The Conduct of In Vitro and In Vivo Drug‐Drug Interaction Studies: A PhRMA Perspective

Thorir D. Bjornsson, John T. Callaghan(Eli Lilly (United States)), Heidi J. Einolf(Novartis (United States)), Volker Fischer(Novartis (United States)), Lawrence L. Gan(Millennium Engineering and Integration (United States)), Scott Grimm(Wilmington University), John Y. Kao, Shang‐Ying P. King, Gerald T. Miwa(Millennium Engineering and Integration (United States)), Lan Ni(Eli Lilly (United States)), Gondi Kumar(Amgen (United States)), James F. McLeod(Novartis (United States)), Scott R. Obach(Pfizer (United States)), Stanley Roberts(Abbott Fund), Amy L. Roe(Procter & Gamble (United States)), Anita Shah(Bayer (United States)), Fred Snikeris(Sanofi (United States)), John T. Sullivan(Amgen (United States)), Donald Tweedie(Boehringer Ingelheim (United States)), José M. Vega(United States Military Academy), John Walsh(Research Triangle Park Foundation), Steven Wrighton(Eli Lilly (United States))
The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
May 1, 2003
Cited by 309

Abstract

Current regulatory guidances do not address specific study designs for in vitro and in vivo drug-drug interaction studies. There is a common desire by regulatory authorities and by industry sponsors to harmonize approaches to allow for a better assessment of the significance of findings across different studies and drugs. There is also a growing consensus for the standardization of cytochrome P450 (CYP) probe substrates, inhibitors, and inducers and for the development of classification systems to improve the communication of risk to health care providers and patients. While existing guidances cover mainly CYP-mediated drug interactions, the importance of other mechanisms, such as transporters, has been recognized more recently and should also be addressed. This paper was prepared by the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) Drug Metabolism and Clinical Pharmacology Technical Working Groups and represents the current industry position. The intent is to define a minimal best practice for in vitro and in vivo pharmacokinetic drug-drug interaction studies targeted to development (not discovery support) and to define a data package that can be expected by regulatory agencies in compound registration dossiers.


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