Literature DB >> 27748517

The expanding role of the clinical haematologist in the new world of advanced therapy medicinal products.

Mark W Lowdell1, Amy Thomas2.   

Abstract

Advanced therapy medicinal products (ATMPs) represent the current pinnacle of 'patient-specific medicines' and will change the nature of medicine in the near future. They fall into three categories; somatic cell-therapy products, gene therapy products and cells or tissues for regenerative medicine, which are termed 'tissue engineered' products. The term also incorporates 'combination products' where a human cell or tissue is combined with a medical device. Plainly, many of these new medicines share similarities with conventional haematological stem cell transplant products and donor lymphocyte infusions as well as solid organ grafts and yet ATMPs are regulated as medicines and their development has remained predominantly in academic settings and within specialist centres. However, with the advent of commercialisation of dendritic cell vaccines, chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells and genetically modified autologous haematopoietic stem cells to cure single gene-defects in β-thalassaemia and haemophilia, the widespread availability of these therapies needs to be accommodated. Uniquely to ATMPs, the patient or an allogeneic donor is regularly part of the manufacturing process. All of the examples given above require procurement of blood, bone marrow or an apheresate from a patient as a starting material for manufacture. This can only occur in a clinical facility licensed for the procurement of human cells for therapeutic use and this is likely to fall to haematology departments, either as stem cell transplant programmes or as blood transfusion departments, to provide under a contract with the company that will manufacture and supply the final medicine. The resource implications associated with this can impact on all haematology departments, not just stem cell transplant units, and should not be under-estimated.
© 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  advanced therapy medicinal product; cell therapy; clinical trial; haematopoietic stem cell transplant

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27748517     DOI: 10.1111/bjh.14384

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Haematol        ISSN: 0007-1048            Impact factor:   6.998


  3 in total

Review 1.  Gene Therapy for Hemophilia.

Authors:  Arthur W Nienhuis; Amit C Nathwani; Andrew M Davidoff
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2017-04-11       Impact factor: 11.454

2.  Systematic review protocol: an assessment of the post-approval challenges of autologous CAR-T therapy delivery.

Authors:  Ching Lam; Edward Meinert; Celine-Lea Halioua-Haubold; Alison Carter; Aidong Yang; David Brindley; Zhanfeng Cui
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Review 3.  3D Bioprinting and the Future of Surgery.

Authors:  Thomas H Jovic; Emman J Combellack; Zita M Jessop; Iain S Whitaker
Journal:  Front Surg       Date:  2020-11-27
  3 in total

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