| Literature DB >> 29564526 |
Valentin Jossen1, Christian van den Bos2, Regine Eibl3, Dieter Eibl3.
Abstract
Human mesenchymal stem cell (hMSC)-based therapies are of increasing interest in the field of regenerative medicine. As economic considerations have shown, allogeneic therapy seems to be the most cost-effective method. Standardized procedures based on instrumented single-use bioreactors have been shown to provide billion of cells with consistent product quality and to be superior to traditional expansions in planar cultivation systems. Furthermore, under consideration of the complex nature and requirements of allogeneic hMSC-therapeutics, a new equipment for downstream processing (DSP) was successfully evaluated. This mini-review summarizes both the current state of the hMSC production process and the challenges which have to be taken into account when efficiently producing hMSCs for the clinical scale. Special emphasis is placed on the upstream processing (USP) and DSP operations which cover expansion, harvesting, detachment, separation, washing and concentration steps, and the regulatory demands.Entities:
Keywords: Advanced therapeutic medicinal product; Allogeneic; Good manufacturing practice; Human mesenchymal stem cells; Microcarrier; Single-use devices
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29564526 PMCID: PMC5895685 DOI: 10.1007/s00253-018-8912-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Microbiol Biotechnol ISSN: 0175-7598 Impact factor: 4.813
hMSC-based products with marketing authorization for allogeneic and autologous therapies
| Medicinal product | Company | hMSC type | Indication | Marketing authorization |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Allostem | AlloSource | Allogeneic hASC | Bone regeneration | US medical device |
| Cartistem | Medipost | Allogeneic UCB-MSC | Osteoarthritis | Korea |
| Grafix | Osiris Therapeutics | Allogeneic BM-MSC | Soft tissue defects | US medical device |
| Prochymal | Mesoblast | Allogeneic BM-MSC | Graft-versus-host disease | Canada and New Zealand |
| OsteoCel | NuVasive | Allogeneic BM-MSC | Spinal bone regeneration | US medical device |
| OvationOS | Osiris Therapeutics | Allogeneic BM-MSC | Bone regeneration | US medical device |
| TEMCELL HS | JCR Pharmaceuticals | Allogeneic BM-MSC | Graft-versus-host disease | Japan |
| Trinity Evolution | Orthofix | Allogeneic BM-MSC | Bone regeneration | US medical device |
| Trinity Elite | Orthofix | Allogeneic BM-MSC | Bone regeneration | US medical device |
| Hearticellgram-AMI | Pharmicell | Autologous BM-MSC | Acute myocardial infarction | Korea |
| Cupistem | Anterogen | Autologous hASC | Crohn’s fistula | Korea |
| QueenCell | Anterogen | Autologous hASC | Regeneration of subcutaneous adipose tissue | Korea |
| Ossron | RMS | Autologous BM-MSC | Bone regeneration | Korea |
hASC human adipose tissue-derived stromal/stem cells, hBM-MSC human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells, UCB-MSC umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stem cells
Fig. 1Main operations required to manufacture hMSC-based therapeutics which are used in a allogeneic and b autologous therapies
Instrumented, dynamic single-use bioreactors operated with microcarriers. The order of the bioreactors within each category represents no rating of the systems (alphabetically ordered)
| Working principle | Scale | Manufacturer | System brand | Cell density/cell type | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stirred systems | Small-scale bioreactors (15 mL–0.25 L)* | Sartorius Stedim Biotech | ambr® 15/ambr® 250 | 4–5∙105 cells/mL | Dufey et al. ( |
| Eppendorf/DASGIP | BioBLU® 0.3c | ||||
| Benchtop scale bioreactors | Eppendorf | CelliGen® BLU | 2.7–5.3∙105 cells/mL | Milipore ( | |
| (1.5–2.4 L)* | Merck | Mobius® CellReady | |||
| Sartorius Stedim Biotech | UniVessel® SU | ||||
| Pilot and production scale bioreactors | Pall Life Sciences | Allegro™ STR | 1.9–20∙105 cells/mL | Schirmaier et al. ( | |
| (35–150 L)* | Sartorius Stedim Biotech | BIOSTAT STR® | |||
| Eppendorf | CelliGen® BLU | ||||
| Thermo Scientific | HyPerforma™ SUB | ||||
| Merck | Mobius CellReady | ||||
| Pall Life Sciences | Nucleo® | ||||
| GE Healthcare | Xcellerex™ XDR | ||||
| Wave-mixed | Benchtop scale (0.5–1.5 L)* | Applicon | Appiflex | 1.9 ∙105 cells/mL | Timmins et al. ( |
| Sartorius Stedim Biotech | BIOSTAT® RM | ||||
| Finesse | SmartRocker | ||||
| GE Healthcare | WAVE | ||||
| Pall Life Sciences | XRS bioreactor | ||||
| Hollow fiber | Benchtop scale | FiberCell Systems | FiberCell | 108–109 hMSCs | Hambor ( |
| (n/a)* | Terumo BCT | Quantum Cell Expansion | |||
| Fixed bed | Benchtop scale | Eppendorf | BioBLU® 5p | 2.93 106 hMSC/mL | Weber et al. ( |
| (1.0–5.0 L)* | Pall | iCellis™ |
*Working volume
Fig. 2Instrumented single-use bioreactors suitable to expand hMSCs and their working principles. (A) Stirred, (B) wave-mixed, (C) hollow fiber bioreactor, and (D) fixed bed bioreactor
Overview of microcarriers used for the expansion of hMSCs
| Carrier | Manufacturer | Diameter (μm) | Material | Coating | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Xeno-free microcarriers | |||||
| Cytodex 1 | GE Healthcare | 147–248 | Dextran | DEAE | Takahashi et al. ( |
| Cytopore 1 | GE Healthcare | 200–280 | Cellulose | DEAE | Takahashi et al. ( |
| Enh. Attach. | Corning | 125–212 | PS | CellBIND® | Rafiq et al. ( |
| Glass | SoloHill | 125–212 | PS | Silica glass | Rafiq et al. ( |
| Hillex® | SoloHill | 160–180 | Dextran | TRA | Rafiq et al. ( |
| Hillex® CT | SoloHill | 90–212 | PS | TRA | Rafiq et al. ( |
| Plastic | SoloHill | 125–212 | PS | None | Rafiq et al. ( |
| Plastic Plus | SoloHill | 125–212 | PS | None | Rafiq et al. ( |
| Star Plus | SoloHill | 125–212 | PS | None | Meiring et al. ( |
| Synthemax II | Corning | 125–212 | PS | Sy II® | Rafiq et al. ( |
| Mammalian protein-coated microcarriers | |||||
| Collagen | SoloHill | 125–212 | PS | Collagen | Nienow et al. ( |
| CultiSpherG | Percell Biolytica | 130–380 | Gelatin | None | Rafiq et al. ( |
| Cytodex 3 | Ge Healthcare | 141–211 | Dextran | Collagen | Sart and Agathos ( |
| FACT III | SoloHill | 125–212 | PS | Collagen | Rafiq et al. ( |
| Recombinant protein-based microcarriers | |||||
| ProNectin F® | SoloHill | 125–212 | PS | Fibronectin | Jossen et al. ( |
DEAE diethylaminoethyl, PS polystyrene, Sy synthemax, TEA triethylammonium
Fig. 3Effect of impeller speed on hMSC/MC-agglomerate formation. Macroscopic (I) and microscopic (II) images of hMSC-microcarrier-agglomerates at 25 rpm (a), 49 rpm (b), and 120 rpm (c) in single-use spinner flasks. The white arrows indicate the hMSC-microcarrier-agglomerates. The white scale bar corresponds to 1 mm
Fig. 4Single-use Harvestainer solution for small scale (a) and large scale (b) (with kind permission of Thermo Scientific)