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Current USP Approaches to Biologics Issues

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Title: Current USP Approaches to Biologics Issues


1
Current USP Approaches to Biologics Issues
  • Anthony J. DeStefano, Ph.D.
  • Vice President, General Chapters
  • Tina S. Morris, Ph.D.
  • Director, Biologics and Biotechnology

2
USP Mission Statement
  • USP promotes the public health and benefits
    practitioners and patients by disseminating
    authoritative standards and information developed
    by its volunteers for medicines, other healthcare
    technologies, and related practices used to
    maintain and improve health and promote optimal
    healthcare delivery.
  • USP is a practitioner-based compendiumthe only
    one in the world

3
USP Milestones and Legislation
  • 1820 USP founded
  • 1848 - Drug Import Act USP legislatively
    mandated
  • 1880s 1890s - State Boards recognize USP as the
    legal standard for composition and formulation of
    drugs
  • 1902 - PHS Act regulates biologicsUSP not
    mentioned (no parenterals)
  • 1906 - Federal Food and Drugs ActFDA enforces
    certain aspects of the USP quality standards for
    biological articles.
  • 1938 - Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act USP
    and NF standards recognized as official standards
    of quality

4
USP Milestones and Legislation
  • 1941 - As the patent protection for insulin was
    about to end, Congress gave FDA certification
    authority and stated that FDA must enforce USP
    standard for insulin
  • 1965 Social Security Act Drugs and biologics
    provided in a physicians office must be in the
    USP for reimbursement to occur.
  • 1997 - FDAMA indicates that FDC Act applies to
    biologics regulated under the PHS Act.
  • 2003 MMA calls for USP to develop a list of
    drug categories and classes.

5
Recognition of USP Standards in Federal Food Drug
and Cosmetic Act (FDCA)
  • Section 501(b) - Adulterated Drugs and Devices
  • A drug or device shall be deemed to be
    adulterated if it purports to be or is
    represented as a drug the name of which is
    recognized in an official compendium, and its
    strength differs from, or its quality or purity
    falls below, the standards set forth in such
    compendium.
  • Such determination as to strength, quality, or
    purity shall be made in accordance with the tests
    or methods of assay set forth in such compendium
  • Section 502(g) Misbranded Drugs and Devices
  • A drug or device shall be deemed to be misbranded
    if it purports to be a drug the name of which is
    recognized in an official compendium, unless it
    is packaged and labeled as prescribed therein.

6
Provisions of the FDCA apply to biologics
regulated under PHS Act
  • PHS ACT (42 USC 262)
  • 262(j) Application of FDCA
  • The Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
    applies to a biological product subject to
    regulation under this section, except that a
    product for which a license has been approved
    under subsection (a) shall not be required to
    have an approved application under section 505 of
    such Act (21 U.S.C. 355)
  • Biological products approved under the PHS Act
    are subject to the adulteration and misbranding
    provisions of FDCA
  • If an official monograph in USP-NF is available,
    the biological product, including a generic
    biologic, should conform

7
Council of Experts
  • Scientific Policy Body
  • Chairs of Expert Committees
  • Develops Standards and Information
  • Assisted by Expert Committees
  • Chair of the Council, Roger L. Williams, M.D.

8
USP and Biologics
  • 1985 - Convention Resolution Feasibility and
    Advisability of Compendial Monographs for
    Macromolecular Drugs Derived from
    Biotechnological Processes
  • 1987 - USP Biotechnology Program
  • 1990 - Proposed monographs on Alteplase,
    Interferons, Somatrem, and Somatropin
  • Biologics and Biotechnology related general
    chapters in USP
  • 1992 PF - USP Rationale for Development of
    Public Standards for Biological Products Licensed
    by CBER
  • 1995 - USP Subcommittee on Biotechnology and
    Biopolymers

9
USP and Biologics
  • 2000 - Expert Committees on
  • Biotechnology and Natural Therapeutics and
    Diagnostics
  • Vaccine, Virology, and Immunology
  • Blood and Blood Products
  • Gene Therapy, Cell Therapy, and Tissue
    Engineering
  • Complex Actives Department in ISD
  • 2005 Biologics and Biotechnology Department Formed

10
Biologics and Biotechnology
  • Division of Documentary Standards- Chief Science
    Officer Darrel Abernethy
  • Biologics and Biotechnology-Director Tina Morris
  • Expert Committees in BB
  • Cell Therapy, Gene Therapy, and Tissue
    Engineering Fouad Atouf/William Tente
  • Blood and Blood Products Anita Szajek/Jean
    Huxsoll
  • Proteins and Polysaccharides Larry Callahan/Lynn
    Yeoman
  • Vaccines and Virology Victor Lu/Barry Garfinkle
  • Committee Chairs form BB Collaborative Group

11
Expert Committees and Advisory Panels in
Biologics Biotechnology
Biologics Biotechnology Collaborative Group
Blood Blood Products
Vaccines Virology
Proteins Polysaccharides
Cell, Gene Tissue Therapies
Bioassay analysis
Human Plasma
Vaccine Tests
Flow Cytometry
Bioassay Development
Heparin
Virology Tests
Test Kit Validation
Immunology Tests
Plasma Analytical
Bioassay Validation
Cell Therapy
NAT
Gene Therapy
Monoclonal Antibodies
Viral Clearance
Bovine Serum
Viral Testing Plasma
Protein A
Glycans
Enzymes
12
Importance of USP Standards in Biotechnology Today
  • Biotech Products are the most expensive drug
    products on the market today.
  • Biotech products are often the target of
    counterfeiters
  • Public standards can help identify and deter
    counterfeiting.
  • Biotech products are inherently heterogeneous.
  • Biotech products are often unstable.
  • Biotech product can have complex methods of
    analysis (need for horizontal standards).

13
Importance of USP Standards in Biotechnology Today
  • USP Standards are market standards enforceable
    from production to consumption
  • Monographs are tied to products not manufacturers
  • USP standards can be flexible-take into account
    different methods of production
  • Public monographs and national primary reference
    materials are government responsibilities that
    came to USP historically
  • Public process improves quality and provides
    transparency
  • A public documentary standard (monograph) and
    national primary reference material are key to
    maintaining unitage within and across products.
  • This is critical to practitioners to understand
    dosing and switching

14
Impact of USP Monographs
  • USP Monographs are enforced both in the US and
    foreign countries
  • Product and API Specifications Must Fall Within
    the USP Monograph Specifications Throughout the
    Entire Lifetime of Product or API
  • US-FDA Can and Often Does Require Additional
    Tests That are not in a Monograph for the Release
    of Products
  • It is not Necessary to do Every Test In a USP
    Monograph but the Product Must Pass Every Test if
    Tested
  • Methods in USP Monographs are Considered
    Validated

15
USP Monograph for Biotech API (Typical
Requirements)
  • ID Tests
  • Peptide Map
  • Retention Time from Assay
  • Purity Test
  • HPLC (Reverse Phase)
  • Electrophoresis
  • Limit on HMW Species (SEC)
  • Glycan analysis (if glycosylated)
  • Assay
  • HPLC-HIC-SEC-RP
  • Enzyme
  • Bioassay-Bioidentity (Potency)
  • If defined 3D structure exists
  • Cellular preferred over animal

16
USP Monograph for Biotech Product (Typical
Requirements)
  • ID Tests
  • Retention Time from Assay
  • Packaging
  • Endotoxin
  • Sterility
  • Total Protein Test
  • Purity Test
  • HPLC (Reverse Phase)
  • Limit on HMW Species (SEC)
  • Assay
  • HPLC-SEC-RP
  • Bioassay-Bioidentity (Potency)
  • If defined 3D structure exists
  • Cellular preferred over animal
  • If not performed on API

17
Biologics and Biotechnology Initiatives
  • Develop and Revise New General Chapters
  • Develop Procedural (Horizontal) Standards
  • Develop Ancillary Materials Monographs and
    Standards
  • Revise Current Monographs with Modern Techniques
  • Bioassays
  • Replace animal assays where possible
  • Develop Separate Chapters for the Development and
    Design, Analysis and Validation of Bioassays
  • Develop criteria for when a bioassay needs to be
    included in a monograph
  • Develop Monographs for High Value Products to
    Combat Counterfeiting and Diversion.

18
Challenges of Monographs for Biotech Products
  • Should Monographs be Product Specific or Type
    Specific
  • Should each interferon have a separate monograph
  • Comparability Equivalence Challenge-
  • Somatropin produced in bacteria, yeast and
    mammalian cells
  • Epoetin different CHO cell lines different
    glycosylation.
  • Complexity Challenge
  • Biotech Products are Inherently Heterogenous
  • Glycosylation/Glycation
  • Deamidation, Oxidation, Proteolysis
  • Complex Biology
  • Produced by complex processes
  • Technology-Analysis Challenge
  • Accessibility (cost, expertise, time)

19
Insulin Historical Overview
  • 1921 Discovery of insulinic function (dog
    pancreatic tissue) for the treatment of diabetes
  • 1922 Amelioration of diabetic condition in human
    by using injections of bovine pancreatic extracts
  • Insulin injection also induced side effects
    including formation of abscesses, probably due to
    impurities, e.g., endotoxin.
  • Further research helped improve purity of the
    extracts, but also showed that too much of the
    pancreatic extract could induce hypoglycemia,
    introducing the notion of potency

20
Insulin Monograph- Historical Overview, cont.
  • 1942 (USP XII), First monograph for extracted
    insulin
  • 1980s, First monograph for human recombinant
    insulin was developed
  • New monographs to cover new analogs or delivery
    systems are developed (rapid- long-acting
    insulin, inhaled insulin)
  • Monograph specifications evolved with technology
    innovations

21
USP Monographs for Insulin
  • Different monographs reflecting
  • Different formulations
  • Nature of the stabilizing complex (Isophane,
    Zinc)
  • Slow and fast release forms (Prompt, extended)
  • Recombinant, extracted, synthetic, analog
  • USP monographs, today!
  • Insulin Injection
  • Insulin Human
  • Insulin Human Injection
  • Human Insulin Isophane Suspension and Human
    Insulin Injection
  • Insulin Lispro
  • Insulin Lispro Injection
  • Isophane Insulin Suspension
  • Isophane Insulin Human Suspension
  • Insulin Zinc Suspension
  • Extended Insulin Zinc Suspension
  • Prompt Insulin Zinc Suspension
  • Insulin Human Zinc Suspension

22
Key Requirements for Insulin Monographs
  • Limits on high molecular weight insulin species
  • Stability indicating
  • Limits immunogenicity
  • Limits on Zinc
  • Zinc interacts with insulin
  • Impact on formation of hexameric structures
  • Affects insulin release
  • Purity Test
  • Deamidation, oxidation and disulfide scrambling
    occurs over time.
  • Gradient is necessary to resolve all peptide
    related impurities.
  • Assay
  • Stability indicating
  • Takes into account the activity of main degradent
    (A-21 desamido)
  • Amount of different forms (soluble, amorphous)
  • Soluble insulin can stick to crystals
  • Amorphous form can turn into crystalline forms
    over time

23
When Are Bioassays Needed in a Monograph
  • Bioassays are a probe of the 3-D conformation or
    a method for measuring the potency of complex
    products where activity may be attributable to
    more than one component
  • EP and USP Differ
  • Somatropin (Bioidentity Test)
  • EP No Bioassay
  • USP Rat weight gain assay
  • Insulin (Bioidentity Test)
  • EP No Bioassay
  • USP Rabbit blood glucose

24
Bioassay Continuum
Steven Kozlowski, USFDA
25
Product-Specific Bioassay Chapters
  • Official
  • lt121gt Insulin Assays
  • Under development
  • Somatropin Assays
  • Glucagon Assays
  • Insulin Cell Based Assays
  • These will include cell-based potency tests that
    replace animal assays

26
Erythropoetin Monograph
  • Kidney derived hormone, role in maintaining
    erythrocyte maturation in vivo
  • 165 amino acids glycoprotein with three (3)
    N-linked and one (1) O-linked glycosylation sites
  • EP monograph
  • WHO designated two INNs (Epoetin-alpha and
    Epoetin-beta) on the basis that they might have
    different glycosylation sites

27
Why General Chapters for Biotechnology?
  • Biotechnology manufacturing is process-driven
  • Many considerations apply to a wide range of
    products
  • Analytical and testing is more complex than for
    small molecules
  • Comprehensive General Chapters facilitate the
    development of monographs for these products

28
USP General Chapters Related to Biotechnology
  • General Chapters are written to provide common
    methods for monographs and/or for informational
    purposes.
  • Chapters over 1000 are for informational purposes
    unless mentioned in a monograph.
  • If over 1000 and mentioned in a monograph the
    chapter is official for that monograph.
  • General Biotech Chapters Official (Revision
    Needed)
  • lt1041gt BIOLOGICS
  • lt1045gtBIOTECHNOLOGY-DERIVED ARTICLES
  • Bioassay Chapters
  • lt111gtAnalysis of Bioassays (Major Revision)
  • lt1032gtDevelopment of Bioassays (In Development)
  • lt1033gtValidation of Bioassays (In Development)

29
General Chapters Official
  • Protein/Peptide Analysis Official Harmonized
  • lt503gtACETIC ACID IN PEPTIDES
  • lt1052gtAMINO ACID ANALYSIS
  • lt1053gtCAPILLARY ELECTROPHORESIS
  • lt1054gtISOELECTRIC FOCUSING
  • lt1055gtPEPTIDE MAPPING (UNDER REVISION)
  • lt1056gtPOLYACRYLAMIDE GEL ELECTROPHORESIS (IN
    NEED OF REVISION)
  • lt1057gtTOTAL PROTEIN ASSAY

30
General Chapters Under Development
  • lt130gt PROTEIN A QUALITY ATTRIBUTES
  • lt131gt RESIDUAL PROTEIN A TESTING
  • lt1084gt GLYCOPROTEIN AND GLYCAN ANALYSIS --
    INTRODUCTION AND CHOICE OF ANALYSIS STRATEGIES
  • lt1085gt GLYCOPROTEIN AND GLYCAN ANALYSIS --
    DEGLYCOSYLATION OF GLYCOPROTEINS
  • lt1094gt GLYCOPROTEIN AND GLYCAN ANALYSIS --
    MONOSACCHARIDE ANALYSIS
  • lt1095gt GLYCOPROTEIN AND GLYCAN ANALYSIS --
    OLIGOSACCHARIDE ANALYSIS
  • lt1260gt MONOCLONAL ANTIBODIES

31
The new Chapter lt111gt, out for public comment
32
Participate!
To register http//ems.intellor.com/?p201821do
registert12
33
Ancillary Materials
  • lt1043gt Ancillary Materials for Cell, Gene and
    Tissue Engineered Products
  • Biochemical substances that are used to
    manufacture cell therapy, gene therapy or
    tissue-engineered products or therapeutics
    derived from cell culture (e.g., vaccines,
    proteins) but are not intended to be in final
    product.
  • Include raw materials, processing and
    purification aids or agents used during
    manufacture.

34
Ancillary Materials
  • Ancillary material chapters are intended to help
    standardize these items
  • These chapters can specify reference standards
    that help demonstrate compliance to compendial
    tests.
  • Reference standards can also be qualified for use
    as procedural standards and calibrants in limit
    tests

35
lt130gt Protein A Quality Attributes
  • Contains specifications for
  • Protein A
  • rProtein A, C-Cys
  • rProtein A
  • rProtein A, B4, C-Cys
  • Is accompanied by 4 USP
  • Ancillary Materials RS

36
The USP Glycoprotein and Glycan Chapter Family
and Associated Standards
lt1084gt Glycoprotein and Glycan Analysis
Introduction and Choice of Analysis Methods
Human a Acid Glycoprotein
Single oligosaccharides
Single monosaccharides
Mixes 14
Mixes 14
Fetuin
RNAse B
Human IgG
37
Procedural Reference Standards
  • Procedural Reference Standards are horizontal
    standards
  • To be Used in Analytical Methods Development and
    Validation of Procedures
  • To be Used in Routine Analysis as
  • Positive Controls
  • Method Optimization, qualification and Validation
  • System Suitability Establishment
  • Training
  • Troubleshooting
  • Reagent Qualification

38
Procedural Reference Standards Monosaccharide
Mixtures
  • Use of Mixture 1 for system suitability in
    HPAEC-PAD analysis, PA 10 method

39
Impurity Matrix From lt1045gtBIOTECHNOLOGY-DERIVED
ARTICLES
40
Impurity Matrix From lt1045gtBIOTECHNOLOGY-DERIVED
ARTICLES
41
Conclusions
  • Biotechnology products are complex from both
    biological and compendial perspectives
  • Monograph development and general chapters
    designed to help
  • Analytical methods can be used as surrogate for
    functionality assays
  • Development of cell based assays will help
    tighten the monograph specifications and increase
    the precision of the assays.
  • Public standards play a key role in assessing
    product quality in an emerging global market of
    increasing product diversity (biogenerics/biosimil
    ars)

42
Extractables and Leachables
  • Broad topic that impacts many small molecule and
    biologics and biotechnology Expert Committees.
  • It likely will call for chapters that are
    specific to the areas of interest (e.g.,
    aerosols, water, biologics/parenterals).
  • USP needs input to develop chapters. It does not
    have a mechanism to work on these issues alone.
    Industry input in developing a framework is
    critical.
  • USP works with organizations that can help, such
    as PDA and PQRI.

43
Extractables and Leachables
  • USP has worked with PQRI on extractables and
    leachables in orally inhaled and nasal drug
    products report (over 270 pages).
  • The Aerosols Expert Committee is currently
    drafting a chapter to address this area.
  • PQRI has set up a committee to work on
    extractables and leachables in parenteral and
    ocular drug products.
  • USP will have membership on this committee to
    make transition of a report to a chapter more
    seamless.

44
Extractables and Leachables in Biologics
  • Extractables and leachables can cause problems
    unique to biologics
  • USP needs a group to draft a proposed chapter
  • A strong tie to existing and future monographs is
    needed
  • The tests proposed need to be able to
    meaningfully detect known issues

45
Quality by Design?
  • Quality is never an accident.It is always
    the result of intelligent effort. There must be
    the will to produce a superior thing.John
    Ruskin (1819-1900)

46
What is Quality by Design?
  • The application of formal risk-analysis
    techniques to the manufacture and control of
    drugs
  • Application of advanced technologies to better
    predict risks
  • Application of advanced data handling techniques
    to evaluate risks
  • Application of advanced systems to reduce and
    control risks
  • Definition of regions of acceptable risk in the
    manufacturing design space

47
Risk
  • Which/Whose Risk?
  • Patient Risk?
  • Practitioner Risk?
  • Manufacturer Risk?
  • What Risk?
  • Risk of producing a bad product
  • Unsafe
  • Ineffective
  • Non-compliant
  • Risk of variable manufacture

48
Where is/can QbD be applied?
  • Manufacturing
  • Feedback loops
  • Re-defined unit operations
  • Change control
  • Analytical
  • Multivariate Design of Experiments
  • Change control
  • Regulatory Affairs
  • Question-based review
  • Change control

49
Change control
  • Change?
  • Specification of raw material
  • Specification of excipient
  • Specification of manufacture route
  • Process for manufacture
  • Compared to what?
  • Initial Specification?
  • Pivotal trial material?
  • Critical control parameter

50
USP Perspective on QbD
  • Represents
  • Good science done for the right reasons
  • Enhanced dialogs
  • Meaningful specifications
  • A better standard
  • May not
  • Be financial sound (not our issue)
  • Produce better product
  • Increase quality, safety or efficacy
  • We support QbD for product registration
  • But private specifications must move to public
    specifications

51
What are USPs roles in QbD
  • Final public standard (traditional role)
  • National primary standards
  • General guidance chapters
  • Standards of equivalency
  • Ancillary and procedural standards

52
Effects of QbD on USP
  • New concepts on
  • General Test Chapters
  • Near-IR
  • Raman
  • Heavy Metals
  • Residual solvents?
  • Equivalency testing
  • Flexible monograph
  • Performance standards
  • Certified Reference Materials

53
Measurement Science, QbD, PAT
  • Improved manufacturing/manufacturing controls
    (QbD, PAT) reduce uncertainty (variation in
    ingredient and product attributes relative to
    specification)
  • Measurement science identifies and controls
    analytical uncertainty
  • USPs reference materials (national primary
    standards) add uncertaintyUSP should control
    this and tell you what it is
  • Buffers (acceptance criteria) help assure that
    specification is met

54
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