This work is the second in a series of publications outlining the fundamental principles and proposed design of a biopharmaceutics classifications system for inhaled drugs and drug products (the iBCS). Here, a mechanistic computer-based model has been used to explore the sensitivity of the primary biopharmaceutics functional output parameters: (i) pulmonary fraction dose absorbed (Fabs) and (ii) drug half-life in lumen (t1/2) to biopharmaceutics-relevant input attributes including dose number (Do) and effective permeability (Peff). Results show the nonlinear sensitivity of primary functional outputs to variations in these attributes. Drugs with Do < 1 and Peff > 1 × 10-6 cm/s show rapid (t1/2 < 20 min) and complete (Fabs > 85%) absorption from lung lumen into lung tissue. At Do > 1, dissolution becomes a critical drug product attribute and Fabs becomes dependent on regional lung deposition. The input attributes used here, Do and Peff, thus enabled the classification of inhaled drugs into parameter spaces with distinctly different biopharmaceutic risks. The implications of these findings with respect to the design of an inhalation-based biopharmaceutics classification system (iBCS) and to the need for experimental methodologies to classify drugs need to be further explored.
Keywords: biopharmaceutics classification system; critical product attributes; iBCS; inhaled drugs; mechanistic modeling; pulmonary availability.