Parametric Tolerance Interval (PTI) Test for Delivered Dose Uniformity (DDU) for Orally Inhaled and Nasal Drug Products (OINDP) Michael Golden On behalf.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Presented by Bo Olsson (AstraZeneca)
Advertisements

Chapter 7 Hypothesis Testing
Statistical Evaluation of Dissolution for Specification Setting and Stability Studies Fasheng Li Associate Director, Pharmaceutical Statistics Worldwide.
The Statisticians Role in Pharmaceutical Development
1 Manufacturing Process A sequence of activities that is intended to achieve a result (Juran). Quality of Manufacturing Process depends on Entry Criteria.
© red ©
Pharmaceutical Product Quality Assurance Through CMC Drug Development Process Presented by Darlene Rosario (Aradigm) 21 October 2003 Meeting of the Advisory.
Individual Bioequivalence Lawrence J. Lesko, Ph.D. Director Office of Clinical Pharmacology and Biopharmaceutics Advisory Committee for Pharmaceutical.
FDA Nasal BA/BE Guidance Overview
September 2006PQRI Training Course1 Best Practices for OINDP Pharmaceutical Development Programs Leachables and Extractables VIII. Quality Control and.
Ensuring Physical Stability of Pharmaceuticals: Can/should we improve our ability to identify and prevent physical changes? Ajaz S. Hussain, Ph.D. Deputy.
International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board The Clarified ISAs, Audit Documentation, and SME Audit Considerations ISA Implementation Support Module.
Business Statistics - QBM117 Introduction to hypothesis testing.
Hypothesis testing is used to make decisions concerning the value of a parameter.
1/2555 สมศักดิ์ ศิวดำรงพงศ์
Achieving and Demonstrating “Quality-by-Design” with Respect to Drug Release/dissolution Performance for Conventional or Immediate Release Solid Oral Dosage.
1 Process to Address Specifications for Delivered Dose Uniformity of Inhaled and Nasal Drug Products Presented by Robert O’Neill, Ph.D. Chair ACPS Working.
Determining Sample Size
ITFG/IPAC Collaboration CMC Specifications Technical Team ITFG/IPAC TECHNICAL TEAM: CMC SPECIFICATIONS Presented by: Bo Olsson, PhD 26 April 2000 Rockville,
The Treatment of “Spare / Sterilised” Capacity – follow up Draft for discussion purposes only.
2015 MBSW1 Quality Assurance Test of Delivered Dose Uniformity of Multi-dose Spray and Inhalation Drug Products Drs. Yi Tsong 1, Xiaoyu (Cassie) Dong*
John R. MurphyACPS 10/ Zero Tolerance Criteria Do Not Assure Product Quality John R. Murphy, Ph.D. Meeting of the Advisory Committee for Pharmaceutical.
CBO ANALYSIS OF SAVINGS FROM PRESCRIPTION DRUG IMPORTATION Colin Baker Margaret Nowak Anna Cook June 8, 2004.
ACPS Meeting, October 19-20, 2004 BioINequivalence: Concept and Definition Lawrence X. Yu, Ph. D. Director for Science Office of Generic Drugs, OPS, CDER,
2010 Annual State of Hawaii Forensic Mental Health Examiner Training Conference, Kaneohe, Hawaii Quality of Conditional Release Reports Submitted to the.
Acceptance Sampling McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Strengthening Science Supporting Fishery Management  Standards for Best Available Science  Implementation of OMB’s Peer Review Bulletin  Separation.
Parametric Tolerance Interval Test for Delivered Dose Uniformity (DDU) Working Group Update Moheb M. Nasr, Ph.D. Office of New Quality Assessment (ONDQA,
Bioequivalence Studies and Other Recommendations for Orally Inhaled and Nasal Drug Products: Work of the ITFG/IPAC-RS Collaboration Presented by Cynthia.
Some ACS Data Issues and Statistical Significance (MOEs) Table Release Rules Statistical Filtering & Collapsing Disclosure Review Board Statistical Significance.
The Development of BPR Pertemuan 6 Matakuliah: M0734-Business Process Reenginering Tahun: 2010.
1 ORALLY INHALED AND NASAL DRUG PRODUCTS FOR LOCAL ACTION Current FDA BA/BE Background and Issues Wallace P. Adams, Ph.D. OPS/CDER/FDA OINDP Subcommittee.
Risk-Based CMC Review - OGD Perspective Gary J. Buehler, R.Ph. Director Office of Generic Drugs July 21, 2004 Advisory Committee for Pharmaceutical Science.
Molecule-to-Market-Place Quality
The USP Performance Test Dissolution Systems Suitability Studies Walter W. Hauck, Ph.D. USP Consultant Presentation to Advisory Committee for Pharmaceutical.
Meiyu Shen, PhD Collaborators: Xiaoyu Dong, Ph.D., Yi Tsong, PhD
Slide Slide 1 Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley. Overview.
COMPARABILITY PROTOCOLUPDATE ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCE Manufacturing Subcommittee July 20-21, 2004 Stephen Moore, Ph.D. Chemistry Team.
CFC Essential Use Status of Albuterol: Medical Considerations Pulmonary-Allergy Drugs Advisory Committee Meeting June 10, 2004 Eugene J. Sullivan, MD,
Blend Uniformity: Update Ajaz S. Hussain, Ph.D.. Background Issue: Assuring and documenting “adequacy of mixing” operations –PQRI’s Proposal Stratified.
Chapter 11: Estimation of Population Means. We’ll examine two types of estimates: point estimates and interval estimates.
Proposed ASB Actuarial Standard of Practice on Statements of Actuarial Opinion Regarding Property/Casualty Loss and Loss Adjustment Expense Reserves Status.
1 Dose Content Uniformity for Aerosol Products Wallace P. Adams, Ph.D. OPS/IO Advisory Committee for Pharmaceutical Science 13 March 2003 Rockville, MD.
1 PTIT for DCU of OINDP: Approaches to Resolution of Identified Issues Wallace P. Adams, Ph.D. OPS/IO Advisory Committee for Pharmaceutical Science 21.
Introduction to the Meeting Introduction to the Meeting Advisory Committee for Pharmaceutical Sciences Clinical Pharmacology Subcommittee November 17-18,
Prioritization Process and Development of the Hazard Characterization Documents Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics U.S. Environmental Protection.
Education 793 Class Notes Inference and Hypothesis Testing Using the Normal Distribution 8 October 2003.
9-1 Copyright © 2016 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
WLTP-12-17e Status report about the work of the gearshift issues task force.
ITFG/IPAC Collaboration Introduction OVERVIEW OF ITFG/IPAC COLLABORATION Presented by: Harris Cummings, PhD 26 April 2000 Rockville, MD.
1 A Seminar On Pharmaceutical Outsourcing A Seminar On Pharmaceutical Outsourcing.
Comparability Protocols Nancy Sager Associate Director, QIS-Chemistry FDA/CDER/OPS.
Dr. Dipayan Das Assistant Professor Dept. of Textile Technology Indian Institute of Technology Delhi Phone:
ITFG/IPAC Collaboration BA/BE Technical Team ITFG/IPAC TECHNICAL TEAM: BA/BE IN VITRO AND IN VIVO TESTS Presented by: Stephen Farr, PhD 26 April 2000 Rockville,
Bioequivalence Criteria Research Plan Stella G. Machado, Ph.D. Office of Biostatistics and the Replicate Design Technical Committee Advisory Committee.
Lawrence X. Yu, Ph.D. Director for Science Office of Generic Drugs, OPS, CDER, FDA ACPS Meeting, ACPS Meeting, Oct. 22, 2003 Office of Generic Drugs Research.
Orally Inhaled and Nasal Drug Products Subcommittee Introduction and Objectives Eric B. Sheinin Deputy Director Office of Pharmaceutical Science Center.
Orally Inhaled and Nasal Drug Products (OINDP) Subcommittee Report to the Advisory Committee for Pharmaceutical Sciences Rockville, Maryland November 15,
Ajaz S. Hussain, Ph.D. Office of Pharmaceutical Sciences CDER, FDA October 21, 2003 Dose Content Uniformity: Parametric Tolerance Interval Approach.
Updated Force Measurement Statistical Tool Jason Beardsley and Bob Fox.
Parametric Tolerance Interval (PTI) Test for Delivered Dose Uniformity (DDU) for Orally Inhaled and Nasal Drug Products (OINDP) Michael Golden On behalf.
An Assessment of IPAC-RS’ Proposal Walter W. Hauck, Ph.D. Biostatistics Section Division of Clinical Pharmacology Thomas Jefferson University Philadelphia,
2016 Primary Assessment Update 27th September 2016
ANNUAL PRODUCT REVIEW Patchara Kootiratrakarn Independent consultant.
© LOUIS COHEN, LAWRENCE MANION AND KEITH MORRISON
Sixth Power Plan Setting Conservation Targets and Implementation Strategies Jill Steiner, Snohomish Public Utility District Northwest Power and Conservation.
LDZ System Charges – Structure Methodology 26 July 2010
Chapter Nine Part 1 (Sections 9.1 & 9.2) Hypothesis Testing
Hypothesis Testing.
Water Directors meeting Warsaw, 8-9 December 2011
Presentation transcript:

Parametric Tolerance Interval (PTI) Test for Delivered Dose Uniformity (DDU) for Orally Inhaled and Nasal Drug Products (OINDP) Michael Golden On behalf of IPAC-RS Advisory Committee of Pharmaceutical Science October 25, 2005

2 Overview IPAC-RS appreciates the opportunity to discuss the DDU quality standard with FDA Progress made to date Comments on FDA position IPAC-RS current position, if choice must be made today Strong preference for further accelerated dialogue –Agreement of quality standard

3 Agreements – IPAC-RS Perspective PTI Test provides a more thorough characterization of the batch and facilitates improved decision making. PTI Test is a good scientific approach to setting DDU specifications in accord with emerging QbD and risk management approaches. –Zero tolerance criteria are eliminated. Quality is best defined by coverage of the target interval Sample size is determined and set by the applicant –Flexibility in sample size selection carries no penalty –Reduces manufacturer’s risk without compromising product quality. Technical agreements: –1/3 of the sample in 1 st tier and 2/3 of the sample in the 2 nd tier. –Beginning and End testing from the same OINDP unit. –The Pocock approach to split the Type I error between the two tiers.

4 Agreements Conditional on an Acceptable Quality Standard The FDA-proposed methodology for control of upper and lower “tails” The FDA-proposed methodology for calculation of PTI Test coefficients (k’s) A target interval (‘goalposts’) of % LC

5 FDA’s 4 October 2005 proposal A standard PTI Test applied to beginning and end doses separately Target interval (’goalposts’) % LC Sample sizes n=20/60, 40/120, and 60/180 in the 1 st /2 nd tier (half Beginning & half End, for each tier) Coverage of 87.5% was proposed as the standard Coverages ranging from 82.5 to 90% were also presented by FDA 10/10/30/3020/20/60/6030/30/90/90 CoverageTier ITier IITier ITier IITier ITier II Test coefficients “Smallest” test

6 Comments on FDA Proposal Application of PTI test to each life-stage separately has not been discussed previously by Joint WG. –This makes the test significantly tighter than all previously discussed approaches. Implementation of PTI test in this manner results in a coverage requirement that is greater than the design point (95.8% for “10/10/30/ %” test) Even higher coverage is required when the mean is off target This proposal results in very significant increase in sample size compared to current requirements due to frequent use of tier 2. In addition, 40/120, 60/180 can not be considered for routine release and stability testing The FDA October 4 proposal is tighter than the 1998 MDI/DPI draft guidance test

7 Batch mean at 97% LC FDA October 4 proposal is tighter than the 1998 MDI/DPI draft guidance test

8 IPAC-RS Case Studies Case studies are presented for 3 US-marketed HFA MDIs (comprising 77 batches) –IPAC-RS database > 2000 batches of OINDP 1117 batches have been released to the US market (the others were released to non-US markets or were late development) Of these, 1045 batches are MDIs or DPIs –96 batches of these have enough data to allow evaluation (3 HFA MDIs, 4 CFC MDIs) Judicious pooling of data was performed to create samples of sufficient size to evaluate the 10/10/30/30 test Approach identical to that presented by FDA at the October 4, 2005 meeting

9 IPAC-RS case studies (1) US commercial solution HFA MDI (preventer) 23 batches evaluated Sample means % LC Sample SDs % LC Coverage# pass B & E of of of of 23 Results In this case study, 19 of 23 batches (83%) comply with the FDA proposal of 87.5% coverage Eleven batches require 2 nd tier testing (48%) Average sample size needed is 32

10 IPAC-RS case studies (2) US commercial suspension HFA MDI (preventer) 28 batches evaluated Sample means % LC Sample SDs % LC Coverage# pass B & E of of of of 28 Results In this case study, 19 of 28 batches (68%) comply with the FDA proposal of 87.5% coverage Twenty-two batches require 2 nd tier testing (79%) Average sample size needed is 43

11 IPAC-RS case studies (3) US commercial suspension HFA MDI (reliever) 26 batches evaluated Sample means % LC Sample SDs typically 3-9% LC but values up to 14% Coverage# pass B & E of of of of 26 Results In this case study, 13 of 26 batches (50%) comply with the FDA proposal of 87.5% coverage Twenty-two batches require 2 nd tier testing (85%) Average sample size needed is 48

12 Conclusions from Case Studies on US Commercial Products 26 of the 77 batches would have failed the FDA proposed ”87.5%” test and thus would not have been released. However, all 77 batches passed their approved specifications for uniformity and were suitable for their intended use The lowest coverage presented by FDA on October 4 th (82.5%) resulted in a pass rate of 58-91%, which is still unacceptable from both compliance and business perspectives These case studies illustrate why the FDA October 4, 2005 proposal is not acceptable to IPAC-RS

13 IPAC-RS Current Proposal If a choice must be made today, IPAC-RS requests that the Advisory Committee approve a test and quality standard with which the majority of OINDP can comply, such as the PTI test based on Lieberman-Resnikoff* (LR) methodology proposed to FDA by IPAC-RS in 2004 –82.5% coverage, –80-120% LC target interval, –Beginning and End evaluated together, –Sample size determined by the applicant Exceptions to this could be proposed by the applicant with adequate scientific justification * Lieberman, G. J. and Resnikoff, G..J. Sampling plans for inspection by variables. American Statistical Association Journal, June 1955, p

14 Proposed Two-Tier LR PTI Test Measure n 1 doses, calculate sample mean and SD –Estimate proportion outside goalposts (P 1 ) –Accept in 1 st tier if P 1  p 1 and life-stage means within % LC Otherwise measure n 2 -n 1 more doses, calculate sample mean and SD based on total sample of n 2 doses –Estimate proportion outside goalposts (P 2 ) –Accept in 2nd tier if P 2  p 2 and life-stage means within % LC P depends on goalposts, sample size, mean and SD p depends on sample size, coverage and  

15 Benefits of the IPAC-RS Proposal Provides a quality standard with which the majority of modern OINDP can comply Correctly controls the design-point coverage for batches on and off target -Tighter SDs are required for off-target batches Scientifically rigorous Has precedent in the literature Uses Pocock’s alphas as suggested by FDA

16 Comparison of different DDU tests Batch mean at 97% LC The figure indicates (1) that current FDA standard (green) is much more restrictive than other international requirements (brown and purple), (2) that IPAC-RS current positions (blue and yellow) represent a significant tightening compared to the initial proposals (black and pink) and provide a reasonable compromise between different international standards, and (3) that the FDA October 4 proposal is significantly tighter than current US requirements.

17 OC Curves for US Approved OINDP ( Frequent Exceptions From Guidance) Subset of DDU Specifications Approved by FDA (24 products from ) Red: FDA draft guidance Green: FDA OCT4 20/ % coverage Batch mean at 100% LC

18 IPAC-RS Conclusions Further accelerated dialogue is needed to reach a consensus quality standard for DDU IPAC-RS is flexible about the methodology of the test as long as the required quality standard is attainable –The majority of modern OINDPs should be able to comply with the agreed quality standard using the smallest sample size (20/60)

19 Question to ACPS Would you support the quality standard and test as proposed by IPAC-RS in slide 13?