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TRANSCRIPT
CPH training | May 20141 |
2-1 Packaging – overview and tips for assessment
Andrew Chemwolo, Technical Officer,
WHO Prequalification Team – Medicines Assessment
CPH training | May 20142 |
References
This presentation makes reference to:
Pharmaceutical packaging - an overview including some considerations for paediatrics
Dr. Simon Mills.Training workshop: Pharmaceutical development with focus on paediatric formulations, Beijing June 2010.
Container closure system
Yin Hua. CPH Training, January 2012.
CPH training | May 20143 |
References
WHO Quality guideline (WHO TRS 970, Annex 4)
Guidelines on packaging for pharmaceutical products (WHO TRS 902, Annex 9)
Container closure systems for packaging human drugs and biologics (FDA Guidance for Industry, May 1999)
Guideline on Plastic immediate packaging materials - EMEA/CVMP/205/04
ICH quality guidelines
USP /Ph. Eur.
CPH training | May 20144 |
Overview
Packaging Terminology
The role of packaging system
Types of containers and closures
Information on packaging to be submitted and reviewed in the dossierSuitabilityQuality controlsDosing devices
Packaging assessment Tips
CPH training | May 20145 |
Packaging Terminology
WHO TRS 902 Annex 9 defines packaging as ' the collection of different components (e.g. bottle, vial, closure, cap, ampoule, blister) which surround the pharmaceutical product from the time of production until its use.'
US FDA defines container closure system as 'the sum of packaging components that together contain and protect the dosage form. This includes primary packaging components and secondary packaging components, if the latter are intended to provide additional protection to the drug product.'
A packaging component: is any part of the container closure system.
CPH training | May 20146 |
Packaging Terminology
Immediate (Primary) pack: is or may be in direct contact with the product It bears appropriate label(s) providing content and usage
information. Immediate pack components are considered essential to the
stability of their contents. Secondary Pack
A pack component with no contact with the product but may provide additional protection to that provided by the immediate pack.
CPH training | May 20147 |
Packaging Terminology
Marketing Pack Combination of container closure system, labelling,
associated components (e.g. dosing cups, droppers, spoons), and external packaging (e.g. cartons or shrink wrap).
Materials of construction substances used to manufacture a packaging component
(e.g. HDPE resin, glass, metal).
Refer to USP <659> and Glossary to WHO TRS 902 Annex 9 for more packaging definitions.
CPH training | May 20148 |
The role of packaging system
Containment of the product e.g. no leaking or permeation of contents, hold contents in during normal handling etc.
Protection of the product forming an effective barrier to light, moisture, gases, (e.g.
oxygen), microbial contaminants, dirt, other degradants etc. as appropriate
protection from mechanical damage e.g. breakages, cracks etc.under the proposed conditions of storage of the product
CPH training | May 20149 |
The role of packaging system
Providing all necessary information for... Identification, preparation if required (e.g. reconstitution,
dilution), use of the medicine etc. Storage conditions and shelf-lifeHandling Appropriate disposal of any unused medicine and the
packaging itself
CPH training | May 201410 |
The role of packaging system
Enabling accurate dosing and compliance by patient
e.g. spoons, cups or syringes for oral dose measurement and delivery
Ensuring supply-chain integrity of the medicines e.g. inclusion of anti-counterfeiting measures, use of tamper-evident closures etc.
Ensuring product is not exposed to children i.e. use of child-resistant closures
CPH training | May 201411 |
Types of containers
Primary containers including fillers, absorbents, and desiccants
Secondary functional (e.g. fibre drums, HDPE bottles for products which are immediately packaged with LDPE bag etc.)
Secondary non-functional
Packaging accessories such as dosing devices e.g. measuring cup or syringe
CPH training | May 201412 |
Types of containers: Bottles
GlassType 1: borosilicate, most inert, has high hydrolytic and
thermal shock resistanceType 2: treated soda lime glass, more susceptible to leaching
than type 1 glass, moderate to high hydrolytic resistanceType 3: traditional soda lime glass. Has more leachable
oxides than type 2 glass and moderate hydrolytic resistanceMay be coloured to provide light protection
CPH training | May 201413 |
Types of containers: Bottles
HDPE bottle in general considered highly protectivehas good safety profileSemi-permeable for liquid preparationspermeability also depends on wall thicknessnaturally translucent
PET (Polyethylene Terephthalate or Polyester) bottleusually for liquid preparationshas good gas and fair moisture barrier propertieshas good safety profile
CPH training | May 201414 |
Types of containers: Bottles
Polypropylene (PP):used primarily for jars and closures provides a rigid package with excellent moisture barrier
Closures polypropylene screw /CRC caps inner seal – e.g. Induction seal/heat seal aluminium cap
Fillers, absorbents and moisture adsorbentsabsorbent cotton rayon fibressilica gel desiccant or molecular sieve
CPH training | May 201415 |
Types of containers: Bags
LDPE bagas primary container for bulk packs which is further placed in
HDPE/PP bottlesas primary container for bulk product or intermediatesas primary container for API and excipients, which is further
placed in Alu, fiber or steel drumconsidered safe less protective than HDPE and PETProvides additional protection
CPH training | May 201416 |
Types of containers: Bags
Triple laminated LDPE/Alu/PET bag three layers, LDPE film as inner layeras primary container for bulk packs which is further placed
in HDPE/PP bottlesProtection from oxygen, water vapour, UVProtection from other contaminants e.g. oils, acid, alkalines
CPH training | May 201417 |
Types of containers: Blisters
Blisters and strips Cold-form Alu/Alu Alu/PVC/PE/Aclar* (* poly-chloro-trifluoro-ethylene, PCTFE) Alu/PVC/PVDC Alu/PVC
Generally safe
Moisture and gas permeation of the blisters also depends on the sealing integrity
Alu/Alu provides protection from light
CPH training | May 201418 |
Secondary packaging components
Are not intended to make contact with the dosage form (e.g. outer cartons)provide additional protection from excessive moisture and
reactive gasesprovide additional protection against lightprovide additional protection against microbial and dirt
contamination e.g. carton boxmay protect the product from rough handling
CPH training | May 201419 |
3.2.S.6: Detailed description of the container closure system including identity of materials of construction, appearance etc.
Quality controls: specifications of critical packaging components Include description and identification
Demonstration of suitability of packaging – pursued only where necessary e.g. APIs in liquid form & for sterile APIs (Tips to follow)
Product labels: conditions of storage & use
Information to be submitted
CPH training | May 201420 |
Information to be submitted
3.2.P.2.4: Discussion of the suitability of the container closure system with respect to:Choice of materialsCompatibility with product e.g. extraction/leaching/sorption
(packaging-product interaction) for liquid dosage formsSafety of materials usedprotection of product (from moisture, oxygen, light)Performance e.g. dose delivery accuracy and reproducibility transportation/shipping of product (Tip to follow)
CPH training | May 201421 |
Information to be submitted
3.2.P.7: Detailed description of the container closure system e.g. identity of materials of construction, appearance, pack sizes etc.
Proposed quality controls: specifications of critical packaging components Include description, identification, thickness or area weight
for film and foil materials, etc.
CPH training | May 201422 |
Detailed description of the packaging system
Identification of the materials of construction especially for primary containers.
Physical description e.g. component type, size, shape and colour
Fillers, absorbents and desiccants used
Secondary packaging (functional, non-functional)
Pack sizes
Dosing devices, if applicable
CPH training | May 201423 |
Detailed description of the packaging system
Examples of description of different types of packs: Vial: 2ml clear solution in 3ml USP type I tubular glass vial with 13 mm grey
rubber stopper and 13 mm red aluminium flip-off seal. Pack size: box of 5 vials. Blister: Alu/Alu strip pack of 10 tablets. Such 3 or 10 strips per box. Pack size:
30 (3x10), 100 (10x10) tablets. HDPE: White opaque, round HDPE bottle fitted with white opaque
polypropylene screw cap closure, aluminium sealed, and containing molecular sieve canister 2 gm (CAN TRISORB 2G) as desiccant. Pack size: 30 tablets
HDPE: Transparent LDPE bag, containing 500 or 1000 tablets, packed in a triple laminated aluminium sachet which is further packed in an HDPE bottle along with a leaflet. Each bottle is sealed with an aluminium tagger and closed with a screw cap.
CPH training | May 201424 |
Suitability of packaging
Suitability information should be located in 3.2.P.2. Data usually generated during packaging development:Compatibility i.e. packaging-product interaction – Extraction/leaching/sorption: required for liquid dosage forms
Safety of materials used – Considering dosage form, route of administration, etc.
Protection (from moisture, oxygen, light, etc.)Performance – functions properly
The type and extent of information that should be provided will depend on the dosage form and the route of administration. Next 2 slides: PQ & US FDA guidance for risk-assessment
CPH training | May 201425 |
PQ Guidance: P.2.4
CPH training | May 201426 |
US FDA Guidance
CPH training | May 201427 |
Examples of pharmacopoeial standards
Plastic components: USP <661>
Glass components: USP <660>
Elastomeric components: USP <381> elastomeric closures for injections
Biological reactivity tests: USP <87>/<88> e.g. for elastomers
Container performance testing: USP <671>
Ph. Eur. 3.2 (Containers)
CPH training | May 201428 |
Suitability - Compatibility
The container closure system including associated components should be compatible with the product
Components should not cause unacceptable changes in the quality of product due to adsorption/absorption of the API/excipients leachables / extractablesprecipitationpH changesdiscoloration of the product or the packaging
CPH training | May 201429 |
Suitability - Compatibility
Likelihood of interaction depends on the type of the dosage form to be packaged and type of packaging materials used
Some interactions will be detected during qualification studies on the container closure system. Others may not show up except in the stability studies (may be addressed by stability studies).
Extraction & interaction studies may need to be carried out based on a risk-assessment (route of administration, dosage form) Extraction, leaching & adsorption: required for liquid preparations.
Compatibility may need to be monitored during stability testing
CPH training | May 201430 |
Suitability - Safety
Packaging materials including for associated components should not leach harmful or undesirable amounts of substancesunreacted monomers and process impurities such as
antioxidants in plasticsparticularly for those containers which are in direct contact
with the product in some cases, substances may migrate from secondary
components ( e.g. Ink and adhesives)
Concern for safety depends on the type of packaging material, type of dosage form and route of administration
CPH training | May 201431 |
Suitability - Safety
Demonstration of safetyFor injectables, inhalations, ophthalmic products
• Extraction studies and toxicological evaluation on leachables and extractables
• USP biological reactivity tests <87>/<88> and USP Elastomeric closures for injections tests <381> may provide sufficient evidence of safety
for oral solid and liquid dosage forms – a declaration by the supplier that the material of construction complies with the USFDA or EU requirements for packaging of food items may be acceptable (exception: liquid preps for chronic use).
CPH training | May 201432 |
Suitability - Protection
The container closure system should protect the product from factors that can cause degradation of product such asexposure to lightexposure to reactive gases (e.g. oxygen)absorption of water vapour loss of solventmicrobial contaminationexposure to other contaminants such as dirt
CPH training | May 201433 |
Suitability - Protection
Demonstration of protectiondepends on the product (sensitivity of the product to the
particular degradation factor, for example light)usually general pharmacopoeial test procedures are used
(e.g. USP <671>)Validation of packaging procedure for seal integrity; leak
testing
Packaging must be demonstrated to protect the product from what it is susceptible to e.g. light, moisture etc.
CPH training | May 201434 |
Suitability - Performance
Functionality and drug delivery aspects of the container closure system should be evaluated, if applicable.
A device is required to be included with the container closure system for oral liquids or solids (e.g. solutions, emulsions, suspensions and powders/granules), any time the package provides for multiple doses.
Results of a study should be provided demonstrating the reproducibility of the device (e.g. consistent delivery of the intended volume), generally at the lowest intended dose.
CPH training | May 201435 |
Suitability - Performance
Packaging should ideally be child-resistant
Packaging should be tamper-proof/tamper-evident
Packaging should accommodate patient needs – ability of the elderly to open without exposing a risk to children
CPH training | May 201436 |
Quality controls
An applicant should have in place quality controls for critical packaging components – to ensure consistency in quality
Signed and dated specifications for each packaging component especially for primary containers and functional secondary containers.
Are a combination of physical, chemical & microbiological tests
Chemical composition should be controlled/monitored
Performance characteristics (e.g. deliverable volume, ease of movements of syringe plunger, etc.) also controlled
CPH training | May 201437 |
Quality controls
Identity of primary packaging components is an essential routine test
• HDPE, LDPE, PE, PVC/PVDC : IR• Al: IR of the coating; Chemical test for Aluminium.• Glass: Pharmacopoeial (powdered glass test)
Dimensional criteria (e.g. area/weight for film and foil materials, wall thickness, shape, neck finish, capacity for bottles, design tolerances, etc.)
Having good specifications is meaningless if not supported by stability studies.
CPH training | May 201438 |
Dosing Devices
Devices: Required for oral solutions, emulsions, suspensions and powders/granules for multiple doses e.g.
CPH training | May 201439 |
Dosing devices: Examples
CPH training | May 201440 |
Dosing Devices
Quality part:Specification of the material (with IR identification)Data to demonstrate the uniformity of doses delivered– at
the lowest intended doseA sample of device to be reviewed (may consult with
WHOPAR experts)Compatibility/safety with product, if applicable (Tip to
follow)
CPH training | May 201441 |
Packaging assessment Tips
Due consideration should be given to:
Characteristics of the API – its sensitivity to different factors Light, moisture, oxygen etc.
Dosage form – liquid/semi-solid vs solid
Route of administration – ophthalmic, injection or oral
Packaging materials used – plastic, paper, glass, metal, rubber/elastomer
Results of stability studies: provide ultimate proof of suitability
CPH training | May 201442 |
Packaging assessment Tips
Consider API sensitivity from: forced degradation and photostability studies for the API and
product.• Photostability: As per ICH Q1B. Tests on API, then FPP, then
FPP in pack, stopping when photostability is establishedPharmacopoeial monographsLiterature review
Consider Dosage form:Liquid and semi-solid preparations considered criticalSolid dosage forms not considered very critical
Qualification: route of administration, packaging material & sterility requirements important
CPH training | May 201443 |
Packaging assessment Tips
Route of administration: Expected level of attention:
Injections & inhalation products > ophthalmic preparations &
nasal sprays > topical and oral preparations
Qualification: Dosage form and packaging material important
A risk assessment should be carried out to determine the nature of the information that needs to be provided
Applicant must demonstrate the suitability of proposed packaging
CPH training | May 201444 |
Tips - Suitability data: P.2.4
Packaging suitability must be established during product development process
Susceptibility of the API: Must be familiar with the results of forced degradation studies and photostability studies. Note: ICH Q1B photostability studies are required in the dossier.
Transportation of bulk: Check whether the bulk product is packed on the same site or transported/shipped to another site: check suitability of packaging for bulk product transportation studies provided where appropriate
CPH training | May 201445 |
Tips - Suitability data P.2.4
Proposed packaging should be suitable/appropriate for transportation/shipping of the product e.g. protect the product from breakage or damage or exposure.
Check whether the product requires presence of a dosing device: may need to consult the clinical assessors.
Choice of packaging materials must be appropriate: consult pharmacopoeias, review literature, refer to SRA guidelinesProposed packaging must be appropriate for the dosage
form, route of administration, nature of the API
CPH training | May 201446 |
Tips - Suitability data for injectables
Considered high risk Rubber stoppers:
compatibility studies (nature and levels of extractables/leachables, sorption, etc.).
Demonstration of safety: Compliance with USP <87>/<88> or other equivalent requirements; attestation that it is free from nitrosamines and 2-mercapto benzothiazole
evidence of physicochemical testing as per USP <381>Supplier name & article details (type, code/model number)Stability study includes samples kept in inverted orientation
(product in contact with rubber stopper)
CPH training | May 201447 |
Tips - Suitability data (injectables)
Glass vials/ampoules: data to demonstrate that the glass meets the requirements of USP <660> or other equivalent requirements.Type III glass must be demonstrated to be suitable, if used
Sterility: demonstration of seal integrity (microbial ingress, dye ingress)
Diluents/solvents: compatibility with packaging
CPH training | May 201448 |
Other Tips
Compatibility with dosing devices only required if dose is not administered immediately.
Stability study must cover the proposed pack (ICH Q1A): check description of packaging for stability samples to confirm this
Safety of materials: Declaration of compliance with food regulations, where applicable (US, EU). Consider duration of use.
Applicant must have own specifications: not enough to rely on supplier testing. Adequate vendor qualification, as appropriate.
Demonstration of satisfactory performance of packaging, as appropriate
CPH training | May 201449 |
Other Tips
Packaging components must maintain same quality as used for suitability testing: adequate QCs
Quality aspects of PIL & SmPC: description of container closure system; storage conditions, shelf life, instructions for use & disposal
Labels: storage conditions, shelf life, instructions for use & disposal must be clearly indicated
CPH training | May 201450 |
Summary
Proposed container closure system should be fully described in the application.
Proposed container closure system should be demonstrated to be suitable for the product under the proposed conditions of storage.
Stability studies useful in further demonstrating suitability of proposed packaging
Characteristics of critical packaging components confirmed during suitability testing should be maintained through adequate QC measures put in place.
CPH training | May 201451 |
Thank you for your attention