L14 Generics Flashcards

1
Q

Genetic Drugs must provide evidence of…

A

copies of innovator drugs, they provide evidence of:

  1. safety: by demonstrating chemical comparability to innovator drug in the lab
  2. efficacy: by demonstrating bioequivalence to innovator drug in a clinical trial (bioequivalence study)
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2
Q

Generic drugs are cheaper because…

A
  1. no preclinical studies required:
    - depend on comparability to innovator for animal studies to demonstrate safety
  2. no extensive clinical trials required:
    - to prove comparability to the innovator, they need a single relatively small bioequivalence clinical study
    - depend on comparability to innovator to access multiple large scale clinical trials to prove safety and efficacy
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3
Q

The basic generic strategy

A

see onenote diagram

loss of innovator IP => generic business => money (benefits for investors, economy, consumers)

  • expiry/invalidation/circumvention of innovator IP is central to a generic business
  • value of a company is determined by the value of its ability to gain earliest market entry for a pipeline of drugs
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4
Q

Generic competition - a virtuous cycle

A

see onenote diagram

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5
Q

Comparisons of strategies

A

see onenote

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6
Q

Innovator drug loyalty

A

Even though IP patent expires, trademark, copyrights, registered designs still exist for that brand e.g. Design for Panadol packaging

  • Allows innovator’s market to still exist
  • Initial monopoly allows them to build brand loyalty and brand recognition
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7
Q

What is a generic drug? - simple generic

A
  • a drug product that is comparable to brand/reference listed drug product in dosage form, strength, route of administration, quality and performance characteristics, and intended use
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8
Q

Brand/reference drug

A
  • usually innovator
  • has full safety and efficacy information submitted to FDA, TGA etc.
  • product registered and already marketed in country of interest
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9
Q

Studies to demonstrate comparability with innovator product include

A
  1. lab studies
    - chemical content and purity
    - dissolution studies for oral products
    - microbiological safety
    - stability
  2. clinical bioequivalence
    - needed for most products including oral drugs
    - not needed for some products e.g. simple IV solutions
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10
Q

Compared with innovator, the generic drug should have…

A

see onenote

  1. same API
  2. same route of admin
  3. same dosage form
  4. same strength
  5. same conditions of use
  6. same inactive ingredients approved
  7. same drug profile i.e. is bioequivalent

if these conditions are fulfilled, generic is interchangeable with innovator in clinical use

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11
Q

Development of a generic drug

A

see onenote diagram

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12
Q

Generic vs Innovator route comparison

A

see onenote table

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13
Q

Bioequivalence

A

see diagram and side notes

  • look at drug concentration in blood
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14
Q

Genetic drugs - comment on quality

A

see onenote

“variation between different batches of an originator product is often of the same magnitude or even greater than the statistically calculated and controlled difference between a generic and its reference product”

BUT changes in appearance can result in patients discontinuing medication and hence is of concern

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15
Q

Complex generic drugs

A

see onenote

  1. incomplete physico-chemical comparability
  2. different admin route
  3. difference usage
  4. improved bioavailability or site and duration of action (“supergeneric”)
  5. requires more data than simple generics to support safety and efficacy of drug
  6. increased, separate regulatory requirements
  7. may not be clinically interchangeable with innovator drug
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16
Q

Pregabalin

A

see onenote

- simple defined molecule

17
Q

Erythropoietin

A

see onenote

- complex glycan structures of individual molecules

18
Q

Example of biosimilar - Erythropoietin

A

Eprex vs Retacrit

  • both has extensive physico-chemical lab testing
  • both have extensive animal studies
  • both have large clinical trials involved but…Eprex had over 6000 patients involved, Retacrit only around 1600 patients
19
Q

Biosimilars - US EU comparison

A

see onenote table

  • no clear definition, only that it is comparable in quality, safety and efficacy to a reference product
20
Q

Biosimilars - recent progress

A

see onenote

21
Q

Biosimilars vs simple generic drugs

A

see onenote

  • biosimilar are comparable to, not necessarily substitutable for innvaotr
  • generics are equivalent to, and substitutable for innovator
  • biosimilars - more extensive physico-chemical comparability evidence than generics, PD/PK studies
22
Q

Biosimilars - interchangability

A

see onenote

  • interchangability is required to allow substitution of a brand biological medicine with a biosimilar by a pharmacist
23
Q

Simple generics vs Complex generics vs Biosimilars

A

see onenote

Simple generics = exact copies of small molecular weight drugs
- clinically interchangeable

Complex generics = copies of small molecular weight drugs with minor modifications
- may not be clinically interchangeable

Biosimilar = copies of large molecular weight drugs (biopharmaceuticals)
- not in general clinically interchangeable

24
Q

Biopharmaceutical

A

a biological macromolecule or cellular component, such as a blood product, used as a pharmaceutical.