Safety of Excipients in Pediatric Formulations—A Call for Toxicity Studies in Juvenile Animals?
The development of drug products for pediatric use often requires age-appropriate formulations which can be more complex and may involve a broader range of excipients than adult dosage forms. Excipients established for adult use are not always appropriate for use in children because they can affect...
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Online Access: | http://www.mdpi.com/2227-9067/2/2/191 |
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doaj-6aa6e55264c645beb558a5c15d46b2d52021-04-02T09:54:50ZengMDPI AGChildren2227-90672015-05-012219119710.3390/children2020191children2020191Safety of Excipients in Pediatric Formulations—A Call for Toxicity Studies in Juvenile Animals?Georg Schmitt0F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd., Roche Pharmaceutical Research and Early Development, Roche Innovation Center Basel, Basel CH-4070, SwitzerlandThe development of drug products for pediatric use often requires age-appropriate formulations which can be more complex and may involve a broader range of excipients than adult dosage forms. Excipients established for adult use are not always appropriate for use in children because they can affect children differently than adults. Therefore, a comprehensive safety assessment of the excipients in a pediatric formulation is essential before use, referring to existing safety data from adult human and animals as well as safety data from pediatric use and juvenile toxicity studies, when available. The overall risk assessment needs to consider the safety risk from the excipients and the extent to which the risk from the disease as such will be ameliorated by the drug formulation. Non-clinical safety studies in juvenile animals are used to assess for specific toxicities or sensitivities of excipients and for establishing safe exposures in pediatric age groups. As for any active ingredient, non-clinical safety studies in juvenile animals should only be performed for excipients if important for clinical risk assessment and labelling. Pharmaceutical companies should be critical of excessive demands for juvenile animal testing, particularly of excipients when critically needed for significant therapeutic benefit.http://www.mdpi.com/2227-9067/2/2/191pediatric drug developmentpediatric formulationssafetyjuvenile animal studies |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Georg Schmitt |
spellingShingle |
Georg Schmitt Safety of Excipients in Pediatric Formulations—A Call for Toxicity Studies in Juvenile Animals? Children pediatric drug development pediatric formulations safety juvenile animal studies |
author_facet |
Georg Schmitt |
author_sort |
Georg Schmitt |
title |
Safety of Excipients in Pediatric Formulations—A Call for Toxicity Studies in Juvenile Animals? |
title_short |
Safety of Excipients in Pediatric Formulations—A Call for Toxicity Studies in Juvenile Animals? |
title_full |
Safety of Excipients in Pediatric Formulations—A Call for Toxicity Studies in Juvenile Animals? |
title_fullStr |
Safety of Excipients in Pediatric Formulations—A Call for Toxicity Studies in Juvenile Animals? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Safety of Excipients in Pediatric Formulations—A Call for Toxicity Studies in Juvenile Animals? |
title_sort |
safety of excipients in pediatric formulations—a call for toxicity studies in juvenile animals? |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Children |
issn |
2227-9067 |
publishDate |
2015-05-01 |
description |
The development of drug products for pediatric use often requires age-appropriate formulations which can be more complex and may involve a broader range of excipients than adult dosage forms. Excipients established for adult use are not always appropriate for use in children because they can affect children differently than adults. Therefore, a comprehensive safety assessment of the excipients in a pediatric formulation is essential before use, referring to existing safety data from adult human and animals as well as safety data from pediatric use and juvenile toxicity studies, when available. The overall risk assessment needs to consider the safety risk from the excipients and the extent to which the risk from the disease as such will be ameliorated by the drug formulation. Non-clinical safety studies in juvenile animals are used to assess for specific toxicities or sensitivities of excipients and for establishing safe exposures in pediatric age groups. As for any active ingredient, non-clinical safety studies in juvenile animals should only be performed for excipients if important for clinical risk assessment and labelling. Pharmaceutical companies should be critical of excessive demands for juvenile animal testing, particularly of excipients when critically needed for significant therapeutic benefit. |
topic |
pediatric drug development pediatric formulations safety juvenile animal studies |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/2227-9067/2/2/191 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT georgschmitt safetyofexcipientsinpediatricformulationsacallfortoxicitystudiesinjuvenileanimals |
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