Day 1 :
Keynote Forum
Yashwant Pathak
University of South Florida Health, USA
Keynote: Realistic considerations for bio-similar nutraceuticals: challenges and solutions?
Biography:
Yashwant Pathak has completed his education (MS and PhD) in Pharmaceutical Technology from India and EMBA and MS Confl ict Management from Sullivan University, USA. He is a Professor and Associate Dean for Faculty Affairs College of Pharmacy, University of South Florida. Tampa, Florida. With extensive experience in Academia and Industry, he has over 150 publications research papers, abstracts, chapters and reviews, edited over 25 books. Some of his titles include “Nutraceuticals and Health: Handbook of Metallo-Nutraceuticals”, “Nanotechnology in Nutraceuticals: Production to Consumption” and the recent most is “Nutrigenomics and Nutraceuticals: Clinical Relevance and Disease Prevention”. His areas of research include Drug Delivery Systems, Nanotechnology Applications in Pharmacy and Nutraceuticals. He is a Series Editor for “Nutraceuticals: Basic Research and Clinical Applications” published by CRC Press. He has travelled extensively over 80 countries and is actively involved with many Pharmacy Colleges in different countries.
Abstract:
Keynote Forum
Rodica Olteanu
Colentina Clinical Hospital, Romania
Keynote: Biosimilars in dermatology-clinical series of cases
Biography:
Rodica Olteanu is a Dermatologist and Medical Director of Colentina Clinical Hospital, Bucharest, Romania. She has received her PhD on lupus research in 2007, in collaboration with Hamburg University. She is involved in autoimmunity and immunogenicity of biologics and biosimilars and published more than 100 papers on lupus and psoriasis. She is an Alumni EADV Club, rewarded winner of many international grants, Member in EADV Project Committee, AAD, GRAPPA, EuSCLE, SRD, ILDS Member and Member in Editorial Board of SRD and LAJPPA. She has completed her educational training by participating at Master Class on Psoriasis- Barcelona, Center for Excellence in Psoriasis-Vienna, Pearls in Lisbon and Bucharest- as Invited Speaker and also at Harvard. She supports the idea of a collaborative work group of specialists in different areas for autoimmune diseases also with patient’s participation and she intent to create an Autoimmune Diseases Center in Colentina Hospital.
Abstract:
Introduction: Biosimilars represent a challenge in the daily clinical practice and they have demonstrated their effi cacy and good tolerance in a context of limited budget. Our health policy and Romanian protocols regarding the biosimilars does not recommend the pharmaceutical-nonmedical switch. Th e medical switch is permitted only by doctor’s prescription. Methods: In our hospital (Colentina Clinical Hospital, Bucharest, Dermatology Department), we treat patients with moderate to severe psoriasis with biologics according to the European and also Romanian Consensus (etanercept, adalimumab, infl iximab, ixekizumab, secukinumab, ustekinumab-originals or biosimilars) in a number of 290 patients on biologic therapy. From these 290 patients, 50 patients (17.24%) - are on biosimilars (Infl ectra, Remsima, Benepali) as they have been registered on the national program for psoriasis. Th e patients (23 women-46% and 27 men-54%) were studied for 12 months (January 2017-December 2017). Results: We compared the biosimilars patients with 50 patients on originals: etanercept (18 patients) and infl iximab (32 patients). From those 50 patients, fi ve dropped out from adverse reactions (tuberculosis, myocardial infarction etc.) and nine were switched because of ineffi cacy. As the remaining 36 patients, they were switched on other biologics (mainly on other biosimilars). For the patients on originals, at 12 months: 13 patients-26% (12 on Remicade and one on Enbrel) developed adverse reactions or lost PASI 50 (one dropped out and 18 were switched mainly on other originals: etanercept, adalimumab, ustekinumab, ixekizumab). Conclusions: Comparing the two groups, we did not fi nd any signifi cant diff erences (26% lost PASI 50 or had adverse reactions on originals and 28% on biosimilars) regarding maintaining the same therapy because of the adverse reactions or ineffi cacy at 12 months. In our study, the biosimilars demonstrated the same behavior as the originals.
Keynote Forum
Pawan Saharan
Biomix Network Ltd, USA
Keynote: Paradigm shift in discovery of new generation antibodies and their biosimilars via path breaking innovation Radha 108 (Receptol)
Biography:
Pawan Saharan has completed his MS in Life Sciences (JNU), PhD in Medicine (WVU) and Post-doctoral at Stanford University. He has several international publications/presentations including in top scientiï¬ c journal Nature from the age of 21. He was nominated for several Global awards including by New Drug Discovery Programme of Department of Science & Technology (GoI) funded US$ three million grant and the best US Scientist award at age 22 years by AAAS, Washington DC. He has been CSO & CEO for large MNC and Founder of Biomix Network Inc., USA and India. He has global experience in running Healthcare Industry, including the Pharmaceuticals MNCs and Hospitals at the top management level in USA and India. He created the ï¬ rst truly Nano-Bio-IT Helix via inventing Radha 108 Nano-Peptides for AIDS therapy: RECEPTOL® along with reusable micro-chip diagnostics for AIDS, Cancer, TB and other infections, costing a fraction of current tests creating a paradigm shift in healthcare and bringing smile on billion faces who could not afford modern treatment.
Abstract:
Pawan Saharan has invented Radha108 Nano Peptides that naturally producing new generation antibodies and their biosimilar like cytokine (interleukin & interferon) by secretion from cytotoxic T-cells of the innate immune system, which was increased by fi ve times due to Radha 108 Nano Peptide that get absorbed in the blood through buccal mucosa and crosses the blood brain barrier. Radha108 act on pituitary gland that in turn promotes diff erentiation of B cells, maturation of macrophages and monocytes and stimulates production of cytokines IL-1 to IL-11, TNF-α, INF–γ and maturation of immature thymocytes into either helper or suppressor T cells that helps building body's immune system strongly to fi ght any infection and immune disorders like asthma, allergy, URTI, carcinomas and type 2 diabetes saving hundreds of billions of $ that are spent in treating such ailments with little or no effi cacy. Th e mode of action of Receptol® is based on API Radha 108 Nano-informational peptides proteins which are active in mitigating cell fusion and docks on Gp120, 180, 160 Receptor CD4, CD8 on the cell surface closing entry of virus like foreign antigen and allergens. Radha108 functions as a molecular signaling device which works through receptors on target cell surfaces. Radha108 Nano Peptides SEQ ID 1-8 extracted from Bovine Colostrum with the Granted US patent (U.S. Patent No. 9,249,188 & 8,518,454 B2) consist of ELVPGVPRGTQL (DNA-binding Protein Inhibitor ID-3), VAIIQHMIKKLR (EpsteinBarr virus induced gene-2), LPQEVLNENLLRF (Alpha S1-Casein), RLNARMAELR (S-adenosylmethionine synthetase isoform type-1), SSLQVLNMSHN(Toll- like receptor -4), EYQELMNVK (Keratin type II cytoskeletal 59 kDa component IV), VDTLNDEINFLR (Keratin type II cytoskeletal 7), DGIVNENLAER ( Ribonucleosidediphosphate reductase small chain). Th us, Radha 108 Nanopeptides stimulate the secretion of bio- similar (wide range of cytokines like interleukins, interferon) that are very eff ective in treating all viral and immune disorders like HIV, swine fl u, allergy, asthma, arthritis, diarrhea, fever, fatigue-malaise, anemia, endometriosis, cold and fl u by playing a crucial role.
Keynote Forum
Francois Xavier Frapaise
FX Frapaise Pharma Consulting, France
Keynote: The end of phase 3 clinical trials in biosimilars development
Time : 15:00-15:45
Biography:
Abstract:
Most patients still have limited or no access to life-changing therapeutic proteins in the treatment of their cancer or autoimmune disorders. Th e current clinical development model of biosimilars is expensive, and in most cases, large, phase 3 trials do not provide meaningful information on the clinical equivalence of biosimilars and reference compounds. At the same time, the development of state-of-the-art orthogonal analytical methods has enabled a better understanding of the structure and structure–function relationship of biotherapeutics. Hence, we suggest here that a solid chemistry, manufacturing, and controls (CMC) package and meaningful phase 1 studies will leave limited uncertainty on biosimilarity, which can be addressed— if needed—by post-approval, long-term follow-up studies (post-approval studies, pharmacovigilance, real world evidence data and registries, and possibly new postapproval models to be developed). We believe that this new approach may be more appropriate than 600- to 1000-patient, phase 3 trials in assessing biosimilarity and therapeutic equivalence, under the condition that the administered biosimilar given to individual patients can be clearly identifi ed. Obviously, there will probably never be a “one size fi ts all” development model, and an individualized, risk-based approach to biosimilar development will always have to be considered and discussed early with regulators.
- Developing Biosimilars & Biobetters| Challenges in Biosimilars | Regulatory Advances in Biosimilars | Protein Biotherapeutics and Biosimilars | Biopharmaceutical | Bioequivalence Assessment
Location: Rembrandt 2
Chair
Francois Xavier Frapaise
FX Frapaise Pharma Consulting, France
Session Introduction
Lydia Michaut
BioAgilytix, Switzerland
Title: Recommendations for the development and validation of neutralizing antibody assays in support of biosimilar assessment
Biography:
Lydia Michaut holds a Master’s degree in Molecular and Cellular Biology and PhD in Immunology from the University of Strasbourg (Laboratory of Jules A Hoffman, 2011 Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine with Bruce A Beutler and Ralph M Steinman for Innate Immunity). She then spent over ten years in research on Gene Expression and Genetic Control of Eye Development and Body Axis Formation at the University of Basel, and has ten years of experience in the Development of Biologics and Gene Therapy Drugs in a leading pharmaceutical company. She is also involved in several initiatives from the European Bioanalytical Forum (EBF) such as stability of anti-drug antibodies, management of critical reagents for ligand binding assays, and qPCR.
Abstract:
Biography:
Steven A Watt was granted with a position as Assistant Professor at the Department of Proteome and Metabolome Research after studying Molecular Biology at the Bielefeld University and graduating with a PhD in Genetics and Molecular Biology in 2005. There, he was In-charge of a Mass Spectrometry Service unit, dealing with proteome and metabolome projects. In 2009, he joined Thermo Fisher Scientiï¬ c as an Instructor for scientiï¬ c and pharmaceutical mass spectrometry applications. In his current position as a Business Development Manager at A&M STABTEST, he is involved in customer relations, marketing and the development of new analytical services in the ï¬ eld of pharmaceutical analysis.
Abstract:
Polysorbates (PS), namely PS 20 and PS 80, are widely used in formulations of therapeutic proteins to stabilize and protect these against adsorption, aggregation and precipitation induced by high protein concentration, interfacial or mechanical stress. However, recently there have been increasing reports of issues with PS containing biopharmaceutical drug products, these include clouding phenomena, particulate formation and protein oxidation. In all these cases, there is evidence that PSs or rather their degradation products may be the root cause. The analysis of PSs, due to their heterogeneity, is challenging and although there are robust methods available to quantify PS even in presence of proteins, more comprehensive approaches are required to characterize PS raw materials or monitor their stability throughout the product’s shelf-life. A deeper understanding of impurities and degradants present in PS raw materials and their degradation products arising during storage are essential to understand quality issues and to deï¬ ne control strategies on raw-material level or improve PS stability in the formulation. Here, we propose an LC-MS approach for characterization of PS raw material and a quantitative screening method for fatty acid degradation products in the ï¬ nal formulation. Furthermore, we want to give an outlook on ongoing investigations regarding the impact of packaging material components on PS stability.
- Special Panel Discussion
Location: Rembrandt 2
Chair
Francois Xavier Frapaise
FX Frapaise Pharma Consulting, France