Page 30 - Ethical Guidelines for Conducting Research Studies Involving Human Subjects
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phase  can  be  done  in  other  groups  of  population  that  have  never
                                 been  studied.  Bioequivalence  and  bioavailability  study  also  falls
                                 under this category.

                                 10.1.3 Special Studies

                                 Bioavailability  /  Bioequivalence  studies  -  Bioequivalence
                                 studies should be carried out for all new drug substances intended
                                 for  systemic  absorption  and  if  applicable  with  the  available  doses
                                 formulations which are approved elsewhere in the world. For drug
                                 not intended for systemic absorption, data on the extent of systemic
                                 absorption may be required. Effect of food on absorption following
                                 oral  administration  should  also  be  evaluated.  These  studies  are
                                 conducted most often in normal volunteers. Hence, all safeguards to
                                 protect  participants  must  be  in  place,  including  ethical  review  of
                                 protocol,  recruitment  methods,  compensation  for  participation,
                                 evidence  of  non-coercion  and  consent  procedures.  It  is  in  such
                                 studies that volunteers often participate at short intervals and may
                                 participate  at  different  centers  within  less  than  the  prescribed
                                 period of three months between two studies. Mechanisms to prevent
                                 this must be developed at the study site.

                                 10.1.4 Dissolution studies:

                                 Dissolution is a process in which a solid substance solubilizes in a
                                 given  solvent.  In  the  pharmaceutical  industry,  drug  dissolution
                                 testing  is  routinely  used  to  provide  critical  in  vitro  drug  release
                                 information  for  both  quality  control  purposes  and  drug
                                 development.  In  vitro  drug  dissolution  data  generated  from
                                 dissolution  testing  experiments  can  be  related  to  in  vivo
                                 pharmacokinetic  data  by  means  of  in  vitro-in  vivo  correlations.
                                 Dissolution  and  bioavailability  data  submitted  in  the  new  drug
                                 application  must  provide  information  that  assures  bioequivalence
                                 or  establishes  bioavailability  and  dosage  correlations  between  the
                                 formulation(s)  sought  to  be  marketed  and  those  used  for  clinical
                                 trials  during  clinical  development  of  the  product.  Data  regarding
                                 interaction  of  the  new  drug  with  drugs  that  are  likely  to  be  used
                                 concomitantly  with  it  are  required  to be  conducted  and  should  be
                                 submitted  from  non-clinical  studies  and,  if  appropriate,  from
                                 human studies.








                   BMRC ETHICAL GUIDELINE ON HUMAN SUBJECTS                                   Page 26
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