A Proposed Pediatric Biopharmaceutical Classification System for Medications for Chronic Diseases in Children

2020 
Abstract Age-appropriate pediatric formulations for oral administration can be challenging to formulate. Development of such formulations is often time consuming, labor-intensive and costly. The Biopharmaceutical Classification System (BCS), developed more than two decades ago, is used to develop suitable oral drug formulations for adult use. In theory, some of the same principles could be applied to formulate pediatric oral liquid dosage forms. However, the present BCS system was developed using adult gastrointestinal physiologic factors. Direct extrapolation of this method to develop pediatric oral dosage forms is inappropriate due to differences in adult and pediatric gastrointestinal physiologic differences during development. To date age-appropriate BCS to guide pediatric oral liquid formulation development has not been developed for various pediatric subpopulations. The objective of this study was to provisionally classify oral liquid formulations of extemporaneously prepared drugs at our institution into an age-appropriate BCS class after elimination of any duplicate listing when matched with the most current World Health Organization's Essential Medicines List for Children available at the time of this study and other published studies that may have reported BCS classification of drugs used as extemporaneous oral liquid formulations in children to treat chronic or rare diseases. A total of 96 orally administered extemporaneously compounded liquid formulations were included in this classification. Dose numbers were calculated using age-appropriate initial gastric volume for neonates, 6-month-old infants, and children up to 6 years of age. Using age-appropriate initial gastric volumes and pediatric and neonatal Lexicomp® age-specific maximal dosing recommendations for calculation of dose numbers, the solubility classes shifted for 62.5% of the drugs studied. A significant number of currently used extemporaneously compounded oral liquid formulations for age groups of children included in this study may not provide formulations with predictable safety and efficacy. Factors used in development of adult BCS cannot be applied directly to pediatric subpopulations.
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