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March 2018 Issue

Volume 21, Issue 2

 

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Articles in this Issue

  • Could Amazon (A), Berkshire Hathaway (B) and J.P. Morgan Chase (M) be the Anti-Ballistic Missile...

    Girish Malhotra, PE
    The recent announcement of Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway, and JP Morgan Chase to address rising healthcare costs for their employees has caused a bit of uproar on the healthcare landscape. Healthcare companies and many others have expressed their concern and doubts about success of the partnership. There will be many “naysayers” and many will pontificate. Their concerns could be real but the time for “creative destruction” on the healthcare landscape has come. It has been long overdue.
  • Modeling Endotoxin Reduction in Depyrogenation Oven and Tunnel Studies

    Jeanne Moldenhauer
    Endotoxin results have been a major area of concern, especially in the biologics area due to issues with low endotoxin recovery. In some recent years, there were regulatory concerns about whether we were properly inoculating endotoxin challenge units in oven and tunnel studies, specifically whether we were directly inoculating the surfaces of these units for validation.
  • Anatomy of an FDA Surveillance Facility Inspection - Biocon, Bangalore, India - May 25 to June...

    Tony Cundell, Ph.D.
    This review article analyzes the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) facility inspection, conducted at Biocon Ltd, Bangalore, India from May 25 to June 3, 2017, in the context of the FDA marketing approval of the biosimilar OGIVRI.
  • In Vitro Bioassays to Accelerate ImmunoOncology Candidate Selection

    Sofie Pattijn
    During the last few years, significant advancement has been made in the clinical application of cancer immunotherapies. Molecules directed against immune checkpoints and other agonists show great promise for treatment of a variety of malignancies.
  • Facility Tour: Eurofins Lancaster Laboratories

    Recently, American Pharmaceutical Review met with the company’s Vice President of Business Development and Project Management,Mike McDowell, for a tour of their Lancaster facility and to learn more about the company’s capabilities, their state-of-the-art facility and their continued growth.
  • Model-Assisted Design of Process Strategies for Cell Culture Processes

    Johannes Möller, Kim Beatrice Kuchemüller, Tanja Hernández Rodríguez, Björn Frahm, Volker C. Hass, Ralf Pörtner
    Biopharmaceuticals are the key drivers for the medication of former untreatable diseases. Trends for the future indicate a 50% market share of the top 100 pharmaceuticals to be bio-based. Approximately 70% of these biopharmaceuticals are produced in suspension using Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cell cultures in large volumes and complex production processes.
  • Novel Approaches and Challenges in Dissolution Testing of Pharmaceutical Solid-Oral Dosage...

    Ivelisse Colón, Joseph Medendorp
    It is well known that dissolution is an important quality attribute of pharmaceutical dosage forms, not only important during the development phases in order to predict and optimize invivo performance, but also during the commercialization and post-marketing stages of a product. Even for immediate-release (IR) formulations (where the specification for routine quality control testing usually includes Q at a single time-point), reliable information on dissolution profiles is needed to support postapproval changes in accordance to FDA’s SUPAC IR guidance.
  • How to Utilize Design of Experiment (DoE) Principles for Developing Robust Analytical Methods...

    Jeremy Springall, PhD
    Quality by Design (QbD), as currently applied to the manufacturing of biological and biotechnological therapeutic products, constitutes a systematic approach to product development which aims at consistently delivering safe and efficacious products of known quality to patients.
  • Detecting Protein Pre-aggregation States Using Chaperonin Biosensor Bio-layer Interferometry

    Caleb Trecazzi, Mark T. Fisher
    Protein aggregation is a common deleterious outcome that may occur during the production and storage stages of biotherapeutic protein development. Aggregates are detrimental to drug efficacy, leading to general immunity against the biotherapeutic protein.
  • Driving Value from Regulatory Data: Why it’s Time Life Sciences Moved on with Master Data Management...

    Siniša Belina
    For any business, in any industry, it’s not how much data you have but what you’re able to do with it that determines its value. And few organizations have as much data to manage as life sciences companies, which means they have the most to gain by honing their data discipline.
  • Disposable Technologies Roundtable

    Single-use devices have been part of the bioprocessing industry for 20 years, including starting from storage and freezer bags, based on designs from the medical industry.
  • An Interview With Lukas Swanson, M. Eng

    In general, what are some current issues facing pharmaceutical companies in regards to cleaning process verification?
  • Factors Influencing Biotherapeutic Monoclonal Antibody Aggregation

    Yunyu (Linda) Yi, Li Zang
    Therapeutic mAbs have a propensity to aggregate under a variety of environmental conditions, similar to proteins in biological system. Protein aggregation in biological systems was reported to correlate with age-related or neurodegenerative-related diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease.
  • Process Control and Monitoring for Continuous Production of Biopharmaceuticals

    Dr. Margit Holzer
    This article gives an overview of strategies and current technologies that can help to address challenges which arise with the implementation of continuous production of biopharmaceuticals.
  • Size Exclusion Chromatography of Protein Biopharmaceuticals: Past, Present and Future

    Szabolcs Fekete, Alexandre Goyon, Jean-Luc Veuthey, Davy Guillarme, Ph.D.
    Size exclusion chromatography (SEC) is a historical technique, routinely applied for the separation of species possessing different molecular masses (sizes). It is considered as a reference method for the qualitative and quantitative analysis of protein aggregates.
  • Intricacies of the 30-Month Stay in Pharmaceutical Patent Cases

    Meredith H. Boerschlein, Shana K. Cyr
    Pharmaceutical patent litigations between branded and generic drug companies often take place before the generic drug is marketed.
  • Facility Tour: Catalent

    It’s a well-documented fact that the financial cost and time spent to discover, develop, shepherd through clinical trials, and manufacture/package anew pharmaceutical are astronomical.
  • Pharmaceutical P.I.N. Points Patent Innovation News

    Anvit Vasavada, M.S, Harshada Sant, MS, Amitkumar Lad, PhD, Hemant N. Joshi, Ph.D., MBA
    The purpose of this column is to highlight and summarize recent key patents in the pharmaceutical arena issued by the US Patent Office in January 2018.
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