Dose proportionality and BE [Design Issues]

posted by sciguy – Canada, 2011-11-04 16:34 (5351 d 10:14 ago) – Posting: # 7605
Views: 10,045

Hi Helmut and Ohlbe,

❝ Yes, but it must be clear that here BE is based on a more tough assumption. Genrally (well, outside of Canada) we are not allowed to perform a dose-correction at the same strengths even if we know that actual contents differ.


Actually, the latest Canadian draft guidance (Jan 2010, line 84) implies removal of the dose correction and the inclusion of the 5% similarity requirement (like the rest of the world!) - not sure when the final will be released.

❝ Hhm, but how? If we dose-normalize your example we get e.g. 90.00-111.11%. If we don’t normalize, we get 112.50–138.89%.


I was thinking of the case where the sponsor wants to show their formulation (eg: 10 mg capsule) is bioequivalent to another formulation of different strength (eg: 8 mg tablet). Here, dose normalization would not be necessary because we actually want to show the capsule of this strength is BE to the tablet. Moreover, it would not be appropriate since different formulations = potentially diff f.


sciguy

Complete thread:

UA Flag
Activity
 Admin contact
23,656 posts in 4,994 threads, 1,570 registered users;
241 visitors (0 registered, 241 guests [including 30 identified bots]).
Forum time: 03:49 CEST (Europe/Vienna)

It requires a very unusual mind
to undertake the analysis of the obvious.    Alfred North Whitehead

The Bioequivalence and Bioavailability Forum is hosted by
BEBAC Ing. Helmut Schütz
HTML5