program that seeks to provide benchmarking data that can be used to define performance targets and focus performance improvement. The objective of this study was to use OpERA methodology to undertake a retrospective analysis of the timelines associated with important components of the ANVISA regulatory review process to establish a baseline against which the influence of the new law could be measured. Methods The OpERA tool was used to collect specific milestone data that identify time periods, review stages, and data points for products approved by ANVISA 2013–2016. Results For the 138 products approved in this cohort, the overall median approval time was 795 days. ANVISA and submitting companies will need to reduce their review and response times by approximately half in order to meet the total time goal of 365 days. Conclusions The observations from this baseline study have identified opportunities for ANVISA and sponsor companies to collaborate to reduce regulatory assessment times while assuring the timely approval of safe and effective, quality medicines. These analyses will be repeated to determine how the provisions of the new Law will impact the activities of ANVISA and the extent of sponsors' contributions to this effort.
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- 2020
22. 2019 White Paper On Recent Issues in Bioanalysis: FDA BMV Guidance, ICH M10 BMV Guideline and Regulatory Inputs (<u>Part 2</u> – Recommendations on 2018 FDA BMV Guidance, 2019 ICH M10 BMV Draft Guideline and Regulatory Agencies' Input on Bioanalysis, Biomarkers and Immunogenicity)
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Brian Booth, Lauren Stevenson, Renuka Pillutla, Michael Buonarati, Chris Beaver, Daniela Fraier, Fabio Garofolo, Sam Haidar, Rafiq Islam, Christopher James, John Kadavil, Olga Kavetska, Fumin Li, Christina Satterwhite, Natasha Savoie, Sriram Subramaniam, Nilufer Tampal, Theingi Thway, Eric Woolf, Olivier Le Blaye, Matthew Andisik, Chad Briscoe, Stephanie Cape, Arindam Dasgupta, Sally Fischer, Roger Hayes, John Kamerud, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Corey Nehls, Catherine Soo, Stephen Vinter, Emma Whale, Keyang Xu, Seongeun (Julia) Cho, Anna Edmison, Sean Kassim, Thais Correa Rocha, Jan Welink, Shashi Amur, Abbas Bandukwala, Elana Cherry, Shirley Hopper, Akiko Ishii-Watabe, Susan Kirshner, Kevin Maher, Joao Pedras-Vasconcelos, Yoshiro Saito, Therese Solstad Saunders, Venke Skibeli, Daniela Verthelyi, Yow-Ming Wang, and Haoheng Yan
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Bioanalysis ,Immunogenicity ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Scientific excellence ,General Medicine ,Guideline ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,01 natural sciences ,Method development ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Engineering management ,0302 clinical medicine ,White paper ,Biopharmaceutical ,Business ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics - Abstract
The 2019 13th Workshop on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis (WRIB) took place in New Orleans, LA on 1–5 April 2019 with an attendance of over 1000 representatives from pharmaceutical/biopharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, contract research organizations and regulatory agencies worldwide. WRIB was once again a 5-day, week-long event – a full immersion week of bioanalysis, biomarkers, immunogenicity and gene therapy. As usual, it was specifically designed to facilitate sharing, reviewing, discussing and agreeing on approaches to address the most current issues of interest including both small- and large-molecule bioanalysis involving LCMS, hybrid LBA/LCMS, LBA cell-based/flow cytometry assays and qPCR approaches. This 2019 White Paper encompasses recommendations emerging from the extensive discussions held during the workshop, and is aimed to provide the bioanalytical community with key information and practical solutions on topics and issues addressed, in an effort to enable advances in scientific excellence, improved quality and better regulatory compliance. Due to its length, the 2019 edition of this comprehensive White Paper has been divided into three parts for editorial reasons. This publication (Part 2) covers the recommendations on the 2018 FDA BMV guidance, 2019 ICH M10 BMV draft guideline and regulatory agencies' input on bioanalysis, biomarkers, immunogenicity and gene therapy. Part 1 (Innovation in small molecules and oligonucleotides and mass spectrometry method development strategies for large molecules bioanalysis) and Part 3 (New insights in biomarker assay validation, current and effective strategies for critical reagent management, flow cytometry validation in drug discovery and development and CLSI H62, interpretation of the 2019 FDA immunogenicity guidance and gene therapy bioanalytical challenges) are published in volume 10 of Bioanalysis, issues 22 and 24 (2019), respectively.
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- 2019
23. The Requirements for Additional Strength Biowaivers for Immediate Release Solid Oral Dosage Forms in International Pharmaceutical Regulators Programme Participating Regulators and Organisations: Differences and Commonalities
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Henrike Potthast, Ben Jones, Rami Kariv, Andrew Tam, Chantal Walther, Zulema Rodríguez Martínez, Clare Rodrigues, Miho Kasuga, Matthias Shona Roost, Sang Aeh Park, Joy Van Oudtshoorn, Erwin Guzmán Aurela, Ivana Abalos, Jo-Feng Chi, Milly Divinsky, April C Braddy, Jayoung Kim, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Nayive Rodríguez Rodríguez, Wen-Yi Hung, Tony Jarman, Diego Alejandro Gutierrez Triana, Aya Myoenzono, Eduardo Agostinho Freitas Fernandes, Alfredo García-Arieta, Ryosuke Kuribayashi, Li-Feng Hsu, and Christopher Crane
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Pharmacology ,In vitro dissolution ,lcsh:RM1-950 ,lcsh:RS1-441 ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Harmonization ,Context (language use) ,Bioequivalence ,Multiple dose ,Dosage form ,lcsh:Pharmacy and materia medica ,lcsh:Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,Risk analysis (engineering) ,Immediate release ,Business ,Therapeutic equivalence - Abstract
This article describes an overview of waivers of in vivo bioequivalence studies for additional strengths in the context of the registration of modified release generic products and is a follow-up to the recent publication for the immediate release solid oral dosage forms. The current paper is based on a survey among the participating members of the Bioequivalence Working Group for Generics (BEWGG) of the International Pharmaceutical Regulators Program (IPRP) regarding this topic. Most jurisdictions consider the extrapolation of bioequivalence results obtained with one (most sensitive) strength of a product series as less straightforward for modified release products than for immediate release products. There is consensus that modified release products should demonstrate bioequivalence not only in the fasted state but also in the fed state, but differences exist regarding the necessity of additional multiple dose studies. Fundamental differences between jurisdictions are revealed regarding requirements on the quantitative composition of different strengths and the differentiation of single and multiple unit dosage forms. Differences in terms of in vitro dissolution requirements are obvious, though these are mostly related to possible additional comparative investigations rather than regarding the need for product-specific methods. As with the requirements for immediate release products, harmonization of the various regulations for modified release products is highly desirable to conduct the appropriate studies from a scientific point of view, thus ensuring therapeutic equivalence.
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- 2019
24. 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
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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, and Kwansoo Kim
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,Oral solutions ,Intravenous solutions ,Biopharmaceutics ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Administration, Oral ,RM1-950 ,Bioequivalence ,Waiver ,Dosage form ,RS1-441 ,Solutions ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,Risk analysis (engineering) ,Therapeutic Equivalency ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Drugs, Generic ,Humans ,Business ,Immediate release ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology - 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.
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- 2021
25. 2020 White Paper on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis: BAV Guidance, CLSI H62, Biotherapeutics Stability, Parallelism Testing, CyTOF and Regulatory Feedback (
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Susan, Spitz, Yan, Zhang, Sally, Fischer, Kristina, McGuire, Ulrike, Sommer, Lakshmi, Amaravadi, Abbas, Bandukwala, Steven, Eck, Fabio, Garofolo, Rafiqul, Islam, Gregor, Jordan, Lindsay, King, Yoshiro, Saito, Giane, Sumner, Linda, Terry, Alessandra, Vitaliti, Yow-Ming, Wang, Christine, Grimaldi, Alison, Joyce, Rachel, Palmer, Matthew, Andisik, Marcela, Araya, Mitra, Azadeh, Daniel, Baltrukonis, Rebecca, Elliott, Sam, Haidar, Seema, Kumar, Andrew, Mayer, Florian, Neff, Nisha, Palackal, Kun, Peng, Mohsen Rajabi, Abhari, Christina, Satterwhite, Natasha, Savoie, Catherine, Soo, Stephen, Vinter, Jan, Welink, Weili, Yan, Kevin, Maher, David, Lanham, Sylvie, Bertholet, Naveen, Dakappagari, Christèle, Gonneau, Cherie, Green, Fabian, Junker, Sumit, Kar, Lisa, Patti-Diaz, Shyam, Sarikonda, Megan, McCausland, Priscila Camillo, Teixeira, Vilma, Decman, Jose, Estevam, Michael, Hedrick, Alberto Hidalgo, Robert, Gregory, Hopkins, Sandra, Nuti, Shabnam, Tangri, Richard, Wnek, Suman, Dandamudi, Arindam, Dasgupta, Anna, Edmison, Patrick, Faustino, Michael, McGuinness, Gustavo Mendes, Lima Santos, Tahseen, Mirza, Diaa, Shakleya, Susan, Stojdl, Nilufer, Tampal, Jinhui, Zhang, Elana, Cherry, Isabelle, Cludts, Andrew, Exley, Akiko, Ishii-Watabe, Susan, Kirshner, Joao, Pedras-Vasconcelos, Meiyu, Shen, Richard, Siggers, Therese, Solstad, Daniela, Verthelyi, Haoheng, Yan, and Lucia, Zhang
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Research Report ,Cell- and Tissue-Based Therapy ,Humans ,Biological Assay ,Genetic Therapy ,Biomarkers ,Biotechnology - Abstract
The 14
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- 2021
26. Project Orbis: Global Collaborative Review Program
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Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Agnes Chan, Lauren Tesh Hotaki, Kelly Robinson, Dianne Spillman, Laila Sofia Mouawad, Melissa Hunt, Michael Shum, Clare Rodrigues, Ulrich-Peter Rohr, R. Angelo de Claro, Chantal Walther, Richard Pazdur, Yee Hoo Looi, and Caroline Healy
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Cancer Research ,business.industry ,Center of excellence ,MEDLINE ,Public relations ,Global Health ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Government Agencies ,Oncology ,Median time ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Political science ,Drug Discovery ,Product Surveillance, Postmarketing ,Humans ,Confidentiality ,Disease ,business ,Drug Approval ,Intersectoral Collaboration ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
In 2019, the FDA Oncology Center of Excellence launched Project Orbis, a global collaborative review program to facilitate faster patient access to innovative cancer therapies across multiple countries. Project Orbis aims for concurrent submission, review, and regulatory action for high-impact clinically significant marketing applications among the participating partner countries. Current Project Orbis partners (POP) include the regulatory health authorities (RHA) of Australia, Brazil, Canada, Singapore, and Switzerland. Project Orbis leverages the existing scientific and regulatory partnerships between the various RHA under mutual confidentiality agreements. While FDA serves as the primary coordinator for application selection and review, each country remains fully independent on their final regulatory decision. In the first year of Project Orbis (June 2019 to June 2020), a total of 60 oncology marketing applications were received, representing 16 unique projects, and resulting in 38 approvals. New molecular entities, also known as new active substances, comprised 28% of the received marketing applications. The median time gap between FDA and Orbis submission dates was 0.6 months with a range of −0.8 to 9.0 months. Across the program, the median time-to-approval was similar between FDA (4.2 months, range 0.9–6.9, N = 18) and the POP (4.4 months, range 1.7–6.8, N = 20). Participating countries have signified a strong commitment for continuation and growth of the program. Project Orbis expansion considerations include the addition of more countries and management of more complex applications.
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- 2020
27. Policy of Multisource Drug Products in Latin America: Opportunities and Challenges on the Application of Bioequivalence In Vitro Assays
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Miguel Ángel Cabrera-Pérez, Alexis Aceituno Álvarez, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Mirna Fernández Cervera, Helgi Jung-Cook, and Claudia Miranda-Pérez de Alejo
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Latin Americans ,In vitro dissolution ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Harmonization ,Guideline ,Bioequivalence ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,01 natural sciences ,Interchangeability ,Biopharmaceutics ,010104 statistics & probability ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Biopharmaceutical ,Latin America ,Policy ,Risk analysis (engineering) ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,Therapeutic Equivalency ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Business ,0101 mathematics ,Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (miscellaneous) - Abstract
The replacement of traditional in vivo bioequivalence studies by in vitro dissolution assays, based on the biopharmaceutical classification system (BCS), has emerged as an important tool for demonstrating the interchangeability of multisource products. This paper summarizes the current implementation of the BCS-based biowaiver for the development of multisource products in Latin America, and identifies several challenges and opportunities for greater convergence and application of BCS regulatory requirements. Differences and similarities between the current BCS-based biowaivers’ guidelines proposed by two relevant regulatory agencies for the Latin American region (FDA and WHO) and the new ICH harmonization guideline were identified and compared. An update of the BCS-based biowaiver guideline for Latin American countries was also considered, based on the respective regulatory information on bioequivalence studies, which is publicly available. About 50% of the Latin American countries analyzed have no information on the implementation of any bioequivalence standards, while in the countries where bioequivalence studies are considered, the acceptance and application of BCS-based biowaiver requirements is quite heterogeneous. This situation contrasts with the international trend of global harmonization for BCS-based biowaiver guidance, suggesting the need in Latin America to identify opportunities and overcome challenges to improve the development of BCS-based biowaivers to avoid costly and time-consuming in vivo bioequivalence studies. The study shows that the region is in a position to improve access to safe and effective medicines at a reasonable cost by applying BCS-based biowaiver guidance.
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- 2020
28. 2018 White Paper on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis: ‘A global bioanalytical community perspective on last decade of incurred samples reanalysis (ISR)’ (Part 1 – small molecule regulated bioanalysis, small molecule biomarkers, peptides & oligonucleotide bioanalysis)
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Charles S Hottenstein, Seongeun Julia Cho, Dina Goykhman, Daniela Verthelyi, Jens Sydor, Natasha Savoie, Steven P. Piccoli, Stephanie Fraser, Alex Bulychev, Elana Cherry, Yan Zhang, Anna Edmison, Ingo Röhl, Daniela Fraier, Lieve Dillen, Fabio Garofolo, Yoshiro Saito, Michael H. Buonarati, Adrien Musuku, Timothy Sangster, Barry R Jones, Eric Yang, Ragu Ramanathan, Tate Owen, Nico C van de Merbel, Anton I. Rosenbaum, Christopher Stebbins, Allena J. Ji, Daniel A. Norris, Akiko Ishii-Watabe, Rachel Green, Sean Kassim, Emma Whale, Amanda Wilson, Lina Luo, Neil Henderson, Christopher A. James, Sam Haidar, Alexander Behling, Nicola Hughes, Yuanxin Xu, Scott G. Summerfield, Isabelle Cludts, Stephen Vinter, Tom Verhaeghe, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Robert Dodge, Eric Woolf, Mark Ma, Jan Welink, Kirk Brown, Uma Kavita, and Hyun Gyung Jang
- Subjects
Bioanalysis ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Scientific excellence ,General Medicine ,Community perspective ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,01 natural sciences ,Data science ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Biopharmaceutical ,White paper ,Business ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics - Abstract
The 2018 12th Workshop on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis (12th WRIB) took place in Philadelphia, PA, USA on April 9–13, 2018 with an attendance of over 900 representatives from pharmaceutical/biopharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, contract research organizations and regulatory agencies worldwide. WRIB was once again a 5-day full immersion in bioanalysis, biomarkers and immunogenicity. As usual, it was specifically designed to facilitate sharing, reviewing, discussing and agreeing on approaches to address the most current issues of interest including both small- and large-molecule bioanalysis involving LC–MS, hybrid ligand binding assay (LBA)/LC–MS and LBA/cell-based assays approaches. This 2018 White Paper encompasses recommendations emerging from the extensive discussions held during the workshop, and is aimed to provide the bioanalytical community with key information and practical solutions on topics and issues addressed, in an effort to enable advances in scientific excellence, improved quality and better regulatory compliance. Due to its length, the 2018 edition of this comprehensive White Paper has been divided into three parts for editorial reasons. This publication (Part 1) covers the recommendations for LC–MS for small molecules, peptides, oligonucleotides and small molecule biomarkers. Part 2 (hybrid LBA/LC–MS for biotherapeutics and regulatory agencies’ inputs) and Part 3 (large molecule bioanalysis, biomarkers and immunogenicity using LBA and cell-based assays) are published in volume 10 of Bioanalysis, issues 23 and 24 (2018), respectively.
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- 2018
29. 2017 White Paper on recent issues in bioanalysis: rise of hybrid LBA/LCMS immunogenicity assays (Part 2: hybrid LBA/LCMS biotherapeutics, biomarkers & immunogenicity assays and regulatory agencies’ inputs)
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Hao Jiang, João Pedras-Vasconcelos, Christopher P. Evans, Laurent Cocea, Natasha Savoie, Joe Palandra, Mark G. Qian, Nilufer Tampal, Seongeun Julia Cho, Makoto Niwa, Brian Rago, Hendrik Neubert, Shang-Chiung Chen, Jan Welink, An Song, Kai Liu, Jeff Duggan, Sam Haidar, Jian Wang, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Shashi Amur, Keyang Xu, Olivier Le Blaye, Fabio Garofolo, Lorella Di Donato, Pekka Kurki, Cong Wei, Emma Whale, Amanda Wilson, Yoshiro Saito, Sean Kassim, Mark Bustard, John Kadavil, Stephen Vinter, Eugene Ciccimaro, Matthew Szapacs, Y-J Xue, Rod Mathews, Isabelle Cludts, Celia D’Arienzo, Anita Lee, Akiko Ishii-Watabe, Lieza Danan-Leon, Dian Su, Isabella Berger, Mark Cancilla, Eric Woolf, Ola Saad, and Omar F Laterza
- Subjects
Bioanalysis ,Immunogenicity ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,General Medicine ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,01 natural sciences ,Data science ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,0302 clinical medicine ,White paper ,Biopharmaceutical ,Government regulation ,Business ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics - Abstract
The 2017 11th Workshop on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis (11th WRIB) took place in Los Angeles/Universal City, California on 3–7 April 2017 with participation of close to 750 professionals from pharmaceutical/biopharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, contract research organizations and regulatory agencies worldwide. WRIB was once again a 5-day, weeklong event – a full immersion week of bioanalysis, biomarkers and immunogenicity. As usual, it was specifically designed to facilitate sharing, reviewing, discussing and agreeing on approaches to address the most current issues of interest including both small and large molecule analysis involving LCMS, hybrid ligand binding assay (LBA)/LCMS and LBA approaches. This 2017 White Paper encompasses recommendations emerging from the extensive discussions held during the workshop, and is aimed to provide the bioanalytical community with key information and practical solutions on topics and issues addressed, in an effort to enable advances in scientific excellence, improved quality and better regulatory compliance. Due to its length, the 2017 edition of this comprehensive White Paper has been divided into three parts for editorial reasons. This publication (Part 2) covers the recommendations for biotherapeutics, biomarkers and immunogenicity assays using hybrid LBA/LCMS and regulatory agencies’ inputs. Part 1 (LCMS for small molecules, peptides and small molecule biomarkers) and Part 3 (LBA: immunogenicity, biomarkers and pharmacokinetic assays) are published in Volume 9 of Bioanalysis, issues 22 and 24 (2017), respectively.
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- 2017
30. 2016 White Paper on recent issues in bioanalysis: focus on biomarker assay validation (BAV): (Part 2 – Hybrid LBA/LCMS and input from regulatory agencies)
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Surinder Kaur, Susan Spitz, Jan Welink, Fabio Garofolo, John Kadavil, Christopher P. Evans, Jianing Zeng, Shaolian Zhou, Laurent Cocea, Linzhi Chen, Timothy V Olah, Kara Scheibner, Ronald Bauer, An Song, Carsten Krantz, Mark Bustard, Jason Wakelin-Smith, Nicola Hughes, Yoshiro Saito, Keyang Xu, Lorella Di Donato, Barry R Jones, Rafiq Islam, Joe Palandra, Stephanie Croft, Akiko Ishii-Watabe, Sam Haidar, Anita Lee, Ludovicus Staelens, Nilufer Tampal, João Pedras-Vasconcelos, Fabrizio Galliccia, Natasha Savoie, Jeff Duggan, Eric Thomas, Stephen Vinter, and Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos
- Subjects
Bioanalysis ,Consensus Development Conferences as Topic ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Validation Studies as Topic ,Ligands ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,01 natural sciences ,Mass Spectrometry ,Analytical Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Government Agencies ,0302 clinical medicine ,White paper ,Humans ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Immunoassay ,business.industry ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Scientific excellence ,General Medicine ,Data science ,Antibodies, Anti-Idiotypic ,0104 chemical sciences ,Biotechnology ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Biopharmaceutical ,Business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
The 2016 10th Workshop on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis (10th WRIB) took place in Orlando, Florida with participation of close to 700 professionals from pharmaceutical/biopharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, contract research organizations, and regulatory agencies worldwide. WRIB was once again a 5-day, weeklong event – A Full Immersion Week of Bioanalysis including Biomarkers and Immunogenicity. As usual, it is specifically designed to facilitate sharing, reviewing, discussing and agreeing on approaches to address the most current issues of interest including both small and large molecules involving LCMS, hybrid LBA/LCMS, and LBA approaches, with the focus on biomarkers and immunogenicity. This 2016 White Paper encompasses recommendations emerging from the extensive discussions held during the workshop, and is aimed to provide the bioanalytical community with key information and practical solutions on topics and issues addressed, in an effort to enable advances in scientific excellence, improved quality and better regulatory compliance. This White Paper is published in 3 parts due to length. This part (Part 2) discusses the recommendations for Hybrid LBA/LCMS and regulatory inputs from major global health authorities. Parts 1 (small molecule bioanalysis using LCMS) and Part 3 (large molecule bioanalysis using LBA, biomarkers and immunogenicity) have been published in the Bioanalysis journal, issues 22 and 23, respectively.
- Published
- 2016
31. 2016 White Paper on recent issues in bioanalysis: focus on biomarker assay validation (BAV): (Part 3 – LBA, biomarkers and immunogenicity)
- Author
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Akiko Ishii-Watabe, Albert Torri, Rong Zeng, Daniel Kramer, Steven P. Piccoli, David J. Uhlinger, Stephanie Fraser, Patricia Siguenza, Afshin Safavi, John Smeraglia, Apollon Papadimitriou, Yan G. Ni, Susan M. Richards, Kyra J. Cowan, Alessandra Vitaliti, Lakshmi Amaravadi, Boris Gorovits, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, John Kadavil, Sam Haidar, Jan Welink, Yongchang Qiu, João Pedras-Vasconcelos, Chan C. Whiting, Li Xue, Christina Satterwhite, John Kamerud, Swati Gupta, Natasha Savoie, Herbert Birnboeck, Yoshiro Saito, Paul Rhyne, Fabrizio Galliccia, Laurent Cocea, Stephanie Croft, Bonnie Wu, Theingi M. Thway, Virginia Litwin, Corinna Krinos-Fiorotti, Darshana Jani, Charles S Hottenstein, Vinita Gupta, Roland F Staack, Fabio Garofolo, Eginhard Schick, Kara Scheibner, Meena Subramanyam, John Allinson, Renuka Pillutla, Robert Nelson, Flora Berisha, Martin Ullmann, and Giane Sumner
- Subjects
Bioanalysis ,Macromolecular Substances ,Consensus Development Conferences as Topic ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Validation Studies as Topic ,Ligands ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,01 natural sciences ,Mass Spectrometry ,Analytical Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Government Agencies ,0302 clinical medicine ,White paper ,Humans ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,business.industry ,Immunogenicity ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Scientific excellence ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,General Medicine ,Data science ,0104 chemical sciences ,Biotechnology ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Biopharmaceutical ,Business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
The 2016 10th Workshop on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis (10th WRIB) took place in Orlando, Florida with participation of close to 700 professionals from pharmaceutical/biopharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, contract research organizations, and regulatory agencies worldwide. WRIB was once again a weeklong event – A Full Immersion Week of Bioanalysis for PK, Biomarkers and Immunogenicity. As usual, it is specifically designed to facilitate sharing, reviewing, discussing and agreeing on approaches to address the most current issues of interest including both small and large molecules involving LCMS, hybrid LBA/LCMS, and LBA approaches, with the focus on PK, biomarkers and immunogenicity. This 2016 White Paper encompasses recommendations emerging from the extensive discussions held during the workshop, and is aimed to provide the bioanalytical community with key information and practical solutions on topics and issues addressed, in an effort to enable advances in scientific excellence, improved quality and better regulatory compliance. This White Paper is published in 3 parts due to length. This part (Part 3) discusses the recommendations for large molecule bioanalysis using LBA, biomarkers and immunogenicity. Parts 1 (small molecule bioanalysis using LCMS) and Part 2 (Hybrid LBA/LCMS and regulatory inputs from major global health authorities) have been published in the Bioanalysis journal, issues 22 and 23, respectively.
- Published
- 2016
32. Internal Standards (IS) monitoring in CROs: Anvisa perspective
- Author
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Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos and Eduardo Agostinho Freitas Fernandes
- Subjects
Bioanalysis ,Health Policy ,Research ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Perspective (graphical) ,General Medicine ,Bioequivalence ,Reference Standards ,Analytical Chemistry ,Social Control, Formal ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Engineering ethics ,Business ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics - Published
- 2019
33. Overview of Brazilian Requirements for Therapeutic Equivalence of Orally Inhaled and Nasal Drug Products
- Author
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Marcia Cavallin Silva, Leticia Grecchi, Lee M. Nagao, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Bruna Nardy Valadares, and Helena Silveira Costa
- Subjects
Drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Pharmacology toxicology ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Pharmacy ,02 engineering and technology ,Aquatic Science ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,Food and drug administration ,03 medical and health sciences ,Government Agencies ,0302 clinical medicine ,Administration, Inhalation ,Drug Discovery ,Agency (sociology) ,Humans ,Medicine ,Administration, Intranasal ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common ,Therapeutic equivalence ,Ecology ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,United States ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,Therapeutic Equivalency ,Family medicine ,Normative ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Brazil - Abstract
Brazil has established a framework for provision of generic pharmaceuticals including for orally inhaled and nasal drug products (OINDP) to its populace. This includes the development of guidelines or "resolutions" and normative instructions describing the Brazilian medicines agency's (Anvisa) expectations for demonstrating OINDP therapeutic equivalence. The Anvisa regulatory framework for OINDP therapeutic equivalence, challenges, and comparisons with the US Food and Drug Administration and European Medicines Agency approaches are assessed and discussed.
- Published
- 2019
34. Population pharmacokinetics of orally administrated bromopride: Focus on the absorption process
- Author
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Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Elza Kimura, Marcos Luciano Bruschi, Malidi Ahamadi, Bibiana Verlindo de Araújo, Larissa Lachi-Silva, Aline Bergesch Barth, and Andréa Diniz
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.drug_class ,Metoclopramide ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Administration, Oral ,Biological Availability ,02 engineering and technology ,Absorption (skin) ,Population pharmacokinetics ,Pharmacology ,Bioequivalence ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,Dosage form ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pharmacokinetics ,Bromopride ,medicine ,Antiemetic ,Humans ,Retrospective Studies ,Volume of distribution ,business.industry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Kinetics ,Gastrointestinal Absorption ,Antiemetics ,Female ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Brazil ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Bromopride is a prokinetic and antiemetic drug used to treat nausea and vomiting. Although its prescription is common in Brazil, there is a lack of studies about bromopride pharmacokinetics. Therefore, the aims of this study were to investigate the population pharmacokinetics of bromopride and to evaluate the influence of covariates on its absorption. This study is a retrospective analysis of data collected from bioequivalence studies. The data was modeled using MONOLIX 2018R2. Assuming one-compartment and linear elimination, the absorption phase was evaluated with different structural models. The model of sequential first- and zero-order with combined error and exponential inter-individual variability in all parameters best described the atypical absorption profile of bromopride. Population estimates were first-order absorption rate (ka) of 0.08 h − 1, fraction of dose absorbed by first-order (Fr) of 32.60%, duration of the zero-order absorption (Tk0) of 0.88 h with latency time (Tlag) of 0.47 h, volume of distribution of 230 l and clearance of 46.80 l h − 1. Bodyweight affects Tk0, dosage form was found to correlate with Tk0 and Tlag, while gender affects Tlag. However, simulations evaluating the clinical importance of these covariates on steady-state indicated minimal changes on bromopride exposure. The mixed absorption model was reasonable to describe the absorption process of bromopride because it had the flexibility to fit multiple-peaks profile and shows good agreement with physicochemical properties of drug.
- Published
- 2019
35. A Survey of the Regulatory Requirements for the Acceptance of Foreign Comparator Products by Participating Regulators and Organizations of the International Generic Drug Regulators Programme
- Author
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April C Braddy, Arno Nolting, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Sang Aeh Park, Yusuke Okada, Wen-Yi Hung, Mitchell R. Clarke, Alfredo Garcia Arieta, Chantal Pfäffli, Joy Van Oudtshoorn, Christopher Crane, Ji Myoung Kim, Ryosuke Kuribayashi, Zulema Rodríguez Martínez, Clare Rodrigues, Craig Simon, Iván Omar Calderón Lojero, and Diego Alejandro Gutierrez Triana
- Subjects
lcsh:RS1-441 ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Administration, Oral ,Legislation ,02 engineering and technology ,Bioequivalence ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,Essential medicines ,lcsh:Pharmacy and materia medica ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Generic drug ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Drugs, Generic ,Humans ,European union ,media_common ,Pharmacology ,Public economics ,Jurisdiction ,lcsh:RM1-950 ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Legislation, Drug ,Product (business) ,lcsh:Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,Therapeutic Equivalency ,Business ,0210 nano-technology ,Administration (government) - Abstract
The acceptance of foreign comparator products is the most limiting factor for the development and regulatory assessment of generic medicines marketed globally. Bioequivalence studies have to be repeated with the local comparator products of each jurisdiction because it is unknown if the comparators of the different countries are the same product, with the consequent duplication of efforts by regulators and industry alike. The regulatory requirements on the acceptability of foreign comparator products of oral dosage forms differ between countries participating in the Bioequivalence Working Group for Generics of the International Pharmaceutical Regulators Programme. Brazil, Colombia, the European Union member States, Japan, Mexico, South Korea and the United States only accept bioequivalence studies with their local comparator. In contrast, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Singapore, South Africa, Switzerland and Taiwan accept studies with foreign comparators under certain conditions. Canada limits its use to highly soluble drugs with a wide therapeutic range in immediate release products. Australia requires a comparison of the quantitative composition. In contrast, there are fewer restrictions on the acceptance of foreign comparators in New Zealand, Singapore, South Africa, Switzerland and Taiwan. For the WHO Prequalification of Medicines and for developing generics of the essential medicines the WHO lists comparators from different countries. In conclusion, there is currently no consensus amongst regulators on the acceptability of foreign comparator products.
- Published
- 2019
36. Dealing with nanosafety around the globe—Regulation vs. innovation
- Author
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Ana Proykova, Matthias G. Wacker, and Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Asia ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Globe ,Legislation ,02 engineering and technology ,International trade ,Global Health ,Consumer safety ,03 medical and health sciences ,Human health ,Environmental protection ,medicine ,Humans ,Nanotechnology ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,European Union ,European union ,media_common ,business.industry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,United States ,Nanostructures ,030104 developmental biology ,Balance (accounting) ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Consumer Product Safety ,Food products ,Business ,0210 nano-technology ,Brazil - Abstract
In recent years, nanotechnology has become increasingly important for global industries. Today, many nanomaterials are used as ingredients in cosmetics, food products, medical devices and pharmaceuticals. In some cases they exert unexpected risks and potentially pose a threat to human health and the environment. Regulatory authorities all over the world carefully observe recent developments in this area, striving to find a balance between consumer safety and the interests of the industry. In the following, the current legislation in the United States of America, the European Union, Asia and Brazil will be presented. Further, the requirements defined by these different authorities and methodology to investigate relevant characteristics of nanomaterials will be discussed.
- Published
- 2016
37. 2018 White Paper on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis: focus on immunogenicity assays by hybrid LBA/LCMS and regulatory feedback (Part 2 - PK, PDADA assays by hybrid LBA/LCMSregulatory agencies' inputs on bioanalysis, biomarkers and immunogenicity)
- Author
-
Seongeun Julia Cho, Luca Ferrari, Jiang Wu, Yow-Ming Wang, Shashi Amur, Hongbin Yu, Matthew Szapacs, Daniela Verthelyi, Hendrik Neubert, Haoheng Yan, Anna Edmison, Fabio Garofolo, Naidong Weng, Stephen Vinter, Ludovicus Staelens, Pekka Kurki, Shaolian Zhou, Emma Whale, Yoshiro Saito, João Pedras-Vasconcelos, Robert Dodge, Akiko Ishii-Watabe, Steven P. Piccoli, Natasha Savoie, Joe Palandra, Stephanie Fraser, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Lorella Di Donato, Elana Cherry, Sam Haidar, Sarah Rogstad, Jan Welink, Timothy V Olah, Anita Lee, Sean Kassim, Linzhi Chen, Isabelle Cludts, Meenu Wadhwa, Shirley Hopper, Timothy W. Sikorski, Omar F Laterza, Eric Woolf, Ola Saad, Scott Hottenstein, Susan M. Spitz, Gilles Miscoria, and Stephen C. Alley
- Subjects
Bioanalysis ,Legislation, Medical ,Immunogenicity ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Scientific excellence ,General Medicine ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,01 natural sciences ,Data science ,United States ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,0302 clinical medicine ,White paper ,Biopharmaceutical ,Biological Assay ,Business ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,Antigens ,PK/PD models ,Biomarkers - Abstract
The 2018 12th Workshop on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis took place in Philadelphia, PA, USA on April 9–13, 2018 with an attendance of over 900 representatives from pharmaceutical/biopharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, contract research organizations and regulatory agencies worldwide. WRIB was once again a 5-day, week-long event – a full immersion week of bioanalysis, biomarkers and immunogenicity. As usual, it was specifically designed to facilitate sharing, reviewing, discussing and agreeing on approaches to address the most current issues of interest including both small- and large-molecule bioanalysis involving LCMS, hybrid LBA/LCMS and LBA/cell-based assays approaches. This 2018 White Paper encompasses recommendations emerging from the extensive discussions held during the workshop and is aimed to provide the bioanalytical community with key information and practical solutions on topics and issues addressed, in an effort to enable advances in scientific excellence, improved quality and better regulatory compliance. Due to its length, the 2018 edition of this comprehensive White Paper has been divided into three parts for editorial reasons. This publication (Part 2) covers the recommendations for PK, PD and ADA assays by hybrid LBA/LCMS and regulatory agencies’ input. Part 1 (LCMS for small molecules, peptides, oligonucleotides and small molecule biomarkers) and Part 3 (LBA/cell-based assays: immunogenicity, biomarkers and PK assays) are published in volume 10 of Bioanalysis, issues 22 and 24 (2018), respectively.
- Published
- 2018
38. 2017 White Paper: rise of hybrid LBA/LCMS immunogenicity assays (Part 2: hybrid LBA/LCMS biotherapeutics, biomarkersimmunogenicity assays and regulatory agencies' inputs)
- Author
-
Hendrik, Neubert, An, Song, Anita, Lee, Cong, Wei, Jeff, Duggan, Keyang, Xu, Eric, Woolf, Chris, Evans, Joe, Palandra, Omar, Laterza, Shashi, Amur, Isabella, Berger, Mark, Bustard, Mark, Cancilla, Shang-Chiung, Chen, Seongeun Julia, Cho, Eugene, Ciccimaro, Isabelle, Cludts, Laurent, Cocea, Celia, D'Arienzo, Lieza, Danan-Leon, Lorella Di, Donato, Fabio, Garofolo, Sam, Haidar, Akiko, Ishii-Watabe, Hao, Jiang, John, Kadavil, Sean, Kassim, Pekka, Kurki, Olivier Le, Blaye, Kai, Liu, Rod, Mathews, Gustavo Mendes, Lima Santos, Makoto, Niwa, João, Pedras-Vasconcelos, Mark, Qian, Brian, Rago, Ola, Saad, Yoshiro, Saito, Natasha, Savoie, Dian, Su, Matthew, Szapacs, Nilufer, Tampal, Stephen, Vinter, Jian, Wang, Jan, Welink, Emma, Whale, Amanda, Wilson, and Y-J, Xue
- Subjects
Immunity, Active ,Consensus Development Conferences as Topic ,Government Regulation ,Ligands ,Biomarkers ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Mass Spectrometry - Abstract
The 2017 11th Workshop on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis (11th WRIB) took place in Los Angeles/Universal City, California on 3-7 April 2017 with participation of close to 750 professionals from pharmaceutical/biopharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, contract research organizations and regulatory agencies worldwide. WRIB was once again a 5-day, weeklong event - a full immersion week of bioanalysis, biomarkers and immunogenicity. As usual, it was specifically designed to facilitate sharing, reviewing, discussing and agreeing on approaches to address the most current issues of interest including both small and large molecule analysis involving LCMS, hybrid ligand binding assay (LBA)/LCMS and LBA approaches. This 2017 White Paper encompasses recommendations emerging from the extensive discussions held during the workshop, and is aimed to provide the bioanalytical community with key information and practical solutions on topics and issues addressed, in an effort to enable advances in scientific excellence, improved quality and better regulatory compliance. Due to its length, the 2017 edition of this comprehensive White Paper has been divided into three parts for editorial reasons. This publication (Part 2) covers the recommendations for biotherapeutics, biomarkers and immunogenicity assays using hybrid LBA/LCMS and regulatory agencies' inputs. Part 1 (LCMS for small molecules, peptides and small molecule biomarkers) and Part 3 (LBA: immunogenicity, biomarkers and pharmacokinetic assays) are published in Volume 9 of Bioanalysis, issues 22 and 24 (2017), respectively.
- Published
- 2017
39. 2017 White Paper on recent issues in bioanalysis: aren't BMV guidance/guidelines 'Scientific'? (Part 1 - LCMS: small molecules, peptides and small molecule biomarkers)
- Author
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Laura Coppola, Emma Whale, Chad Briscoe, Eric Yang, Jeff Duggan, Ragu Ramanathan, Stephen Vinter, Rafiq Islam, Mark E. Arnold, Rand Jenkins, Akiko Ishii-Watabe, Brad Ackermann, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Nicola Hughes, Daniela Fraier, Adrien Musuku, Hanlan Liu, Scott G. Summerfield, Lucinda Hittle, Sean Kassim, Rachel Green, Sam Haidar, Sekhar Surapaneni, Yoshiro Saito, Mark Bustard, Nilufer Tampal, Olga Kavetska, Jens Sydor, Stephen C. Alley, John T Mehl, Tom Verhaeghe, Brian Rago, Michael H. Buonarati, Olivier Le Blaye, Wenkui Li, Isabella Berger, Mark Cancilla, Eric Woolf, Matthew Szapacs, Seongeun Julia Cho, Natasha Savoie, John Kadavil, Fabio Garofolo, Barry R Jones, Anita Lee, and Jan Welink
- Subjects
Bioanalysis ,Consensus Development Conferences as Topic ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Guidelines as Topic ,Bioinformatics ,Ligands ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,01 natural sciences ,Mass Spectrometry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Small Molecule Libraries ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,White paper ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Scientific excellence ,General Medicine ,Data science ,0104 chemical sciences ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Biopharmaceutical ,Business ,Peptides ,Biomarkers - Abstract
The 2017 11th Workshop on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis (11th WRIB) took place in Los Angeles/Universal City, California from 3 April 2017 to 7 April 2017 with participation of close to 750 professionals from pharmaceutical/biopharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, contract research organizations and regulatory agencies worldwide. WRIB was once again a 5-day, weeklong event – A Full Immersion Week of Bioanalysis, Biomarkers and Immunogenicity. As usual, it was specifically designed to facilitate sharing, reviewing, discussing and agreeing on approaches to address the most current issues of interest including both small and large molecule analysis involving LCMS, hybrid LBA/LCMS and ligand-binding assay (LBA) approaches. This 2017 White Paper encompasses recommendations emerging from the extensive discussions held during the workshop, and is aimed to provide the bioanalytical community with key information and practical solutions on topics and issues addressed, in an effort to enable advances in scientific excellence, improved quality and better regulatory compliance. Due to its length, the 2017 edition of this comprehensive White Paper has been divided into three parts for editorial reasons. This publication (Part 1) covers the recommendations for Small Molecules, Peptides and Small Molecule Biomarkers using LCMS. Part 2 (Biotherapeutics, Biomarkers and Immunogenicity Assays using Hybrid LBA/LCMS and Regulatory Agencies’ Inputs) and Part 3 (LBA: Immunogenicity, Biomarkers and PK Assays) are published in volume 9 of Bioanalysis, issues 23 and 24 (2017), respectively.
- Published
- 2017
40. 2016 White Paper on recent issues in bioanalysis: focus on biomarker assay validation (BAV) (Part 1 - small molecules, peptides and small molecule biomarkers by LCMS)
- Author
-
Ragu Ramanathan, Christopher P. Evans, Rachel Sun, Eugene Ciccimaro, Corey Nehls, Ronald Bauer, Eric Yang, Adrien Musuku, Rand Jenkins, Lloyd King, Daniela Fraier, Jason Wakelin-Smith, Chad Briscoe, Dieter M. Drexler, Christopher A. James, Michael H. Buonarati, Wenkui Li, Jan Welink, Laura Coppola, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Stephanie Cape, Dina Goykhman, Rafiq Islam, Yoshiro Saito, Scott G. Summerfield, Raj Dodda, Steve Vinter, Amanda Wilson, Nicola Hughes, Nilufer Tampal, Stephanie Croft, Neil Addock, Qin Yue, Natasha Savoie, Mark Bustard, Fabio Garofolo, Eric Woolf, Mark E. Arnold, John Kadavil, Jens Sydor, and Luca Ferrari
- Subjects
Engineering ,Bioanalysis ,business.industry ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,General Medicine ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,01 natural sciences ,Data science ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,Biotechnology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Biopharmaceutical ,White paper ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,business - Abstract
The 2016 10th Workshop on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis (10th WRIB) took place in Orlando, Florida with participation of close to 700 professionals from pharmaceutical/biopharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, contract research organizations, and regulatory agencies worldwide. WRIB was once again a 5-day, weeklong event – A Full Immersion Week of Bioanalysis including Biomarkers and Immunogenicity. As usual, it was specifically designed to facilitate sharing, reviewing, discussing and agreeing on approaches to address the most current issues of interest including both small and large molecule analysis involving LCMS, hybrid LBA/LCMS, and LBA approaches, with the focus on biomarkers and immunogenicity. This 2016 White Paper encompasses recommendations emerging from the extensive discussions held during the workshop, and is aimed to provide the bioanalytical community with key information and practical solutions on topics and issues addressed, in an effort to enable advances in scientific excellence, improved quality and better regulatory compliance. This white paper is published in 3 parts due to length. This part (Part 1) discusses the recommendations for small molecules, peptides and small molecule biomarkers by LCMS. Part 2 (Hybrid LBA/LCMS and regulatory inputs from major global health authorities) and Part 3 (large molecule bioanalysis using LBA, biomarkers and immunogenicity) will be published in the Bioanalysis journal, issue 23.
- Published
- 2016
41. 2015 White Paper on recent issues in bioanalysis: focus on new technologies and biomarkers (Part 2 - hybrid LBA/LCMS and input from regulatory agencies)
- Author
-
Lin-Zhi Chen, Jan Welink, Ann Lévesque, Timothy V Olah, Jaap Wieling, Stephen Vinter, Natasha Savoie, Olivier Le Blaye, Susan Spitz, Jian Wang, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Mark Bustard, Fabio Garofolo, Leo Kirkovsky, Stephen C. Alley, Sam Haidar, Emma Whale, Hendrik Neubert, Bärbel Witte, Omar F Laterza, Lee Abberley, Nilufer Tampal, Noriko Katori, Brad Ackermann, Julia Heinrich, Surinder Kaur, Michael Skelly, Patricia Brown-Augsburger, Nicola Hughes, and Matthew Szapacs
- Subjects
Bioanalysis ,Emerging technologies ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Scientific excellence ,Nanotechnology ,General Medicine ,History, 21st Century ,Analytical Chemistry ,Biopharmaceutics ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Engineering management ,White paper ,Biopharmaceutical ,Humans ,Business ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,Biomarkers ,Biotechnology - Abstract
The 2015 9th Workshop on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis (9th WRIB) took place in Miami, Florida with participation of over 600 professionals from pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, contract research organizations and regulatory agencies worldwide. It is once again a 5-day week long event – a full immersion bioanalytical week – specifically designed to facilitate sharing, reviewing, discussing and agreeing on approaches to address the most current issues of interest in bioanalysis. The topics covered included both small and large molecules, and involved LCMS, hybrid LBA/LCMS, LBA approaches including the focus on biomarkers and immunogenicity. This 2015 White Paper encompasses recommendations that emerged from the extensive discussions held during the workshop, and is aimed at providing the bioanalytical community with key information and practical solutions on topics and issues addressed, in an effort to advance scientific excellence, improve quality and deliver better regulatory compliance. Due to its length, the 2015 edition of this comprehensive White Paper has been divided into three parts. Part 2 covers the recommendations for hybrid LBA/LCMS and regulatory agencies’ inputs. Part 1 (small molecule bioanalysis using LCMS) and Part 3 (large molecule bioanalysis using LBA, biomarkers and immunogenicity) will be published in volume 7 of Bioanalysis, issues 22 and 24, respectively.
- Published
- 2015
42. A Survey of the Regulatory Requirements for BCS-Based Biowaivers for Solid Oral Dosage Forms by Participating Regulators and Organisations of the International Generic Drug Regulators Programme
- Author
-
Arno Nolting, Peter Bachmann, Iván Omar Calderón Lojero, Diego Alejandro Gutierrez Triana, Wen-Yi Hung, April C Braddy, Craig Simon, Nancy Arciniegas Leal, Ji Myoung Kim, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Joy Van Oudtshoorn, Ryosuke Kuribayashi, Yusuke Okada, Christopher Crane, Mitchell R. Clarke, Sang Aeh Park, Zulema Rodríguez Martínez, Chantal Pfäffli, Clare Rodrigues, and Alfredo García-Arieta
- Subjects
Dosage Forms ,Pharmacology ,business.industry ,International Cooperation ,Biopharmaceutics ,lcsh:RM1-950 ,Administration, Oral ,lcsh:RS1-441 ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Guidance documents ,Public relations ,Bioequivalence ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,lcsh:Pharmacy and materia medica ,03 medical and health sciences ,lcsh:Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Generic drug ,Humans ,Psychology ,business ,Therapeutic equivalence - Abstract
Purpose: The Biopharmaceutics Classification System (BCS) based biowaiver is a scientific model which enables the substitution of in vivo bioequivalence studies with in vitro data as evidence of therapeutic equivalence subject to certain conditions. Despite being based on the same principles, BCS-based biowaivers are interpreted and regulated differently among international regulatory agencies. In this survey, the Bioequivalence Working Group (BEWG) of the International Generic Drug Regulators Programme (IGDRP) compared the criteria for BCS-based biowaivers applied by the participating regulators and organisations. Methods: Differences and similarities regarding solubility, permeability, dissolution, excipients and fixed-dose combination products, were identified and compared in a detailed survey of each participant’s criteria for BCS-based biowaivers. These criteria were determined based upon the participants’ respective regulatory guidance documents, policies and practices. Results: This review has, with the exception of two participants who do not accept BCS-based biowaivers, revealed that most IGDRP participants interpret the BCS principles and conditions similarly but notable differences exist in the application of these principles. Conclusion: Although many similarities exist, this review identifies several opportunities for greater convergence of regulatory requirements amongst the surveyed jurisdictions. This article is open to POST-PUBLICATION REVIEW. Registered readers (see “For Readers”) may comment by clicking on ABSTRACT on the issue’s contents page
- Published
- 2018
43. 2015 White Paper on recent issues in bioanalysis: focus on new technologies and biomarkers (Part 1 - small molecules by LCMS)
- Author
-
Bob Nicholson, Nico C van de Merbel, Bärbel Witte, Eric Woolf, Roger Hayes, Natasha Savoie, Min Meng, Jan Welink, Olivier Le Blaye, Michael Skelly, Nilufer Tampal, Wenkui Li, Stephen Vinter, Guowen Liu, Noriko Katori, Luis Sojo, Eric Fluhler, Mark E. Arnold, Katja Heinig, Sam Haidar, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Laura Coppola, Raj Dhodda, Enaksha R Wickremsinhe, Emma Whale, Amanda Wilson, Christopher P. Evans, Carol Gleason, Tom Verhaeghe, Fabio Garofolo, Mark Bustard, and Nicola Hughes
- Subjects
Engineering ,Bioanalysis ,business.industry ,Emerging technologies ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Scientific excellence ,Chromatography liquid ,Nanotechnology ,General Medicine ,Data science ,Mass Spectrometry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Small Molecule Libraries ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Biopharmaceutical ,White paper ,Humans ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,business ,Biomarkers ,Chromatography, Liquid - Abstract
The 2015 9th Workshop on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis (9th WRIB) took place in Miami, Florida with participation of over 600 professionals from pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, contract research organizations and regulatory agencies worldwide. It is once again a 5-day week long event – a full immersion bioanalytical week – specifically designed to facilitate sharing, reviewing, discussing and agreeing on approaches to address the most current issues of interest in bioanalysis. The topics covered included both small and large molecules, and involved LCMS, hybrid LBA/LCMS, LBA approaches including the focus on biomarkers and immunogenicity. This 2015 White Paper encompasses recommendations that emerged from the extensive discussions held during the workshop, and is aimed to provide the bioanalytical community with key information and practical solutions on topics and issues addressed, in an effort to advance scientific excellence, improve quality and deliver better regulatory compliance. Due to its length, the 2015 edition of this comprehensive White Paper has been divided into three parts. Part 1 covers the recommendations for small molecule bioanalysis using LCMS. Part 2 (hybrid LBA/LCMS and regulatory agencies’ inputs) and Part 3 (large molecule bioanalysis using LBA, biomarkers and immunogenicity) will also be published in volume 7 of Bioanalysis, issues 23 and 24, respectively.
- Published
- 2015
44. Regulatory Considerations for Approval of Generic Inhalation Drug Products in the US, EU, Brazil, China, and India
- Author
-
Abhijit Vaidya, Shuguang Hou, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Svetlana Lyapustina, Shrinivas Madhukar Purandare, Alfredo García-Arieta, Sarah Lu, Bhawana Saluja, Ying Li, Jaideep Gogtay, Juliet Rebello, and Sau L. Lee
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Public economics ,business.industry ,Chemistry, Pharmaceutical ,Population ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Pharmacology ,Bioequivalence ,Meeting Report ,Documentation ,Therapeutic Equivalency ,Acceptance testing ,Health care ,Administration, Inhalation ,Medicine ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Drugs, Generic ,Humans ,Product (category theory) ,European union ,business ,education ,Emerging markets ,Drug Approval ,media_common - Abstract
This article describes regulatory approaches for approval of “generic” orally inhaled drug products (OIDPs) in the United States, European Union, Brazil, China and India. While registration of a generic OIDP in any given market may require some documentation of the formulation and device similarity to the “original” product as well as comparative testing of in vitro characteristics and in vivo performance, the specific documentation approaches, tests and acceptance criteria vary by the country. This divergence is due to several factors, including unique cultural, historical, legal and economic circumstances of each region; the diverse healthcare and regulatory systems; the different definitions of key terms such as “generic” and “reference” drug; the acknowledged absence of in vitro in vivo correlations for OIDPs; and the scientific and statistical issues related to OIDP testing (such as how best to account for the batch-to-batch variability of the Reference product, whether to use average bioequivalence or population bioequivalence in the statistical analysis of results, whether to use healthy volunteers or patients for pharmacokinetic studies, and which pharmacodynamic or clinical end-points should be used). As a result of this discrepancy, there are ample opportunities for the regulatory and scientific communities around the world to collaborate in developing more consistent, better aligned, science-based approaches. Moving in that direction will require both further research and further open discussion of the pros and cons of various approaches.
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- 2015
45. An Update of the Brazilian Regulatory Bioequivalence Recommendations for Approval of Generic Topical Dermatological Drug Products
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Kelen Carine Costa Soares, Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos, Guilherme M. Gelfuso, and Tais Gratieri
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Drug ,Therapeutic equivalency ,business.industry ,Administration, Topical ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Pharmacology toxicology ,Drugs generic ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Pharmacy ,Accounting ,Bioequivalence ,Pharmacology ,Regulatory Note ,Health surveillance ,Therapeutic Equivalency ,Drug approval ,Drugs, Generic ,Humans ,Medicine ,Dermatologic Agents ,business ,Drug Approval ,Brazil ,media_common - Abstract
This note aims to clarify the Brazilian regulatory bioequivalence recommendations for approval of generic topical dermatological drug products, since the legal framework of the “Brazilian Health Surveillance Agency” (ANVISA) is only available in Portuguese. According to Resolutions RE n. 1170 (December 19th 2006) and RDC n. 37 (August 3rd 2011) in Brazil, only in vitro studies are required for registration of generic topical dermatological drug products. Current Regulatory Agenda of ANVISA, which contains possible future resolutions to be revised over 2015–2016, includes a discussion on biowaiver requirements and on possible in vitro and in vivo comparability tests for these products.
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- 2015
46. A code for clinical trials centralized monitoring, sharing open-science solutions to high-quality data.
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Daher, André, Castro-Alves, Júlio, Amparo, Leandro, Pacheco de Moraes, Natalia, Araújo dos Santos, Thaís Regina, Gram dos Santos, Karla Regina, Siqueira do Valle, Cristiane, Hermoso, Maria, Catoia Varela, Margareth, and Correa Oliveira, Rodrigo
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CLINICAL trials monitoring ,MEDICAL coding ,DATA libraries ,OPEN scholarship ,CLINICAL trials - Abstract
Monitoring of clinical trials is critical to the protection of human subjects and the conduct of high-quality research. Even though the adoption of risk-based monitoring (RBM) has been suggested for many years, the RBM approach has been less widespread than expected. Centralized monitoring is one of the RMB pillars, together with remote-site monitoring visits, reduced Source Data Verification (SDV) and Source Document Reviews (SDR). The COVID-19 pandemic promoted disruptions in the conduction of clinical trials, as on-site monitoring visits were adjourned. In this context, the transition to RBM by all actors involved in clinical trials has been encouraged. In order to ensure the highest quality of data within a COVID-19 clinical trial, a centralized monitoring tool alongside Case Report Forms (CRFs) and synchronous automated routines were developed at the clinical research platform, Fiocruz, Brazilian Ministry of Health. This paper describes how these tools were developed, their features, advantages, and limitations. The software codes, and the CRFs are available at the Fiocruz Data Repository for Research—Arca Dados, reaffirming Fiocruz's commitment to Open Science practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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47. Academic league of Cannabis sciences: an initiative to discuss medicinal Cannabis.
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Carneiro Montes, Guilherme, Lima Fontes-Dantas, Fabrícia, Alves de Carvalho, Filipe Eloi, and de Simas Gonçalves, Vitória Macario
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ACADEMIC medical centers ,SOCIAL media ,DEBATE ,RESEARCH methodology ,HEALTH literacy ,MEDICAL marijuana ,ACCESS to information ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HEALTH promotion ,DIFFUSION of innovations - Abstract
Copyright of Saúde Coletiva is the property of MPM Comunicacao and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
- Full Text
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48. 2021 White Paper on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis: Mass Spec of Proteins, Extracellular Vesicles, CRISPR, Chiral Assays, Oligos; Nanomedicines Bioanalysis; ICH M10 Section 7.1; Non-Liquid & Rare Matrices; Regulatory Inputs (Part 1A – Recommendations on Endogenous Compounds, Small Molecules, Complex Methods, Regulated Mass Spec of Large Molecules, Small Molecule, PoC & Part 1B - Regulatory Agencies' Inputs on Bioanalysis, Biomarkers, Immunogenicity, Gene & Cell Therapy and Vaccine)
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Kaur, Surinder, Alley, Stephen C, Szapacs, Matt, Wilson, Amanda, Ciccimaro, Eugene, Su, Dian, Henderson, Neil, Chen, Linzhi, Garofolo, Fabio, Hengel, Shawna, Jian, Wenying, Kellie, John F, Lee, Anita, Mehl, John, Palandra, Joe, Qiu, Haibo, Savoie, Natasha, Shakleya, Diaa, Staelens, Ludovicus, and Sugimoto, Hiroshi
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- 2022
- Full Text
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49. Comparison of BRICS-TM Countries' Biosimilar Regulatory Frameworks With Australia, Canada and Switzerland: Benchmarking Best Practices.
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Rahalkar, Hasumati, Sheppard, Alan, and Salek, Sam
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GOVERNMENT agencies ,REGULATORY approval ,BENCHMARKING (Management) ,DATA analysis ,COUNTRIES - Abstract
Objectives: The aim of this study was to identify, compare and evaluate regulatory requirements for the biosimilar development and review processes in BRICS-TM (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Turkey, Mexico) countries with mature regulatory systems of Australia, Canada, Singapore and Switzerland. It is hoped that this benchmark study provides an opportunity for BRICS-TM agencies to identify the key areas for improvement in their regulatory processes. Materials and Methods: A semi-quantitative questionnaire was developed covering the different criteria used in biosimilar development and registration process. Eleven regulatory agencies from BRICS-TM and ACSS (Australia, Canada, Switzerland and Singapore) countries were invited to take part in this study. Data processing and analysis was carried out using descriptive statistics for quantitative data and content analysis to generate themes for qualitative data. Results and Discussions: Nine of the 11 regulatory agencies recruited for the study completed the questionnaire. China and Singapore did not meet the deadline due to lack of resources. The organisational structure of BRICS-TM agencies revealed support from external assessors by most of these agencies in comparison with ACSS agencies. There was absence of reliance approach and participation in harmonisation activities across most BRICS-TM agencies. Despite alignment over biosimilarity, the mandate for in vivo non-clinical studies and additional local clinical studies in some of the BRICS-TM countries illustrates a lack of effective implementation of a step-wise approach. Adopting flexible regulatory standards in the sourcing of a RBP (Reference Biologic Product) by BRICS-TM similar to ACSS, will facilitate cost-effective development of biosimilar products. Conclusions: Comparative assessment of the biosimilar regulatory framework of BRICS-TM with ACSS agencies reveals the scope for enhancing efficiency of the regulatory approval process. To achieve this, BRICS-TM agencies should consider relying on reference agencies for alternative review mechanisms such as abridged or verification models, streamlined processes for providing scientific advice to developers and for waiving local clinical studies in-lieu of advanced scientific data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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50. 2020 White Paper on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis: Vaccine Assay Validation, qPCR Assay Validation, QC for CAR-T Flow Cytometry, NAb Assay Harmonization and ELISpot Validation (Part 3 – Recommendations on Immunogenicity Assay Strategies, NAb Assays, Biosimilars and FDA/EMA Immunogenicity Guidance/Guideline, Gene & Cell Therapy and Vaccine Assays)
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Corsaro, Bart, Yang, Tong-yuan, Murphy, Rocio, Sonderegger, Ivo, Exley, Andrew, Bertholet, Sylvie, Dakappagari, Naveen, Dessy, Francis, Garofolo, Fabio, Kierstead, Lisa, Koch, Holger, Sarikonda, Ghanashyam, Savoie, Natasha, Siggers, Richard, Solstad, Therese, Lu, Yanmei, Milton, Mark, Marshall, Jean-Claude, DelCarpini, Jason, and Gorovits, Boris
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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