Abstract

AimsIn the EU, development of new medicines for children should follow a prospectively agreed paediatric investigation plan (PIP). Finding the right dose for children is crucial but challenging due to the variability of pharmacokinetics across age groups and the limited sample sizes available. We examined strategies adopted in PIPs to support paediatric dosing recommendations to identify common assumptions underlying dose investigations and the attempts planned to verify them in children.MethodsWe extracted data from 73 PIP opinions recently adopted by the Paediatric Committee of the European Medicines Agency. These opinions represented 79 medicinal development programmes and comprised a total of 97 dose investigation studies. We identified the design of these dose investigation studies, recorded the analyses planned and determined the criteria used to define target doses.ResultsMost dose investigation studies are clinical trials (83 of 97) that evaluate a single dosing rule. Sample sizes used to investigate dose are highly variable across programmes, with smaller numbers used in younger children (< 2 years). Many studies (40 of 97) do not pre-specify a target dose criterion. Of those that do, most (33 of 57 studies) guide decisions using pharmacokinetic data alone.ConclusionsCommon assumptions underlying dose investigation strategies include dose proportionality and similar exposure−response relationships in adults and children. Few development programmes pre-specify steps to verify assumptions in children. There is scope for the use of Bayesian methods as a framework for synthesizing existing information to quantify prior uncertainty about assumptions. This process can inform the design of optimal drug development strategies.

Highlights

  • Recent regulatory changes place greater emphasis on ensuring that new medicines are appropriately licensed for use in children

  • This review focused on clinical ‘dose investigation’ studies stipulated by paediatric investigation plan (PIP) opinions

  • We extracted information from the last 74 opinions agreeing a PIP that had been adopted by the Paediatric Committee (PDCO) as of 20 July 2012, spanning a period of about 14 months, excluding opinions granting a full development waiver

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Summary

Introduction

Recent regulatory changes place greater emphasis on ensuring that new medicines are appropriately licensed for use in children. Development should follow a prospectively agreed paediatric investigation plan (PIP). This plan must be submitted by an ‘applicant’ for the consideration of the Paediatric Committee (PDCO) of the European Medicines Agency (EMA) no later than completion of the adult pharmacokinetic (PK) studies; requests for a waiver of development must be justified. Finding an appropriate dosing rule for a new medicine is crucial if its benefits are to be properly evaluated. Differences in the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of a drug across age groups, reflecting changes in developmental growth and maturation [1, 2], may result in differences in possible clinical benefit. Information on drug pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, is usually needed across all ages concerned by development to identify subgroups for which different optimal dosing rules apply. The ICH E11 guideline [4] proposes one possible age grouping, classifying children as neonates (0–27 days); infants (1–23 months); children (2–11 years) or adolescents (12–17 years), but cautions that unnecessary age subdivisions may unnecessarily increase the number of patients required

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