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Drugs and dosage forms
Fakhrul Ahsan, Ph.D.
E-mail: fakhrul.ahsan@ttuhsc.edu
Room # SOP 214
I have used the above book to prepare this note. I have used a large
number of pictures from various websites and books, but I did not cite all
to avoid clutters. A few pictures were drawn by Dr. Nilesh Gupta.
Learning objectives
1. Know the discipline of pharmaceutics and its
branches
2. Define drugs and know the process of drug
development and discovery
3. Explain pharmaceutics and drug delivery
4. Differentiate drugs, formulations and dosage
forms
5. Distinguish between active ingredients and
excipients
6. Appreciate the standardization process of drugs
7. Learn the nomenclature of drugs
8. Categorize drugs based on dispensing
regulations
9. Recognize official compendia for drug standards
The science of dosage forms
īƒ˜ Pharmaceutical principles
of dosage forms and
pharmacy calculations
based on different routes
of administration
īƒ˜ Physico-chemical
properties
īƒ˜ Bio-pharmaceutics,
stability, packaging, and
formulation of various
dosage forms.
īƒ˜ Radiopharmaceuticals
Pharmaceutics
īƒ˜ The methodologies and science
involved in transforming a new
chemical entity (NCE) or a
biological into a consumable
product that is safe for human
use but effective against a
given disease
īƒ˜ The science of dosage form
design and drug delivery
systems.
īƒ˜ Many chemicals have
pharmacological effects but you
cannot administer a raw
chemical as is.
īƒ˜ Branches of
Pharmaceutics:
ī‚§ Pharmacokinetics
ī‚§ Bio-pharmaceutics
ī‚§ Pharmacodynamics
ī‚§ Pharmacogenomics
ī‚§ Pharmaceutical
Technology
Pharmaceutics
īƒ˜Pharmacokinetics
ī‚§ Pharmacokinetics (in Greek: "pharmacon" meaning
drug, and "kinetikos" meaning putting in motion)
ī‚§ A branch of pharmaceutics that studies the fate of
drugs after administration to human or animals
ī‚§ Assess the extent and rate of absorption, distribution,
metabolism and excretion (ADME)
ī‚§ What body does to the drug
oP2 spring
īƒ˜Pharmacodynamics:
ī‚§ Study the relationship between drug concentration
and its effect
ī‚§ What drug does to the body
oP2 spring
Pharmaceutics
īƒ˜ Bio-pharmaceutics
ī‚§ Study the impact of physicochemical properties of
drugs and drug products on drug delivery and
absorption under normal or pathological condition.
oWill be covered in P1 spring
īƒ˜ Pharmacogenomics
ī‚§ Cover the influence of genetic variation on the drugs’
efficacy and toxicity
īƒ˜ Pharmaceutical Technology
ī‚§ Address the technologies involved in the development
of dosage forms
oWill be covered in P1 spring
Review
īƒ˜Pharmaceutics deals with all of the followings
EXCEPT
o A. Preparation of dosage forms
o B. Formulating a pure drug into a dosage forms
o C. Studying the physico-chemical properties of
pure drug substance
o D. Identifying the mechanism of action of a drug
o C. Study the rate and extent of drug absorption
Drug
â€ĸ From the Greek pharmakon = drug
â€ĸ Any chemical or biological substances used in the
diagnosis, mitigation, treatment, cure or
prevention of human or animal diseases.
â€ĸ The process of drug discovery is very
complex
â€ĸ Requires integrated efforts of a team of scientists
comprising chemists, biochemists, pharmaceutical
scientists, clinical pharmacists, medical doctors,
and statisticians
Drugs versus biologics
īƒ˜ Drugs
ī‚§ In general, they have well-known chemical structures
ī‚§ Manufactured via chemical synthesis
ī‚§ Manufacturing in involves a ordered process
ī‚§ Example: Acetaminophen, ibuprofen
īƒ˜ Biologics (also called biopharmaceuticals or biotech
products
ī‚§ Manufactured in bacteria, plan or animal cells
ī‚§ Very large molecules or may contain a mixture of
molecules
ī‚§ Hard to know the exact structure or composition
ī‚§ Difficult to control the manufacturing process
ī‚§ Use recombinant DNA technology
ī‚§ Example: Adalimumab (Humira)
Drug discovery
īƒ˜ Pharmaceutical industry discovers the vast majority of the
drugs
īƒ˜ To discover drugs, we must have well-designed research
program for screening, molecular modification and
mechanism based drug design
īƒ˜ You can isolate drugs from a variety of natural sources or
synthesize them in the laboratory.
īƒ˜ Natural drug sources include
ī‚§ Plant: Taxol (paclitaxel), extracted from Pacific Yew
Tree, is used in the treatment of cancer
ī‚§ Animal: Many vaccines were initially developed from
animals.
Prodrugs
īƒ˜ A drug that must change
to an active compound
after ingestion
īƒ˜ Such conversion occurs
through enzymatic and
biochemical cleavage.
Drug discovery and development
īƒ˜ Discovery
ī‚§ Identify disease targets and potential therapeutic
compounds
ī‚§ The least successful aspect of drug development
īƒ˜ Non-Clinical Development
ī‚§ Translates chemical or biological substances into
therapeutic candidates
ī‚§ Modify, scale-up, purify, test, produce chemical or
biological substances
ī‚§ Use animals to conduct studies
īƒ˜ Clinical Development: Studies performed in humans
ī‚§ Phase I, II, III and IV trials
Drug discovery
Terms used in drug discovery
īƒ˜ Target
ī‚§ A protein, enzyme, receptor, signaling or other molecules that is/are
responsible for development of a disease
īƒ˜ Hit
ī‚§ A test protein, peptide or compound that appears to act on targets.
īƒ˜ Lead
ī‚§ Of the numerous hits or variants, the protein, peptide or organic
compound that show the highest degree of activity against the disease
īƒ˜ Candidate
ī‚§ A protein, peptide or organic compound that has most or all of
properties of a desired therapeutic (a development candidate) agent
īƒ˜ IND
ī‚§ Investigational New Drug application, filed for first human test
īƒ˜ Product
ī‚§ A marketed therapeutic agent
From Drug and Biological Development by R.P. Evens
Terms used in drug discovery
â–ēTarget identification:
ī‚§ You investigate potential targets, screen and prioritize
ī‚§ Understand the disease process, such as up-regulation of
certain proteins in cancer cells
â–ēTarget validation:
ī‚§ Identify the roles a target plays in a disease
ī‚§ Use various in vitro and in vivo functional studies
â–ēLead identification:
ī‚§ Potential therapeutics are screened and prioritized
ī‚§ Utilizes knowledge of a specific target to identify/design
an appropriate agonist/antagonist
â–ēLead optimization/validation:
ī‚§ The effects of a compound on a disease are confirmed
ī‚§ You test compounds in animal models of the target
disease
ī‚§ Redesign and re-assess the effects of variants of the same
compound
Target to candidate
Clinical development
īƒ˜ Phase I
ī‚§ First studies in humans, usually healthy humans, after
obtaining an IND
ī‚§ Single-dose followed by short-term multiple dose studies –
follow-up for days to weeks
īƒ˜ Phase II
ī‚§ Determine effectiveness in conditions or diseases of
interest
īƒ˜ Phase III
ī‚§ Confirm effectiveness in larger studies
īƒ˜ Phase IV
ī‚§ Post-approval studies
Clinical trials
Pre
Clinical
Testing
FILE
IND
Phase I Phase II Phase III
FILE
NDA
FDA Approval
Years 3.5 1 - 2 2 - 4 4 - 6 1.5 Total = 12 -
17
Test
Population
Laborator
y and
Animal
Studies
20 to 100
Healthy
Volunteers
100 – 300
Patient
Volunteers
1,000 to 3,000
Patient Volunteers
Review
Post Marketing
Safety
Monitoring
Purpose
Assess
Safety
and
Biological
Activity
Determine
Safety and
Dosage
Evaluate
Effectiveness.
Look for Side
Effects.
Verify Effectiveness,
Monitor Adverse
Reactions from
Long-Term Use
Process
Large Scale
Manufacturing
--------------
Distribution
--------------
Education
%
of
all
new
drugs
that
pass
70% of INDs 30% of INDs 27% of INDs 20% of
INDs
Preclinical and clinical
development
Drug discovery timeline
Generic drug development
īƒ˜Does not involve
preclinical
development or drug
discovery process
īƒ˜Requires
bioequivalence study
or data showing that
the product is as
efficacious as its
brand counterpart
Generic drug development
Brand, Generic and biosimilars
īƒ˜ Brand
ī‚§ Innovator’s product
ī‚§ Innovators has the exclusive patent
ī‚§ Nobody, but the innovator can make or sell during a certain time
īƒ˜ Generics
ī‚§ The Hatch-Waxman Act of 1984 allows drug companies to copy an
innovator’s product when the patent expires
ī‚§ Much cost effective
ī‚§ Chemically identical to the original branded drug.
īƒ˜ Biosimilars
ī‚§ Since biologics may not be an exact copy of the innovators’ product,
the generics of biologics are NOT called generic products, called
biosimilars
ī‚§ They have the same clinical effect as that of innovators’ product, but
one cannot confirm that the chemical identity of the generic product
is the same as that of the innovator’s product
Review
īƒ˜Preclinical studies are performed in -------
īƒ˜Clinical studies are performed in -------- at --
------different phases
īƒ˜The correct definition of the term ‘hit’ isâ€Ļ..
ī‚§ A protein, enzyme, receptor, signaling or other
molecule that may play a role in a Particular
disease process
ī‚§ A test protein, peptide or compound that
appears to act on targets
Good manufacturing practices
(GMP)
īƒ˜ “A system to ensure that products are consistently produced
and controlled according to quality standards.
īƒ˜ Minimize the risks involved in any pharmaceutical production
that cannot be eliminated through testing the final product.
īƒ˜ Covers all aspects of production from the starting materials,
premises and equipment to the training and personal
hygiene of staff.
īƒ˜ Detailed, written procedures for each process that could
affect the quality of the finished products
īƒ˜ Provide documented proof that correct procedures are
consistently followed at each step in the manufacturing
process” (ISPE Website)
Good laboratory practice (GLP)
īƒ˜ A Federal regulation concerning the minimum quality
standards that pharmaceutical laboratories should adhere
to regarding the following:
ī‚§ Personnel
ī‚§ Management
ī‚§ Quality assurance
ī‚§ Facility
ī‚§ Equipment
ī‚§ Procedures required
ī‚§ Testing issues
ī‚§ Records and Reports
Good clinical practice (GCP)
īƒ˜ A set of standards for the design, conduct, performance,
monitoring, auditing, recording, analysis and reporting of
clinical trials or studies.
īƒ˜ Addresses:
ī‚§ Ethical conduct of clinical trials
ī‚§ Institutional approval prior to initiation of a trial
ī‚§ Qualification to perform trials
ī‚§ Informed consent
ī‚§ Data quality and integrity
ī‚§ Protects confidentiality of records
ī‚§ Investigational products conform to GMP’s and used per
protocol
Drug product and drug substance
īƒ˜ Drug substance
ī‚§ An active ingredient that produces
pharmacological action or other direct
effect in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation,
treatment, or prevention of a disease
ī‚§ Does not include intermediates used in the
synthesis of such an ingredient.
īƒ˜ Drug product
ī‚§ A finished dosage form, for example,
tablet, capsule, or solution, that contains a
drug substance, generally, but not always,
in association with one or more inert
ingredients.
Dosage forms
īƒ˜ You cannot administer drugs in their natural or pure state.
īƒ˜ You administer drugs with other pharmaceutical ingredients
in different forms, called dosage forms.
ī‚§ Examples: tablets, capsules, injections, syrup, elixir
īƒ˜ We need a dosage form to
ī‚§ Administer an accurate dose of a drug that would be safe
and convenient
ī‚§ Ensure patient compliance, e.g. pediatric/geriatric
patients may have difficulty swallowing solid dosage
forms
ī‚§ Protect the drug against chemical decomposition from
both the external (atmospheric oxygen and humidity)
and internal (gastric acid) environments
ī‚§ Conceal any unpleasant odor or taste
ī‚§ Ensure or control the release of drugs into the body
Dose, dosage forms and strengths
īƒ˜ An amount of a drug that
is enough to produce a
therapeutic response
without producing toxic
effects
īƒ˜ The amount of drug that
produces desired effect in
most adult patients is used
as the drug’s adult dose
īƒ˜ You should not confuse
the term ‘dose’ with
‘dosage form’ and ‘dose’
with strengths
īƒ˜ A drug product may be
available in different
strengths, your physician
chooses a dose for you
Review
īƒ˜ Which of the following statements are not correct
o A. Drug substance is the same as active
ingredient
o B. Tablet is a drug product
o C. The terms ‘drug product’ and ‘drug substance’
can be used interchangeably’
o D. Prodrugs requires bio-transformation to
become active
o E. ‘Dose’ and ‘Dosage forms’ are used as
synonyms
Review
īƒ˜ A dosage form offers which of the following
advantages?
o A. Provides a safe and convenient means of
administering a drug
o B. Enhances patient compliance,
o C. Protects the drug against chemical
decomposition
o D. Conceals any unpleasant odor or taste
o E. Ensures or control the release of drug into
the body
o F. All of the above
Review
īƒ˜Identify the correct statement:
o Some prescription drugs may not require FDA
registration
o Phase III trial is performed after FDA approval
of a drug
o Generic drug development involves all the steps
that are required for a brand drug
o Mutagenicity studies are performed in healthy
humans
Drug formulations
īƒ˜ A recipe or formula for a dosage
form that includes the following
information
ī‚§ Name and quantities of ingredients
ī‚§ Mixing sequence
ī‚§ Processing steps
īƒ˜ A recipe for preparation of a
drug product is called
formulation
īƒ˜ A pharmaceutical formulation
contains
ī‚§ One or more active ingredient
(Drug)
ī‚§ Many additives called excipients
Drug formulations
īƒ˜ An optimized drug product should take into
account all factors to ensure maximal
effectiveness, the primary objective, along with
safety and reliability, the secondary objectives
īƒ˜ Important factors for drug formulations
īƒ˜ Drug factors
ī‚§ Physical-chemical properties of the drug substance
īƒ˜ Therapeutic considerations
ī‚§ Disease and patients
īƒ˜ Bio-pharmaceutic considerations
ī‚§ Factors that affect absorption of a drug substance from
various routes of administration.
Ingredients in a drug product
īƒ˜ A drug product contains two groups of ingredients
īƒ˜ Active ingredients: one or more
ī‚§ Responsible for pharmacological effects
īƒ˜ Inactive ingredients, called excipients
ī‚§ Excipients do not have any pharmacological
effect
ī‚§ Excipients contribute to the
â€ĸ Physical form
â€ĸ Texture
â€ĸ Stability
â€ĸ Taste
â€ĸ Overall appearance
A drug formulation
Drug nomenclature
īƒ˜ Proprietary (Brand) names
ī‚§ A trademark officially registered (ÂŽ) by a company
â€ĸ Example: TylenolÂŽ from Johnson & Johnson
īƒ˜ Non-proprietary (Generic) names
ī‚§ The generally recognized or "common" name for a drug
ī‚§ Standardized nomenclature established by:
â€ĸ USAN Council (United States Adopted Names)
â€ĸ WHO (World Health Organization)
â€ĸ Example, acetaminophen
īƒ˜ Generic products
ī‚§ A copy of a brand drug product, comprising the same
active ingredient(s), strength, and dosage form.
â€ĸ Tylenol from Walgreen
Review
īƒ˜Identify true or false statements
o A. Proprietary name is the chemical name of a
drug
o B. The terms, ‘generic name’ and ‘generic
product’ describe the same nomenclature
o C. Generic name is the common name of a drug
o D. Generic product is an imitation of a brand
product
Drug class according to the food
and drug act
īƒ˜ OTC Drugs
ī‚§ Not considered dangerous for self-medication and you
can get these drugs without a prescription
īƒ˜ Legend Drugs
ī‚§ “Caution: Federal Law prohibits dispensing w/o
prescription“
ī‚§ Refills have to be authorized
īƒ˜ Controlled or scheduled Drugs
ī‚§ These drugs have potential for abuse
ī‚§ DEA enforces these drugs
ī‚§ Schedules I to V with decreasing levels of control
Controlled or scheduled drugs
īƒ˜ Schedule I
ī‚§ Drugs with no accepted medical use and high potential
for abuse
ī‚§ Heroin and LSD (Lysergic acid diethylamide)
īƒ˜ Schedule II
ī‚§ Drugs with accepted medical use(s) but still have high
potential for abuse
ī‚§ Causes severe psychological and physical dependence
ī‚§ Amphetamine, morphine, oxycodone, and cocaine
Controlled or scheduled drugs
īƒ˜ Schedule III
ī‚§ These substances have an abuse potential less than
those in Schedules I and II
ī‚§ Cause moderate or low physical dependence or high
psychological dependence
ī‚§ Anabolic steroids and products containing not more than
90 mg codeine in a dosage unit or products containing
less than 15 mg hydrocodone per dosage unit
ī‚§ Any products containing amobarbitol, secobartibal or
ketamine
Controlled or scheduled drugs
īƒ˜ Schedule IV
ī‚§ Less potential for abuse than I, II, and III
ī‚§ Cause limited psychological and physical dependence
ī‚§ Benzodiazepines and phenobarbital
īƒ˜ Schedule V
ī‚§ Least potential for abuse
ī‚§ In many states, you can get these drugs without a
prescription after signing a log book
ī‚§ Certain anti-cough preparations containing not more
than 200 mg codeine in each 100 mL or 100 g
(promethazine or guaifenesin with codeine)
Reviews
īƒ˜Which of the following drug class has the
least potential for abuse.
o A. Schedule I
o B. Schedule II
o C. Schedule III
o D. Schedule IV
o C. Schedule V
Drug standards and
pharmacopeias
īƒ˜ Drugs and drug products must meet certain
requirements for purity, strength, labeling,
packaging and stability.
īƒ˜ We have monographs and reference books that
describe standards that manufacturers should
maintain when they prepare drug products
īƒ˜ Organized sets of monographs or books of these
standards are called pharmacopeias
īƒ˜ They are also called official compendia because
they are considered as legal standards
The United States Pharmacopeia
īƒ˜ The term pharmacopeia comes
from Greek ‘pharmacon’ meaning
drug and poiein = meaning make.
īƒ˜ The term pharmacopeia suggest
any recipe or formula or other
standards required to prepare a
drug
īƒ˜ First used in 1580 in Italy
īƒ˜ First United States Pharmacopeia
(USP) was published in 1820.
īƒ˜ Dr. Lyman Spalding, a physician
from New York, is recognized as
the Father of the United States
Pharmacopeia
The National Formulary
īƒ˜National Formulary (NF) was first published
in 1888
īƒ˜NF was first edited by pharmacists and
listed many drugs that USP did not list
īƒ˜In 1975 , USP and NF were merged into a
single book and first combined compendium
was published in 1980
īƒ˜USP contains information on drug
substances, but NF has information
regarding pharmaceutical ingredients
The United States Pharmacopeia
īƒ˜ The USP, a non-governmental agency, sets
standard for prescription and over-the-counter
medicines, dietary supplements, and other
healthcare products
īƒ˜ The USP helps healthcare providers reach the
standards.
īƒ˜ More than 130 countries recognize USP standards
īƒ˜ USP is a science-based public health organization,
not belongs to any agency of the US government
Other pharmacopeias
īƒ˜British Pharmacopeia
īƒ˜European Pharmacopeia
īƒ˜International pharmacopeia
īƒ˜Many countries have their own
pharmacopeias
USP MONOGRAPHS
â€ĸ http://www.usp.org/USPNF/understanding
USPNF.html
http://www.usp.org/sites/default/files/usp_pd
f/EN/products/sample_monograph_35-30.pdf
Reviews
īƒ˜ Identify the correct statements
o A. USP is a reference book that establishes standards
to be used by the manufacturers to prepare drug
products
o B. USP is an independent, science-based public health
organization.
o C. Monographs of drug substances are in the USP
section and that of pharmaceutical ingredients are in NF
section
o D. USP is the only pharmacopoeia in the world
o E. USP is used only in the United States
o F. Monographs of USP mainly describes use of drugs

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DDS DRUGS AND DOSAGE FORMS-2020.ppt

  • 1. Drugs and dosage forms Fakhrul Ahsan, Ph.D. E-mail: fakhrul.ahsan@ttuhsc.edu Room # SOP 214 I have used the above book to prepare this note. I have used a large number of pictures from various websites and books, but I did not cite all to avoid clutters. A few pictures were drawn by Dr. Nilesh Gupta.
  • 2. Learning objectives 1. Know the discipline of pharmaceutics and its branches 2. Define drugs and know the process of drug development and discovery 3. Explain pharmaceutics and drug delivery 4. Differentiate drugs, formulations and dosage forms 5. Distinguish between active ingredients and excipients 6. Appreciate the standardization process of drugs 7. Learn the nomenclature of drugs 8. Categorize drugs based on dispensing regulations 9. Recognize official compendia for drug standards
  • 3. The science of dosage forms īƒ˜ Pharmaceutical principles of dosage forms and pharmacy calculations based on different routes of administration īƒ˜ Physico-chemical properties īƒ˜ Bio-pharmaceutics, stability, packaging, and formulation of various dosage forms. īƒ˜ Radiopharmaceuticals
  • 4. Pharmaceutics īƒ˜ The methodologies and science involved in transforming a new chemical entity (NCE) or a biological into a consumable product that is safe for human use but effective against a given disease īƒ˜ The science of dosage form design and drug delivery systems. īƒ˜ Many chemicals have pharmacological effects but you cannot administer a raw chemical as is. īƒ˜ Branches of Pharmaceutics: ī‚§ Pharmacokinetics ī‚§ Bio-pharmaceutics ī‚§ Pharmacodynamics ī‚§ Pharmacogenomics ī‚§ Pharmaceutical Technology
  • 5. Pharmaceutics īƒ˜Pharmacokinetics ī‚§ Pharmacokinetics (in Greek: "pharmacon" meaning drug, and "kinetikos" meaning putting in motion) ī‚§ A branch of pharmaceutics that studies the fate of drugs after administration to human or animals ī‚§ Assess the extent and rate of absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion (ADME) ī‚§ What body does to the drug oP2 spring īƒ˜Pharmacodynamics: ī‚§ Study the relationship between drug concentration and its effect ī‚§ What drug does to the body oP2 spring
  • 6. Pharmaceutics īƒ˜ Bio-pharmaceutics ī‚§ Study the impact of physicochemical properties of drugs and drug products on drug delivery and absorption under normal or pathological condition. oWill be covered in P1 spring īƒ˜ Pharmacogenomics ī‚§ Cover the influence of genetic variation on the drugs’ efficacy and toxicity īƒ˜ Pharmaceutical Technology ī‚§ Address the technologies involved in the development of dosage forms oWill be covered in P1 spring
  • 7. Review īƒ˜Pharmaceutics deals with all of the followings EXCEPT o A. Preparation of dosage forms o B. Formulating a pure drug into a dosage forms o C. Studying the physico-chemical properties of pure drug substance o D. Identifying the mechanism of action of a drug o C. Study the rate and extent of drug absorption
  • 8. Drug â€ĸ From the Greek pharmakon = drug â€ĸ Any chemical or biological substances used in the diagnosis, mitigation, treatment, cure or prevention of human or animal diseases. â€ĸ The process of drug discovery is very complex â€ĸ Requires integrated efforts of a team of scientists comprising chemists, biochemists, pharmaceutical scientists, clinical pharmacists, medical doctors, and statisticians
  • 9. Drugs versus biologics īƒ˜ Drugs ī‚§ In general, they have well-known chemical structures ī‚§ Manufactured via chemical synthesis ī‚§ Manufacturing in involves a ordered process ī‚§ Example: Acetaminophen, ibuprofen īƒ˜ Biologics (also called biopharmaceuticals or biotech products ī‚§ Manufactured in bacteria, plan or animal cells ī‚§ Very large molecules or may contain a mixture of molecules ī‚§ Hard to know the exact structure or composition ī‚§ Difficult to control the manufacturing process ī‚§ Use recombinant DNA technology ī‚§ Example: Adalimumab (Humira)
  • 10. Drug discovery īƒ˜ Pharmaceutical industry discovers the vast majority of the drugs īƒ˜ To discover drugs, we must have well-designed research program for screening, molecular modification and mechanism based drug design īƒ˜ You can isolate drugs from a variety of natural sources or synthesize them in the laboratory. īƒ˜ Natural drug sources include ī‚§ Plant: Taxol (paclitaxel), extracted from Pacific Yew Tree, is used in the treatment of cancer ī‚§ Animal: Many vaccines were initially developed from animals.
  • 11. Prodrugs īƒ˜ A drug that must change to an active compound after ingestion īƒ˜ Such conversion occurs through enzymatic and biochemical cleavage.
  • 12. Drug discovery and development īƒ˜ Discovery ī‚§ Identify disease targets and potential therapeutic compounds ī‚§ The least successful aspect of drug development īƒ˜ Non-Clinical Development ī‚§ Translates chemical or biological substances into therapeutic candidates ī‚§ Modify, scale-up, purify, test, produce chemical or biological substances ī‚§ Use animals to conduct studies īƒ˜ Clinical Development: Studies performed in humans ī‚§ Phase I, II, III and IV trials
  • 14. Terms used in drug discovery īƒ˜ Target ī‚§ A protein, enzyme, receptor, signaling or other molecules that is/are responsible for development of a disease īƒ˜ Hit ī‚§ A test protein, peptide or compound that appears to act on targets. īƒ˜ Lead ī‚§ Of the numerous hits or variants, the protein, peptide or organic compound that show the highest degree of activity against the disease īƒ˜ Candidate ī‚§ A protein, peptide or organic compound that has most or all of properties of a desired therapeutic (a development candidate) agent īƒ˜ IND ī‚§ Investigational New Drug application, filed for first human test īƒ˜ Product ī‚§ A marketed therapeutic agent From Drug and Biological Development by R.P. Evens
  • 15. Terms used in drug discovery â–ēTarget identification: ī‚§ You investigate potential targets, screen and prioritize ī‚§ Understand the disease process, such as up-regulation of certain proteins in cancer cells â–ēTarget validation: ī‚§ Identify the roles a target plays in a disease ī‚§ Use various in vitro and in vivo functional studies â–ēLead identification: ī‚§ Potential therapeutics are screened and prioritized ī‚§ Utilizes knowledge of a specific target to identify/design an appropriate agonist/antagonist â–ēLead optimization/validation: ī‚§ The effects of a compound on a disease are confirmed ī‚§ You test compounds in animal models of the target disease ī‚§ Redesign and re-assess the effects of variants of the same compound
  • 17. Clinical development īƒ˜ Phase I ī‚§ First studies in humans, usually healthy humans, after obtaining an IND ī‚§ Single-dose followed by short-term multiple dose studies – follow-up for days to weeks īƒ˜ Phase II ī‚§ Determine effectiveness in conditions or diseases of interest īƒ˜ Phase III ī‚§ Confirm effectiveness in larger studies īƒ˜ Phase IV ī‚§ Post-approval studies
  • 18. Clinical trials Pre Clinical Testing FILE IND Phase I Phase II Phase III FILE NDA FDA Approval Years 3.5 1 - 2 2 - 4 4 - 6 1.5 Total = 12 - 17 Test Population Laborator y and Animal Studies 20 to 100 Healthy Volunteers 100 – 300 Patient Volunteers 1,000 to 3,000 Patient Volunteers Review Post Marketing Safety Monitoring Purpose Assess Safety and Biological Activity Determine Safety and Dosage Evaluate Effectiveness. Look for Side Effects. Verify Effectiveness, Monitor Adverse Reactions from Long-Term Use Process Large Scale Manufacturing -------------- Distribution -------------- Education % of all new drugs that pass 70% of INDs 30% of INDs 27% of INDs 20% of INDs
  • 21. Generic drug development īƒ˜Does not involve preclinical development or drug discovery process īƒ˜Requires bioequivalence study or data showing that the product is as efficacious as its brand counterpart
  • 23. Brand, Generic and biosimilars īƒ˜ Brand ī‚§ Innovator’s product ī‚§ Innovators has the exclusive patent ī‚§ Nobody, but the innovator can make or sell during a certain time īƒ˜ Generics ī‚§ The Hatch-Waxman Act of 1984 allows drug companies to copy an innovator’s product when the patent expires ī‚§ Much cost effective ī‚§ Chemically identical to the original branded drug. īƒ˜ Biosimilars ī‚§ Since biologics may not be an exact copy of the innovators’ product, the generics of biologics are NOT called generic products, called biosimilars ī‚§ They have the same clinical effect as that of innovators’ product, but one cannot confirm that the chemical identity of the generic product is the same as that of the innovator’s product
  • 24. Review īƒ˜Preclinical studies are performed in ------- īƒ˜Clinical studies are performed in -------- at -- ------different phases īƒ˜The correct definition of the term ‘hit’ isâ€Ļ.. ī‚§ A protein, enzyme, receptor, signaling or other molecule that may play a role in a Particular disease process ī‚§ A test protein, peptide or compound that appears to act on targets
  • 25. Good manufacturing practices (GMP) īƒ˜ “A system to ensure that products are consistently produced and controlled according to quality standards. īƒ˜ Minimize the risks involved in any pharmaceutical production that cannot be eliminated through testing the final product. īƒ˜ Covers all aspects of production from the starting materials, premises and equipment to the training and personal hygiene of staff. īƒ˜ Detailed, written procedures for each process that could affect the quality of the finished products īƒ˜ Provide documented proof that correct procedures are consistently followed at each step in the manufacturing process” (ISPE Website)
  • 26. Good laboratory practice (GLP) īƒ˜ A Federal regulation concerning the minimum quality standards that pharmaceutical laboratories should adhere to regarding the following: ī‚§ Personnel ī‚§ Management ī‚§ Quality assurance ī‚§ Facility ī‚§ Equipment ī‚§ Procedures required ī‚§ Testing issues ī‚§ Records and Reports
  • 27. Good clinical practice (GCP) īƒ˜ A set of standards for the design, conduct, performance, monitoring, auditing, recording, analysis and reporting of clinical trials or studies. īƒ˜ Addresses: ī‚§ Ethical conduct of clinical trials ī‚§ Institutional approval prior to initiation of a trial ī‚§ Qualification to perform trials ī‚§ Informed consent ī‚§ Data quality and integrity ī‚§ Protects confidentiality of records ī‚§ Investigational products conform to GMP’s and used per protocol
  • 28. Drug product and drug substance īƒ˜ Drug substance ī‚§ An active ingredient that produces pharmacological action or other direct effect in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of a disease ī‚§ Does not include intermediates used in the synthesis of such an ingredient. īƒ˜ Drug product ī‚§ A finished dosage form, for example, tablet, capsule, or solution, that contains a drug substance, generally, but not always, in association with one or more inert ingredients.
  • 29. Dosage forms īƒ˜ You cannot administer drugs in their natural or pure state. īƒ˜ You administer drugs with other pharmaceutical ingredients in different forms, called dosage forms. ī‚§ Examples: tablets, capsules, injections, syrup, elixir īƒ˜ We need a dosage form to ī‚§ Administer an accurate dose of a drug that would be safe and convenient ī‚§ Ensure patient compliance, e.g. pediatric/geriatric patients may have difficulty swallowing solid dosage forms ī‚§ Protect the drug against chemical decomposition from both the external (atmospheric oxygen and humidity) and internal (gastric acid) environments ī‚§ Conceal any unpleasant odor or taste ī‚§ Ensure or control the release of drugs into the body
  • 30. Dose, dosage forms and strengths īƒ˜ An amount of a drug that is enough to produce a therapeutic response without producing toxic effects īƒ˜ The amount of drug that produces desired effect in most adult patients is used as the drug’s adult dose īƒ˜ You should not confuse the term ‘dose’ with ‘dosage form’ and ‘dose’ with strengths īƒ˜ A drug product may be available in different strengths, your physician chooses a dose for you
  • 31. Review īƒ˜ Which of the following statements are not correct o A. Drug substance is the same as active ingredient o B. Tablet is a drug product o C. The terms ‘drug product’ and ‘drug substance’ can be used interchangeably’ o D. Prodrugs requires bio-transformation to become active o E. ‘Dose’ and ‘Dosage forms’ are used as synonyms
  • 32. Review īƒ˜ A dosage form offers which of the following advantages? o A. Provides a safe and convenient means of administering a drug o B. Enhances patient compliance, o C. Protects the drug against chemical decomposition o D. Conceals any unpleasant odor or taste o E. Ensures or control the release of drug into the body o F. All of the above
  • 33. Review īƒ˜Identify the correct statement: o Some prescription drugs may not require FDA registration o Phase III trial is performed after FDA approval of a drug o Generic drug development involves all the steps that are required for a brand drug o Mutagenicity studies are performed in healthy humans
  • 34. Drug formulations īƒ˜ A recipe or formula for a dosage form that includes the following information ī‚§ Name and quantities of ingredients ī‚§ Mixing sequence ī‚§ Processing steps īƒ˜ A recipe for preparation of a drug product is called formulation īƒ˜ A pharmaceutical formulation contains ī‚§ One or more active ingredient (Drug) ī‚§ Many additives called excipients
  • 35. Drug formulations īƒ˜ An optimized drug product should take into account all factors to ensure maximal effectiveness, the primary objective, along with safety and reliability, the secondary objectives īƒ˜ Important factors for drug formulations īƒ˜ Drug factors ī‚§ Physical-chemical properties of the drug substance īƒ˜ Therapeutic considerations ī‚§ Disease and patients īƒ˜ Bio-pharmaceutic considerations ī‚§ Factors that affect absorption of a drug substance from various routes of administration.
  • 36. Ingredients in a drug product īƒ˜ A drug product contains two groups of ingredients īƒ˜ Active ingredients: one or more ī‚§ Responsible for pharmacological effects īƒ˜ Inactive ingredients, called excipients ī‚§ Excipients do not have any pharmacological effect ī‚§ Excipients contribute to the â€ĸ Physical form â€ĸ Texture â€ĸ Stability â€ĸ Taste â€ĸ Overall appearance
  • 38. Drug nomenclature īƒ˜ Proprietary (Brand) names ī‚§ A trademark officially registered (ÂŽ) by a company â€ĸ Example: TylenolÂŽ from Johnson & Johnson īƒ˜ Non-proprietary (Generic) names ī‚§ The generally recognized or "common" name for a drug ī‚§ Standardized nomenclature established by: â€ĸ USAN Council (United States Adopted Names) â€ĸ WHO (World Health Organization) â€ĸ Example, acetaminophen īƒ˜ Generic products ī‚§ A copy of a brand drug product, comprising the same active ingredient(s), strength, and dosage form. â€ĸ Tylenol from Walgreen
  • 39. Review īƒ˜Identify true or false statements o A. Proprietary name is the chemical name of a drug o B. The terms, ‘generic name’ and ‘generic product’ describe the same nomenclature o C. Generic name is the common name of a drug o D. Generic product is an imitation of a brand product
  • 40. Drug class according to the food and drug act īƒ˜ OTC Drugs ī‚§ Not considered dangerous for self-medication and you can get these drugs without a prescription īƒ˜ Legend Drugs ī‚§ “Caution: Federal Law prohibits dispensing w/o prescription“ ī‚§ Refills have to be authorized īƒ˜ Controlled or scheduled Drugs ī‚§ These drugs have potential for abuse ī‚§ DEA enforces these drugs ī‚§ Schedules I to V with decreasing levels of control
  • 41. Controlled or scheduled drugs īƒ˜ Schedule I ī‚§ Drugs with no accepted medical use and high potential for abuse ī‚§ Heroin and LSD (Lysergic acid diethylamide) īƒ˜ Schedule II ī‚§ Drugs with accepted medical use(s) but still have high potential for abuse ī‚§ Causes severe psychological and physical dependence ī‚§ Amphetamine, morphine, oxycodone, and cocaine
  • 42. Controlled or scheduled drugs īƒ˜ Schedule III ī‚§ These substances have an abuse potential less than those in Schedules I and II ī‚§ Cause moderate or low physical dependence or high psychological dependence ī‚§ Anabolic steroids and products containing not more than 90 mg codeine in a dosage unit or products containing less than 15 mg hydrocodone per dosage unit ī‚§ Any products containing amobarbitol, secobartibal or ketamine
  • 43. Controlled or scheduled drugs īƒ˜ Schedule IV ī‚§ Less potential for abuse than I, II, and III ī‚§ Cause limited psychological and physical dependence ī‚§ Benzodiazepines and phenobarbital īƒ˜ Schedule V ī‚§ Least potential for abuse ī‚§ In many states, you can get these drugs without a prescription after signing a log book ī‚§ Certain anti-cough preparations containing not more than 200 mg codeine in each 100 mL or 100 g (promethazine or guaifenesin with codeine)
  • 44. Reviews īƒ˜Which of the following drug class has the least potential for abuse. o A. Schedule I o B. Schedule II o C. Schedule III o D. Schedule IV o C. Schedule V
  • 45. Drug standards and pharmacopeias īƒ˜ Drugs and drug products must meet certain requirements for purity, strength, labeling, packaging and stability. īƒ˜ We have monographs and reference books that describe standards that manufacturers should maintain when they prepare drug products īƒ˜ Organized sets of monographs or books of these standards are called pharmacopeias īƒ˜ They are also called official compendia because they are considered as legal standards
  • 46. The United States Pharmacopeia īƒ˜ The term pharmacopeia comes from Greek ‘pharmacon’ meaning drug and poiein = meaning make. īƒ˜ The term pharmacopeia suggest any recipe or formula or other standards required to prepare a drug īƒ˜ First used in 1580 in Italy īƒ˜ First United States Pharmacopeia (USP) was published in 1820. īƒ˜ Dr. Lyman Spalding, a physician from New York, is recognized as the Father of the United States Pharmacopeia
  • 47. The National Formulary īƒ˜National Formulary (NF) was first published in 1888 īƒ˜NF was first edited by pharmacists and listed many drugs that USP did not list īƒ˜In 1975 , USP and NF were merged into a single book and first combined compendium was published in 1980 īƒ˜USP contains information on drug substances, but NF has information regarding pharmaceutical ingredients
  • 48. The United States Pharmacopeia īƒ˜ The USP, a non-governmental agency, sets standard for prescription and over-the-counter medicines, dietary supplements, and other healthcare products īƒ˜ The USP helps healthcare providers reach the standards. īƒ˜ More than 130 countries recognize USP standards īƒ˜ USP is a science-based public health organization, not belongs to any agency of the US government
  • 49. Other pharmacopeias īƒ˜British Pharmacopeia īƒ˜European Pharmacopeia īƒ˜International pharmacopeia īƒ˜Many countries have their own pharmacopeias
  • 51. Reviews īƒ˜ Identify the correct statements o A. USP is a reference book that establishes standards to be used by the manufacturers to prepare drug products o B. USP is an independent, science-based public health organization. o C. Monographs of drug substances are in the USP section and that of pharmaceutical ingredients are in NF section o D. USP is the only pharmacopoeia in the world o E. USP is used only in the United States o F. Monographs of USP mainly describes use of drugs