| Literature DB >> 17537259 |
David F Stroncek1, Ping Jin, Ena Wang, Betsy Jett.
Abstract
Potency testing is an important part of the evaluation of cellular therapy products. Potency assays are quantitative measures of a product-specific biological activity that is linked to a relevant biological property and, ideally, a product's in vivo mechanism of action. Both in vivo and in vitro assays can be used for potency testing. Since there is often a limited period of time between the completion of production and the release from the laboratory for administration to the patient, in vitro assays such are flow cytometry, ELISA, and cytotoxicity are typically used. Better potency assays are needed to assess the complex and multiple functions of cellular therapy products, some of which are not well understood. Gene expression profiling using microarray technology has been widely and effectively used to assess changes of cells in response to stimuli and to classify cancers. Preliminary studies have shown that the expression of noncoding microRNA which play an important role in cellular development, differentiation, metabolism and signal transduction can distinguish different types of stem cells and leukocytes. Both gene and microRNA expression profiling have the potential to be important tools for testing the potency of cellular therapies. Potency testing, the complexities associated with potency testing of cellular therapies, and the potential role of gene and microRNA expression microarrays in potency testing of cellular therapies is discussed.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17537259 PMCID: PMC1891278 DOI: 10.1186/1479-5876-5-24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Challenges associated with potency testing of cellular therapies
| ▪Limited quantity of final product to test |
| ▪Time to perform lot release testing is usually limited |
| ▪Stability of most cellular therapy products is limited |
| ▪Limited availability of reference standards |
| ▪Variability among lots is generally very high |
Factors contributing to the complex nature of cellular therapies
| ▪Variations in the starting cellular material |
| ▪Multiple biological products may be used in the manufacturing process |
| ▪Multiple steps can be involved in the manufacturing process |
| ▪Clinical effectiveness may be dependent on multiple cellular functions |
Assays used for potency testing
| ▪Animal models |
| ▪Cell-based assay systems |
| ▪ELISA |
| ▪Flow cytometry |
| ▪ELISPOT |
| ▪Proteomics |
| ▪Quantitative real-time PCR |