Clin Ther. 2012 Nov;34(11):S1-10. doi: 10.1016/j.clinthera.2012.09.013.
The Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) organized a workshop held in November 2011 to address knowledge gaps that limit the availability of adequate pediatric formulations. This workshop was used as a means to identify the types of research innovations needed and to stimulate research efforts designed to improve the availability of pediatric formulations and the technologies required to make these formulations.
Information for this article was gathered from the proceedings of the Second US PFI Workshop sponsored by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in Bethesda, Maryland, on November 1 and 2, 2011, as well as from post-workshop discussions. The workshop preparation began with formation of 4 working groups: Biopharmaceutics, Biopharmaceutics Classification System (BCS), New Technology and Drug Delivery Systems, and Taste and Flavor.
The recommendations of the 4 working groups will form the basis for the development of a blueprint to guide future research efforts. The pediatric-specific problems identified include the heterogeneity of the population, the small size of the pediatric drug market, the limited number of new formulations for the large number of off-patent and unlabeled drugs, and the lack of universal agreement on how to define appropriate formulations for different ages and stages of development. There was consensus on the need to develop a universal technology platform for flexible pediatric dosage forms, transforming an empirical process into a science-based platform. A number of problems affect the availability of drugs in the developing world. Age-appropriate solid oral pediatric medicines for common diseases can have a global impact. Success on a global scale depends on the commitment of policy makers, regulators, scientists, pharmaceutical companies, sponsors, government, and research foundations to address gaps in knowledge and solve public health issues related to the availability of formulations in the developing world.
Solutions to the worldwide lack of appropriate pediatric formulations will require the development of a road map and the commitment of policy makers, regulators, scientists, pharmaceutical sponsors, academic institutions, governments, and research foundations. The development of a universal, cost-effective platform using existing or developing innovative technology that produces flexible pediatric dosage forms remains an important but elusive goal.
美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)国家儿童健康与人类发展研究所的尤尼斯·肯尼迪·施莱佛国立儿童健康与人类发展研究所组织了一次于 2011 年 11 月举行的研讨会,旨在解决限制足够儿科制剂供应的知识空白。本次研讨会旨在确定所需的研究创新类型,并激发旨在改善儿科制剂供应和制造这些制剂所需技术的研究工作。
本文信息来自于 2011 年 11 月 1 日和 2 日在马里兰州贝塞斯达举行的由尤尼斯·肯尼迪·施莱佛国立儿童健康与人类发展研究所赞助的第二届美国儿科配方创新工作坊的会议记录,以及会后讨论。研讨会的筹备工作从四个工作组的组建开始:生物药剂学、生物药剂学分类系统(BCS)、新技术和药物传递系统以及口味和风味。
四个工作组的建议将作为制定蓝图的基础,以指导未来的研究工作。确定的儿科特有问题包括:人群的异质性、儿科药物市场的规模较小、大量非专利和未标记药物的新制剂数量有限,以及对于如何为不同年龄和发育阶段定义适当的制剂缺乏普遍共识。与会者一致认为需要为灵活的儿科剂型开发通用技术平台,将经验过程转化为基于科学的平台。许多问题影响发展中国家药物的供应。适用于常见疾病的适合儿童年龄的固体口服儿科药物可以产生全球性影响。在全球范围内取得成功取决于政策制定者、监管机构、科学家、制药公司、赞助商、政府和研究基金会致力于解决知识差距和解决与发展中国家制剂供应相关的公共卫生问题的承诺。
解决全球范围内缺乏适当儿科制剂的问题需要制定路线图,并需要政策制定者、监管机构、科学家、制药赞助商、学术机构、政府和研究基金会的承诺。使用现有或开发创新技术开发通用、具有成本效益的平台,生产灵活的儿科剂型仍然是一个重要但难以实现的目标。