CMC Live - Chemistry, Manufacturing & Controls

著者: Meranda Parascandola Ed Narke
  • サマリー

  • FDA CMC regulations and guidance simplified through examination, real life experiences and risk-based advice. This podcast hopes to educate sponsors and individuals on agency related regulatory CMC matters. We will focus on the critical CMC issues and build programs that enhance drug development. CMC topics will include Regulatory Starting Materials, API and Drug Product Process, Formulation Development, Supply Chains, Analytical Controls. Advocating and interpreting CMC Strategy, directing CMC Operations and Quality Assurance oversight in conjunction with developing CMC submission content that represents the best interests of emerging biotech. NOT INTENDED TO BE PRESCRIPTIVE ADVICE BUT RATHER INTERPRETATION THAT IS RIGHT FOR YOU. Since 2007 we have provided our partners with innovative strategies and exceptional advice intended to enhance program development, product approval, and marketing presence.
    2020 DSI InPharmatics. All Rights Reserved.
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あらすじ・解説

FDA CMC regulations and guidance simplified through examination, real life experiences and risk-based advice. This podcast hopes to educate sponsors and individuals on agency related regulatory CMC matters. We will focus on the critical CMC issues and build programs that enhance drug development. CMC topics will include Regulatory Starting Materials, API and Drug Product Process, Formulation Development, Supply Chains, Analytical Controls. Advocating and interpreting CMC Strategy, directing CMC Operations and Quality Assurance oversight in conjunction with developing CMC submission content that represents the best interests of emerging biotech. NOT INTENDED TO BE PRESCRIPTIVE ADVICE BUT RATHER INTERPRETATION THAT IS RIGHT FOR YOU. Since 2007 we have provided our partners with innovative strategies and exceptional advice intended to enhance program development, product approval, and marketing presence.
2020 DSI InPharmatics. All Rights Reserved.
エピソード
  • 025 - The Parenteral Drug Association & Evolution of Drug Development with Michael Carroll
    2021/03/12
    What We Covered
    • 00:55 – Ed, Meranda and Brian welcome today’s guest, Mike Carroll, who speaks to his background in microbiology and product development  
    • 04:28 – Mike talks about his involvement in the Parenteral Drug Association (PDA)  
    • 07:51 – Lessons Mike has learned throughout his career and expounds on the relevance of PDA technical reports  
    • 15:03 – The evolution of regulatory approvals in the pharmaceutical industry  
    • 17:34 – Mike describes the influence of the PDA today, given the pandemic  
    • 20:18 – Mike explains a typical day working in microbiology and quality control and assurance
    • 23:11 – The pressure of working in pharmaceutical drug development and final comments from Mike  
    Tweetable Quotes

    “The PDA was kind of the bridge. It’s the Parenteral Drug Association – its focus is sterile injectable product. But it’s into all kinds of different things.” 

    “The biggest things that are most frequently used in my case are the media fill, as Brian mentioned, and environmental monitoring.” 

    “When you cite regulations from Europe, it used to be you would pull the British because they were gonna be the standard. If you could pass Brit, you could worry about anybody else at all; you were fine.”

    “It’s an entire system that you’re trying to get where every little thing that fits into the process has been qualified and can be depended on. From the raw materials coming in the door to the viles, to the stoppers, to the machinery, the environment, the filters, the air quality and differentials – all of that stuff fitting together.” 

    “With drug development, you’re not having a life depend on you. You’re having tens of thousands of lives depend on you.”

    Relevant Links

    Design Space InPharmatics – LinkedIn

    Design Space InPharmatics – Twitter

    Edward Narke on LinkedIn

    Michael Carroll on LinkedIn

    PDA

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    32 分
  • 024 - Quality Management Systems Explained!
    2021/03/05
    What We Covered
    • 00:54 – Ed, Meranda and Brian welcome a special panel of guests to break down today’s topic: Quality Management Systems (QMS) Explained!  
    • 07:53 – The panel expounds on the timing necessary for QMS and what role the quality manual plays  
    • 13:06 – The panel explains the Code of Federal Regulations (CFRs)  
    • 17:30 – The panel defines Phase Appropriate as it pertains to QMS
    • 23:12 – Identifying which guiding documents to follow  
    • 27:29 – The value in having an experience quality professional  
    • 31:54 – Why a quality agreement is necessary  
    • 35:32 – The panel provides final words of wisdom on Quality Systems Management  
    Tweetable Quotes

    “Quality System Management provides an infrastructure for a company to ensure the quality of your drug product with patient safety in mind as its primary function.” 

    “It helps determine and define management’s commitment to quality. Because if you don’t have senior management commitment, all could be lost.”

    “To begin at the beginning, when you set up your QMS, you need to start with the procedures and processes that will reduce risk and help you prepare for your submission in the long run. That would come through managing your documents.” 

    “Guidance documents are just an opinion. And they actually say that in the documents. So, you kinda try to do a combination of everything.”

    “The biggest thing is that when you have somebody who’s experienced and they’ve been through various things like FDA audits or have worked with a very small company versus a very large company, they can differentiate what you really need right now.” 

    Relevant Links

    Design Space InPharmatics – LinkedIn

    Design Space InPharmatics – Twitter

    Edward Narke on LinkedIn

    Bettina Kaplan on LinkedIn

    Susan Fasso on LinkedIn

    Robbi Freisem on LinkedIn

    Maria Arakil on LinkedIn

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    39 分
  • 023 - A Broadway Performance Analogy for API Process Validations with Jim Mencel
    2021/02/26
    What We Covered
    • 00:52 – Ed, Meranda and Brian welcome back Jim Mencel who shares his extensive experience with process validation
    • 07:46 – The importance of Proven Acceptable Range (PAR) and Critical Process Parameter Program (CPP)  
    • 11:14 – The evolution of the batch documentation and the value of critical parameter studies  
    • 18:07 – Registration laws and gathering necessary stability data  
    • 20:49 – How validation material can be used for launch  
    • 24:15 – Jim speaks to the importance of writing a Protocol and having a quality supplier team  
    • 32:34 – Jim discusses timing when moving towards validation  
    • 38:02 – Jim reinforces the notion that communication is key when it comes to process validation  
    • 40:42 – Final recommendations Jim would give regarding process validation  
    Tweetable Quotes

    “Validation’s very formal. Validation really, in a stage analogy, is Opening Night. This is where the critics are all present, everybody’s breathing on you, you’re gonna be in the headlines the next day and everything needs to go right. So, when you think about it in that context, the validation batches are very visible to regulatory authorities.”

    “Your batch record really is a document that’s going to evolve. And if you look at the batch record for even the same step of a process, what that’s going to look like when you’re in the early phases of clinical development is different from what it’s going to look like towards the end. It’s going to be much more refined.”

    “There is a point where the process is the process. And as inefficient as it may be, it’s what you have.” 

    “Yes, your validation batches certainly count as launch stock as long as they pass all specs.” 

    “When you go into validation, you’ve gotta have your suppliers identified. And quality plays a huge role in assessing your suppliers” 

    “What it all comes down to is that preparing for the validation is something that you should be thinking about as you’re making your later clinical batches, your Phase 2 batches especially.”

    “When you’re in Phase Three it’s not a place to be penny-pinching. The old saying is, ‘you drive for show, you put for dough.’ When you’re validating, you’re putting for dough.” 

    Relevant Links

    Design Space InPharmatics – LinkedIn

    Design Space InPharmatics – Twitter

    Edward Narke on LinkedIn

    Jim Mencel on LinkedIn

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    44 分

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