During the write-up of the meeting summary reports from the 2019 dissolution similarity workshop held at the University of Maryland's Center of Excellence in Regulatory Science and Innovation (M-CERSI), several coauthors continued their discussions to develop a "best-practice" document defining the steps required to assess dissolution profiles in support of certain biowaivers and postapproval changes. In previous reports, current challenges related to dissolution profile studies were discussed such that the steps outlined in the two flow charts ("decision trees") presented here can be applied. These decision trees include both recommendations for the use of equivalence procedures between reference and test products as well as application of the dissolution safe space concept.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe pharmaceutical industry and regulatory agencies rely on dissolution similarity testing to make critical product decisions as part of drug product life cycle management. Accordingly, the application of mathematical approaches to evaluate dissolution profile similarity is described in regulatory guidance with the emphasis given to the similarity factor f with little discussion of alternative methods. In an effort to highlight current practices to assess dissolution profile similarity and to strive toward global harmonization, a workshop entitled "In Vitro Dissolution Similarity Assessment in Support of Drug Product Quality: What, How, When" was held on May 21-22, 2019 at the University of Maryland, Baltimore.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis manuscript discusses global regulatory divergence of dissolution requirements for modified release solid oral dosage forms and the obstacles that must be addressed to be compliant with evolving guidance and legislation. The proliferation of local guidance documents, changing regulatory expectations, and increased legal enforcement has resulted in mismatched country-specific dissolution testing requirements and similarity criteria, and heightens industry's challenges with registration of modified release solid oral dosage forms. The lack of global harmonization and the complexity added by minor regional adaptations contributes to inefficiencies and hinders industry's goal of developing and delivering medicines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe objective of this article is to compare and contrast the international expectations associated with the model-independent similarity factor approach to comparing dissolution profiles. This comparison highlights globally divergent regulatory requirements to meet local dissolution similarity requirements. In effect, experiments customized to meet the current international regulatory expectations for dissolution and drug release unnecessarily increase manufacturing costs, hinder science and risk-based approaches, increase collective regulatory burden, reduce continuous improvement and innovation, and potentially delay patient access to urgently needed medication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn enterohemorrhaghic Escherichia coli O157:H7 (EHEC) outbreak in 1993 was epidemioiogically linked to commercial real mayonnaise. This study evaluated EHEC contamination risk during commercial mayonnaise and mayonnaise dressing production, and EHEC behavior in low-pH dressings. Two potential contamination sources, pasteurized liquid eggs and wet environmental areas, were surveyed for 4 months in three processing plants.
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