Fr. 240.00

Extractables and Leachables - Characterization of Drug Products, Packaging, Manufacturing Delivery

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks (not available at short notice)

Description

Read more

Informationen zum Autor Dennis Jenke, PhD, is the Chief Executive Scientist at Triad Scientific Solutions and has over 40 years of direct technical experience in the pharmaceutical, environmental, mining, geoscience, and chemical industries. Klappentext EXTRACTABLES AND LEACHABLESLearn to address the safety aspects of packaged drug products and medical devicesPharmaceutical drug products and medical devices are expected to be effective and safe to use. This includes minimizing patient, user or product exposure to impurities leached from these items when the drug product is administered or when the medical device is used. Clearly, patient or user exposure to leachables must not adversely impact their health and safety. Furthermore, these impurities must not adversely affect key quality attributes of the drug product or medical device, including its manufacturability, stability, efficacy, appearance, shelf-life and conformance to standards.Extractables and leachables are derived from the drug product's packaging, manufacturing systems and/or delivery systems or from the medical device's materials of construction. It is imperative to understand and quantify the release of extractables from these items, the accumulation of leachables in drug products and the release of leachables from medical devices. Once extractables and leachables have been discovered, identified and quantified, their effect on the key product or device quality attributes, including safety, must be systematically and scientifically established according to recognized, rigorous and relevant regulatory and compendial standards and industry-driven best practices.In Extractables and Leachables, the chemical compatibility (including safe use) of drugs (and their containers, delivery devices and manufacturing systems) and medical devices is examined at length, focusing particularly on how trace-level extractables and leachables affect the quality and safety of a medical product and how to assess the magnitude of the effect. This is accomplished by addressing the two critical activities required to develop, register and commercialize safe, effective and affordable clinical therapies; measuring extractables and leachables (chemical characterization) and assessing their impact (for example, toxicological safety risk assessment). Each of these activities is addressed in-depth, based on the existing and developing international regulations and guidelines, current published literature and the author's extensive personal experience. Written by a key contributor to standards, guidelines, recommended practices and the scientific literature, the book provides "insider" insights beyond those gained by merely reading the relevant texts. Given that the rapidly evolving extractables and leachables landscape, this book provides the most current and crucial information on new and forthcoming regulations and best practices.Extractables and Leachables readers will also find:* A thorough summary of regulatory and compendial guidelines and the steps required to meet them* A detailed and in-depth review of essential scientific principles and recommended best practices for the design, implementation, interpretation and reporting of chemical characterization studies* A practical resource for optimizing the development, registration, and commercialization of safe and effective medical products* A helpful tool to maximize product development and successful regulatory outcomesExtractables and Leachables is the essential reference for pharmaceutical scientists, analytical chemists, regulatory affairs professionals, engineers, and toxicologists in areas such as product research and development, product registration and approval, regulatory affairs, analytical science, quality control, and manufacturing. Zusammenfassung EXTRACTABLES AND LEACHABLESLearn to address the safety aspects of packaged drug products and medical devicesPharm...

List of contents

Preface
 
Acknowledgments
 
1. INTRODUCTION AND ESSENTIAL CONCEPTS
 
1.1 General Discussion
 
1.2 Regulations, Guidelines, Standards and Recommendations for Chemical Compatibility Assessments
 
1.3 Why Chemical Assessment?
 
1.4 An Overview of the Chemical Compatibility Assessments Process
 
1.5 Looking Ahead
 
1.6 References
 
2. GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT; EXTRACTION AND LEACHING
 
2.1 Key Definitions and Concepts, Extractables and Leachables
 
2.2 Extraction Studies
 
2.2.1 Key Definitions and Concepts
 
2.2.2 Types of Extractions
 
2.2.3 Examples of Extraction Sequences
 
2.2.4 Required/Recommended Extractions
 
2.2.5 Principles of Extraction
 
2.2.5.1 Thermodynamics and Kinetics of Extraction and Leaching
 
2.2.5.2 Extraction Solvents, Polarity
 
2.2.5.3 Extraction Solvents, pH
 
2.2.5.4 Temperature/Duration
 
2.2.5.5 Stoichiometry
 
2.2.5.6 Additional Factors to Consider
 
2.2.6 Compromised Extracts
 
2.3. Leaching Studies
 
2.4 Variation in Extraction and Leaching Studies
 
2.5 References
 
3. GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT; ANALYTICAL TESTING FOR EXTRACTABLES AND LEACHABLES; ORGANIC COMPOUNDS
 
3.1 Key Definitions and Concepts
 
3.2 Organic Substance Analysis, Screening
 
3.2.1 Relevant Analytical Methods
 
3.2.2 Survey of Chromatographic Screening Methods
 
3.2.3 Derivation and Use of the Analytical Evaluation Threshold (AET)
 
3.2.3.1 Definitions and Concepts
 
3.2.3.2 Sample AET Calculations
 
3.2.3.3 Uncertainty Adjustments to the AET
 
3.2.3.4 Selecting the Basis for the AET
 
3.2.3.5 The Relationship Between the AET and other Measures of Analytical Sensitivity
 
3.2.4 Discovery
 
3.2.5 Identification and Identification Categories
 
3.2.6 The Identification Process
 
3.2.7 "Quantitation"
 
3.2.8 Uncertainty Adjustments to Quantitative Data
 
3.2.9 Reducing Variation via Process Optimization
 
3.2.10 Screening Errors and their Mitigation - Extractables/Leachables Database
 
3.2.11 Method Qualification
 
3.3 Organic Substance Analysis, Targeting
 
3.3.1 Intent and Purpose
 
3.3.2 Selection and Justification of Targets
 
3.3.3 Establishing Reporting Practices
 
3.3.4 Method Validation
 
3.4 Organic Substance Analysis, Targeted Screening
 
3.5. Extractables/Leachables Correlations
 
3.5.1 Linking Extractables and Leachables
 
3.5.2 A Hierarchy for Linkages between Extractables and Leachables
 
3.5.3 Decisions Concerning the Required Rigor for Linkages
 
3.5.4 Circumstances Requiring the Linking of Extractables and Leachables
 
3.5.5 Examples of Linkages between Extractables and Leachables
 
3.5.6 Practical Realities Associated with Linking Extractables and Leachables
 
3.6 Intra-laboratory Variation in Extractables/Leachables Profiles
 
3.6.1 PQRI Controlled Extraction Study
 
3.6.2 Investigation of Lab-to-Lab Variation Between Four Testing Laboratories
 
3.6.3 Investigation of Extraction Conditions for Medical Devices
 
3.6.4 If You Play this Game Long Enough, You are Bound to Repeat Yourself
 
3.6.5 Addressing Variation in Environmental Testing
 
3.6.6 Concluding Thoughts
 
3.7 References
 
4. GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT; ANALYTICAL TESTING FOR EXTRACTABLES AND LEACHABLES; ELEMENTS, ANIONS AND GENERAL TESTING
 
4.1 Elemental Analysis
 

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.