2016
DOI: 10.1186/s41120-015-0002-x
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Scope and relevance of a pulmonary biopharmaceutical classification system AAPS/FDA/USP Workshop March 16-17th, 2015 in Baltimore, MD

Abstract: The Biopharmaceutics Classification System (BCS), developed in the 1990s for oral immediate release drugs, is utilized by R&D scientists and regulators to streamline product development and regulatory approval timelines. This elegant, science-based approach is based on three in vitro parameters representing a combination of drug substance physicochemical and physiological properties with respect to oral administration; specifically a dose number, dissolution number, and absorption number. Interest in applying … Show more

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Cited by 89 publications
(103 citation statements)
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References 51 publications
(65 reference statements)
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“…The physicochemical properties of molecules that confer good biopharmaceutical performance when inhaled are not fully understood [6,37,38]. In vitro and ex vivo techniques provide experimental models in which drug permeability in the lungs can be derived empirically.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…The physicochemical properties of molecules that confer good biopharmaceutical performance when inhaled are not fully understood [6,37,38]. In vitro and ex vivo techniques provide experimental models in which drug permeability in the lungs can be derived empirically.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A recent AAPS/FDA/USP workshop considered a systematic framework to classify pulmonary drugs to provide a tool for formulators and discovery chemists working in the pulmonary drug delivery field [6]. Drug permeability or the rate of absorption was identified as an important predictor of local residence time and, therefore, duration of effect for locally-acting drugs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Hence, the stearyl alcohol that potentially reaches the lung can be estimated to be approximately 0.1 mg (5% of the 1.98 mg respirable dose). Although not taking into account local concentration gradients during particle dissolution, solubilisation of this dose in the available volume of lung lining fluid (20 mL based on estimates of 10-30 mL in the conducting airways and 7-20 mL in the alveolar region (Hastedt et al, 2016), would provide a surfactant concentration of around 5 µg/ml, namely 0.018 mM, which compares very favorably to an LC50 = 24.7 mg/mL in vitro. Therefore, this data represent a preliminary encouraging step toward the gain the FDA approval for this new excipients .…”
Section: Biocompatibility Of Hyaluronate Powders With Lung Cellsmentioning
confidence: 91%