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Erschienen in: Clinical Pharmacokinetics 7/2019

03.06.2019 | Letter to the Editor

Comment on: “Levothyrox® New and Old Formulations: Are they Switchable for Millions of Patients?”

verfasst von: Patrick Nicolas

Erschienen in: Clinical Pharmacokinetics | Ausgabe 7/2019

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Excerpt

I read with interest the article published in Clinical Pharmacokinetics by Didier Concordet and colleagues [1], who reported an independent revised statistical analysis of the bioequivalence study between old and new formulations of Levothyrox® [2]. Using the approach of individual bioequivalence (IBE) instead of average bioequivalence (ABE), more than 50% of healthy volunteers enrolled in this bioequivalence study were outside the a priori bioequivalence range and thus the authors questioned whether the switchability of these two drugs was a safe option in patients. Meanwhile, a ‘Levothyrox scandal’ has legitimately agitated the French public and media due to an unexpectedly large number of adverse events occurring soon after the launch of the new formulation. In this sensitive context, the conclusion of this reanalysis could be falsely interpreted and therefore counterproductive. So, I feel the need to raise some major concerns. First, their article perfectly illustrates a decade of scientific research that eventually led to IBE being abandoned, in particular when the same bioequivalence study could end up with a discordant conclusion: ABE accepted but IBE rejected or, conversely, ABE rejected but IBE accepted. No satisfactory regulatory decision/rule could be established. In the past, several generic versions of levothyroxine received marketing approval on the basis of ABE in the standard acceptance range (80–125%), with public health concern focused not on safety but on quality due to loss of the active ingredient over the duration of the shelf life. On the basis of a US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) initiative, the assay range specification for levothyroxine sodium tablets was reduced from 90–110% to 95–105% of the label claim in 2007 and classification of levothyroxine as a narrow therapeutic index (NTI) drug was adopted in 2014. To achieve this, the FDA required a bioequivalence study designed as a fully replicated crossover approach in order to scale the bioequivalence limits to the variability of the reference product and compare the test and reference product for within-subject variability [3], meaning that each subject should receive each formulation on two occasions. Statistical details can be found in Jiang et al. [4]. In Europe, the European Medicines Agency (EMA) did not endorse this scaled ABE approach, preferring a direct tightening of ABE limits to 90–111.11%. …
Literatur
2.
Zurück zum Zitat Gottwald-Hostalek U, Uhl W, Wolna P, Kahaly GJ. New levothyroxine formulation meeting 95-105% specification over the whole shelf-life: results from two pharmacokinetic trials. Curr Med Res Opin. 2017;33:169–74.CrossRef Gottwald-Hostalek U, Uhl W, Wolna P, Kahaly GJ. New levothyroxine formulation meeting 95-105% specification over the whole shelf-life: results from two pharmacokinetic trials. Curr Med Res Opin. 2017;33:169–74.CrossRef
4.
Zurück zum Zitat Jiang W, Makhlouf F, Schuirmann DJ, Zhang X, Zheng N, Conner D, et al. A bioequivalence approach for generic narrow therapeutic index drugs: evaluation of the reference-scaled approach and variability comparison criterion. AAPS J. 2015;17(4):891–901.CrossRef Jiang W, Makhlouf F, Schuirmann DJ, Zhang X, Zheng N, Conner D, et al. A bioequivalence approach for generic narrow therapeutic index drugs: evaluation of the reference-scaled approach and variability comparison criterion. AAPS J. 2015;17(4):891–901.CrossRef
Metadaten
Titel
Comment on: “Levothyrox® New and Old Formulations: Are they Switchable for Millions of Patients?”
verfasst von
Patrick Nicolas
Publikationsdatum
03.06.2019
Verlag
Springer International Publishing
Erschienen in
Clinical Pharmacokinetics / Ausgabe 7/2019
Print ISSN: 0312-5963
Elektronische ISSN: 1179-1926
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40262-019-00778-w

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