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Prequalification and ADP

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Title: Prequalification and ADP


1
Medicines - Quality Control and Quality
Assurance WHO Normative Functions in the field of
pharmaceuticals
PSM Technical Briefing Seminar 8 12 October,
Geneva
Dr Lembit Rägo Coordinator Quality Assurance and
Safety Medicines (QSM) Medicines Policy and
Standards (PSM) WHO Headquarters, Geneva,
Switzerland ragol_at_who.int
1
2
Quality of medicines remains a problem in many
countries tragedy in Panama in 2006
  • The medical nightmare of Lucia Cruz, a
    74-year-old grandmother, began in mid-September
    2006 when she realized that she had not urinated
    in two days. She was sent to the hospital but her
    condition went from bad to worse. Nausea and
    vomiting came first. Then she could not breathe.
    Her kidneys continued to fail, her arms and legs
    got swollen and eventually she died. When she
    died, her physician told the family to cremate
    the body in case she carried a mysterious disease
    that might spread.
  • As it turned out the cause of death of more than
    30 other persons was more simple. The cough
    syrup and potentially other medicines produced in
    the governmental pharmaceutical factory were
    contaminated.
  • The death were likely caused by diethylene glycol
    (DEG) found in medicines. DEG is a chemical
    cousin of antifreeze and used widely by various
    industries. It is toxic to the kidneys and can
    cause deadly renal failure.
  • Pictures. 1. Waiting for answer. 2. A popular
    medicine in Panama that turned to be a killer. 3.
    Medicines traced down and removed from supply
    chain

3
Usual perceptions may not help in Making
judgements about medicines
Taste
Smell
Appearance
4
Medicines and Myths Policies and Politics
  • Medicines are one of the most common object of
    all type of myths
  • Polices and politics is often not based on
    evidence or science
  • Judgments about medicines should be science
    based, not perceptions etc.

5
Why Stringent Standards for Medicines?
  • Medicines are different from other goods as
    patients (consumers) and even health care
    professionals are not able to judge their
    "quality" or "fitness for use"
  • " drugs are a public good and not simply just
    another commodity first for their high social
    value, and then because consumers and prescribers
    are unable to assess their quality, safety and
    efficacy" (Dr Gro Harlem Brundtland, former
    Director General of the World Health
    Organization)
  • This is the reason why medicines belong to one of
    the most regulated group of products

6
What Standards for Medicines?
  • Medicines must meet quality, safety and efficacy
    criteria.
  • These three sets of requirements are
    complementary to each other and each product has
    to be of good quality, safe and efficacious.
  • It is possible that a product is of good quality,
    but may not necessarily be effective or safe
  • It is possible that a product is effective, but
    may not necessarily be of good quality or safe
  • It is possible that a product is safe but may not
    be of good quality or effective

7
What type of medicines we have? 1. Innovator
products
  • For these products one has to prove their safety,
    efficacy and quality. Basis for these criteria is
    created by respective scientific disciplines.
    Implementation is executed through respective
    laws and regulations.
  • Proving safety and efficacy is the key for these
    products. It is based on the results of
    pre-clinical (i.e. animal toxicology) and
    clinical (clinical studies carried out in healthy
    volunteers and patients) research
  • Innovator (or originator) products
  • New innovative products that nobody yet has
    marketed, usually based on the new active
    ingredient (chemical compound which is
    responsible for its effects in human subjects)
  • The manufacturer has also to prove that its
    processes to produce the product and methods
    invented to control its quality are meeting
    established quality requirements.

8
What type of medicines we have? 2. Generic
products interchangeability a key
  • The term generic product has somewhat different
    meanings in different jurisdictions. Therefore,
    term multisource pharmaceutical product is
    preferred by WHO. Generic products may be
    marketed either under the approved nonproprietary
    name or under a brand (proprietary) name. They
    may be marketed in dosage forms and/or strengths
    different from those of the innovator products.
  • Where the term generic product is used, it means
    a pharmaceutical product, usually intended to be
    interchangeable with the innovator product, which
    is usually manufactured without a license from
    the innovator company and marketed after expiry
    of the patent or other (e.g. data) exclusivity
    rights.
  • Multisource pharmaceutical products are
    pharmaceutically equivalent products that may or
    may not be therapeutically equivalent.
    Multisource pharmaceutical products that are
    therapeutically equivalent are interchangeable

9
What type of medicines we have?
  • Other products us as medicines
  • Traditional medicines such as traditional Chinese
    medicine or in Europe in some countries
    homeopathic medicines
  • Herbal medicines
  • .

10
What standards are need for generic medicines?
  • For generic medicines the manufacturer has to
    prove that the product meets all quality
    requirements
  • In case of safety and efficacy it refers to the
    originator's research
  • To prove the therapeutic interchangeability it
    has, as a rule, to carry out bioequivalence
    studies (small scale clinical trials in healthy
    volunteers to examine if the test drug has
    essentially the same blood concentration pattern
    of active ingredient as the originator.
  • It is assumed that if the blood concentrations
    are essentially the same the safety and efficacy
    profile is also the same.

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12
What is WHO doing to help the countries?
  • Normative functions
  • Capacity building
  • Prequalification
  • "Three in one" more tuned to real public health
    problems, immediate feedback, better quality,
    higher efficiency

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14
WHO normative documents
  • The Expert Committee documents pass wide
    international consultation and are finally
    adopted by the Committee composed of outstanding
    international technical experts
  • New TRS No 943 with 41st Report from 2007
  • Updated PQ general procedure
  • PQ of QC labs procedure

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Bookorders_at_who.int
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20
Are there alternative regulatory pathwaysfor
products of public health needs?
  • EU Article 58
  • US FDA tentative approvals linked to PEPFAR
  • Canadian Access to medicines scheme
  • WHO cooperation with the above mentioned
  • Confidentiality agreement with US FDA in place
    and working CA with Health Canada expected by
    March 2007
  • How better use the synergies?

21
Instead of conclusions
  • Thank you for listening
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