Article

On the shelf life of pharmaceutical products.

Nonclinical and Pharmaceutical Sciences Statistics, Merck, West Point, Pennsylvania, USA.
AAPS PharmSciTech (impact factor: 1.43). 06/2012; 13(3):911-8. DOI:10.1208/s12249-012-9815-2 pp.911-8
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT This article proposes new terminology that distinguishes between different concepts involved in the discussion of the shelf life of pharmaceutical products. Such comprehensive and common language is currently lacking from various guidelines, which confuses implementation and impedes comparisons of different methodologies. The five new terms that are necessary for a coherent discussion of shelf life are: true shelf life, estimated shelf life, supported shelf life, maximum shelf life, and labeled shelf life. These concepts are already in use, but not named as such. The article discusses various levels of "product" on which different stakeholders tend to focus (e.g., a single-dosage unit, a batch, a production process, etc.). The article also highlights a key missing element in the discussion of shelf life-a Quality Statement, which defines the quality standard for all key stakeholders. Arguments are presented that for regulatory and statistical reasons the true product shelf life should be defined in terms of a suitably small quantile (e.g., fifth) of the distribution of batch shelf lives. The choice of quantile translates to an upper bound on the probability that a randomly selected batch will be nonconforming when tested at the storage time defined by the labeled shelf life. For this strategy, a random-batch model is required. This approach, unlike a fixed-batch model, allows estimation of both within- and between-batch variability, and allows inferences to be made about the entire production process. This work was conducted by the Stability Shelf Life Working Group of the Product Quality Research Institute.

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Keywords

article discusses various levels
 
batch shelf lives
 
between-batch variability
 
confuses implementation
 
different methodologies
 
different stakeholders
 
entire production process
 
five new terms
 
fixed-batch model
 
key stakeholders
 
labeled shelf life
 
maximum shelf life
 
Product Quality Research Institute
 
production process
 
shelf life
 
shelf life-a Quality Statement
 
Stability Shelf Life Working Group
 
suitably small quantile
 
true product shelf life
 
true shelf life
 

Robert Capen