Abstract

The gap in the commercially-available pediatric drug products and formulations suitable for children, especially those below the age of 6 years, is long recognized. A group of clinicians and scientists with a common interest in pediatric drug development and medicines-use systems developed a practical framework for identifying a list of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) with the greatest market potential for development to use in pediatric patients. Reliable and reproducible evidence-based drug formulations designed for use in pediatric patients are needed vitally, otherwise safe and consistent clinical practices and outcomes assessments will continue to be difficult to ascertain. Identification of a prioritized list of candidate APIs for oral formulation using the described algorithm provides a broader integrated clinical, scientific, regulatory, and market basis to allow for more reliable dosage forms and safer, effective medicines use in children of all ages. Group members derived a list of candidate API molecules by factoring in a number of pharmacotherapeutic, scientific, manufacturing, and regulatory variables into the selection algorithm that were absent in other rubrics. These additions will assist in identifying and categorizing prime API candidates suitable for oral formulation development. Moreover, the developed algorithm aids in prioritizing useful APIs with finished oral liquid dosage forms available either adapted from other countries or the aim to register them in North America and beyond.

Highlights

  • Childhood illnesses often require the use of medications under the premise of “off-label” use

  • In February 2014, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) released a policy statement from its Committee on Drugs regarding the off-label use of drugs in children (Committee on Drugs 2014)

  • The M4KRC-derived list of candidate active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) molecules has been derived from selection matrix that factored in a number of pharmacotherapeutic, biopharmaceutical, scientific, manufacturing, and regulatory variables absent in other rubrics

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Summary

Open Access

Development of an algorithm to identify mass production candidate molecules to develop children’s oral medicines: a North American perspective.

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