Eli Lilly, Gilead, Thermo Fisher and other industry groups and nonprofits like BIO and USP are seeking some slight changes and more clarity from the International Council of Harmonisation on its new guidance related to continuous manufacturing.
The guidance, known as Q13, focuses on continuous manufacturing and its potential to lower manufacturing costs and reduce the physical footprint of manufacturing facilities compared to traditional batch manufacturing, according to USP. Continuous manufacturing also may improve quality control, lower the variability in manufactured products, and provide enhanced flexibility in production quantity and utilization of manufacturing lines.
But drugmakers have been reluctant to completely jump into continuous manufacturing because of the upfront costs and time-consuming nature of altering their manufacturing operations. And some are still trying to wrap their heads around how this new ICH guidance aligns with FDA’s own draft guidance.
USP, which says it wants to help FDA and ICH provide resources and training on continuous manufacturing, also seeks more clarity on how the ICH guidance will impact that FDA’s draft from 2019, known as ‘Quality Considerations for Continuous Manufacturing,’ which describes FDA’s current thinking on continuous manufacturing of small molecule, solid oral drugs.
Others like BIO are requesting more specific tweaks. For instance, BIO is calling on ICH to widen its definition of a ‘batch,’ as there may be ‘situations where the defining it by ‘size’ may not always be the most relevant, e.g., yield/productivity or flow rate may not always be constant leading to a fairly wide range of ‘batch sizes’.’
Gilead, meanwhile, also calls on ICH to better define the word ‘fluctuation’ in the Q13 guidance, as it’s only used once and only used it’s ‘not very clear the difference between fluctuations and disturbances. If fluctuations have no impact to the process, then the action of ‘masked by the data analysis method used’ should not be an issue.’ If it is a ‘large’ fluctuation, it should then be considered a disturbance, Gilead said.
Eli Lilly also takes issue with an area of the guidance that focuses on how continuous monitoring can help create additional opportunities for process monitoring and control that assure the process is operating in a state of control.
‘Thus, CM does not require comparisons to historical ranges to identify drifts or trends within the batch to ensure the process is operating in a state of control. While this may be a best practice, written as is, this may be considered as a new requirement,’ Lilly said, calling on ICH to pull that reference.
The ICH draft guidance also notes that, ‘All information for models used as part of commercial manufacturing should be maintained at the manufacturing site’
But Lilly says that ‘All information’ is too broad. ‘Could it be more specific (e.g. model development, validation and maintainence)? Please also clarify what ‘maintained at the manufacturing site’ means,’ the company adds.
Sensor-based technology for clinical trial data collection represents the latest medical paradigm shift. There are more than 700 clinical studies involving wearable devices currently underway in the United States. A study from Intel IT projects their inclusion in clinical trials will surge to 70% by 2025.
Apps, biosensors and patient-centered technologies increase visibility of comprehensive patient data. Pharma leaders anticipate the benefits of wearables to include better data (58%), faster results (33%) and lower trial costs (10%).
Crowd gathering at the Westin St. Francis for JPM in 2019 (Endpoints News)
Well, see you in January 2023.
In a surprise about-face, #JPM22 will now be fully virtual after organizers of the popular biotech conference decided to pull the plug on a live event in San Francisco given fears over the Omicron variant and a growing chorus of drugmakers opting out.
The move is no big surprise after reports swirled about some of the industry’s biggest players nixing plans to attend live and pressuring the bank to reconsider the annual meet at the Westin St. Francis. STAT reported Tuesday that Moderna and Amgen, among other large drugmakers, had already pulled out.
Richard Pazdur (via AACR)
There’s no denying that Merck’s Keytruda set a high bar for checkpoint inhibitors in development everywhere. But when it comes to the often redundant development of PD(L)-1 antibodies worldwide, FDA’s top cancer doctors Rick Pazdur and Julia Beaver are calling for more industry coordination.
‘Efforts to corral this enthusiasm should focus on increased international partnerships between sponsors of approved checkpoint inhibitors and those developing novel agents to be used with anti–PD-1 and anti–PD-L1 antibodies rather than developing ‘me too’ drugs,’ Beaver and Pazdur wrote Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine.
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The FDA on Wednesday not only approved the first generic versions of the decades-old diabetes insipidus treatment vasopressin, but also simultaneously offered a particularly damning rebuke of a citizen petition attempting to block the generic, while promising to pass along the matter to the Federal Trade Commission.
The response could prove troublesome for the sponsor of the brand name version of the drug, Endo’s Par Sterile Products, which brought in more than $780 million in 2020 for its brand name version of the drug Vasostrict.
Robert Califf (Graeme Sloan/Sipa via AP Images)
As Rob Califf likely makes his return as FDA commissioner next month, his confirmation hearing yesterday offered a peek into some of the larger obstacles he’s going to face in the coming months and years.
The pandemic isn’t going away anytime soon with Omicron, and some vaccines and therapeutics may need to be tweaked or pulled from the market entirely as they prove to be ineffective against the new variant. The FDA, meanwhile, needs to get back on even footing with some longer-term direction.
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A nurse administers a COVID-19 booster shot to Joe Rigdon at a vaccination site in Eastmonte Park, Altamonte Springs. (Photo by Paul Hennessy/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
When Laura Burns went to get her first Covid-19 shot last January, no one had warned her that the vaccines might not work for her.
Burns, the recipient of a double-lung transplant in 2016, knew to be careful about the medicines she took. She consulted with her transplant team when the Pfizer and Moderna shots were authorized and only signed up after being told the vaccines would likely be safe for her, which they were.
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Jay Bradner, President, Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research
John Carroll: Well, hello everybody. This is John Carroll. I’m the editor of Endpoints News, the editor and founder of Endpoints News. I’m here with Jay Bradner, the president of the Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research. Jay, we’re going to be talking about ASH in just a second, but you’ve just recently celebrated your sixth anniversary as president of NIBR. And I’m curious, it’s such a significant amount of time for anybody to spend in one career phase. And looking back over the last six years, is everything fundamentally different about the research process and the translational arena that you’re in?
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For the first time, doctors will have a drug to combat acute graft-versus-host disease — a dangerous side effect of stem cell transplants in which donor cells attack the recipient — before it occurs.
The FDA has approved Bristol Myers Squibb’s Orencia to prevent aGVHD in combination with certain immunosuppressants, the company announced on Wednesday. Adults and kids two years and older can take the drug if they’re undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation from an unrelated recipient.
Karthik Balakrishnan, Nodexus founder and CEO
A new company emerged from stealth this morning in San Francisco Bay, and it’s one focused on research technology.
Nodexus, a bio company that develops automated live cell characterization and isolation technologies, announced its launch this morning with a Series A netting it $30 million.
Even though Nodexus does not develop its own drugs, the Series A was led by major biotech investor RA Capital Management, with participation from California VC fund Section 32 and some previous investors. This comes at the same time Nodexus brings on a new board member: former president at BD Biosciences Bill Rhodes.
https://endpts.com/drugmakers-seek-tweaks-to-ich-guidance-on-continuous-manufacturing/