Abstract

Glucagon for Injection (NDA 020928) is a polypeptide hormone identical to human glucagon approved 20 years ago for severe hypoglycemia in patients with diabetes mellitus. On Dec 28, 2020, the U.S. FDA approved the first generic version of glucagon for injection USP, 1 mg/vial packaged in an emergency kit. The generic and the reference listed drug (RLD) version, i.e., the innovator version, of glucagon were each produced through different manufacturing processes. The RLD version of glucagon is produced via recombinant DNA in yeast while the generic version of glucagon is produced by peptide synthesis. The FDA published its current thinking on how to ensure sameness between the generic and innovator peptide products prepared with different manufacturing processes in a Draft Guidance for Industry: Submission of Abbreviated New Drug Applications for Certain Highly Purified Synthetic Peptide Drug Products, which applies to five peptide drug products, including glucagon. In this presentation, we aim to provide an overview of the regulatory recommendations for submitting generic glucagon drug products for approval, as outlined in the aforementioned draft guidance. Although glucagon may be produced using different manufacturing processes, the sameness in glucagon can be adequately demonstrated using analytical methods, which involve demonstrating physicochemical properties, as well as primary and secondary structures, oligomers and aggregation states. Biological assays may also be used as part of the demonstration of active pharmaceutical ingredient sameness. Synthetic glucagon may have different impurity profiles when compared to the RLD recombinant product. As part of the ANDA review, impurities in the synthetic drugs are analyzed and controlled, in addition, the potential immunogenicity of new impurities, which are not in the RLD products, are assessed and compared using non-clinical assays. In this work, we will discuss non-clinical assays for assessing the immunogenicity risk of these impurities, for both adaptive and innate immune responses. In conclusion, the sameness of an approved generic synthetic glucagon to an RLD can be adequately established through various analytical methods and biological assays.

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