| Literature DB >> 31220076 |
Carmen H Coxon1, Colin Longstaff1, Chris Burns1.
Abstract
Both basic and translational research are continuously evolving, but the principles that underpin research integrity remain constant. These include rational, hypothesis-driven, and adequately planned and controlled science, which is carried out openly, honestly, and ethically. An important component of this should be minimising experimental irreproducibility. Biological systems, in particular, are inherently variable due to the nature of cells and tissues, as well as the complex molecules within them. As a result, it is important to understand and identify sources of variability and to strive to minimise their influence. In many instances, the application of metrology (the science of measurement) can play an important role in ensuring good quality research, even within biological systems that aren't always amenable to many of the metrological concepts applied in other fields. Here, we introduce the basic concepts of metrology in relation to biological systems and promote the application of these principles to help avoid potentially costly mistakes in both basic and translational research. We also call on funders to encourage the uptake of metrological principles, as well as provide funding and support for later engagement with regulatory bodies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31220076 PMCID: PMC6605671 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3000338
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Biol ISSN: 1544-9173 Impact factor: 8.029
Organisations developing and distributing standards and reference materials.
| Organisation | Role/Mission | Areas |
|---|---|---|
| NIBSC (government) | Assures the quality of biological medicines through the provision of biological reference materials, by testing products (control), and by carrying out research. NIBSC also provide expert advice in response to emergencies as well as guidance to manufacturers, regulatory authorities, United Kingdom government and European bodies, the UN, and WHO. | Advanced therapies, vaccines, blood products, haemostasis, toxins, stem cells, gene therapy, next-generation sequencing, posttranslational modifications, biosimilars, cytokines and growth factors, microbiome. |
| NIST (government) | Nonregulatory government agency within the US Department of Commerce. Founded in 1901, it is the national measurement (metrology) institute for the US. NIST provides guidance to federal agencies on the participation in, and use of, voluntary written and physical standards. | Measures and weights, >1,200 standard reference materials for instrument calibration and method development, laboratory accreditation, documentary standards, standard reference data (e.g., biometrics, mass spectrometry), reference materials for nontargeted metabolomics, lipidomics, and proteomics. |
| EDQM | Development, implementation, and monitoring of quality standards (written and physical) for manufacture and control of safe medicines and cosmetics, coordination of European OMCLs, combating counterfeit drugs, guidance in safe use of medicines and cosmetics. | Blood transfusion; organ, cell, and tissue transplantation; biotherapeutics; consumer health issues; cosmetics and food contact materials; monographs and reference standards of the European Pharmacopoeia. |
| CEN | Provide voluntary European standards and related products and services for the benefit of businesses, consumers, and other standard users in Europe and drive agreement on common specifications and/or procedures that respond to the needs of business and meet consumer expectations. | Advanced manufacturing and processing, advanced materials, biotechnology, nanotechnologies, and nanomaterials (including healthcare and consumer products). |
| SCB | SCB aims to connect producers of written and physical standards with users of these materials and therefore promote their uptake and implementation. Mission: ‘Coordinate the accelerated advancement and improved awareness of the standards and best practices that address the rapidly evolving needs of the global regenerative medicine advanced therapy community’. | Cell-based drug discovery, cell therapy, gene therapy, tissue engineering, rapid microbial testing for commercial cell or gene therapy products, ancillary materials for cellular therapies, cell collection standards. |
| ARM | International organisation focused on regenerative medicine and advanced therapies. Works with members and policymakers to foster investment, research and development, and successful commercialisation of safe, effective, and transformational therapies. Enable market access and advocate clear regulatory pathways and procedures. | Cell therapy, gene therapy, and gene-modified cell therapy, tissue engineering and biomaterials, Europe/US market access and European/US regulatory affairs, patient engagement, European advanced therapies, communication and education. |
| NPL | The UK’s NMI, developing and maintaining the national primary measurement standards (physical). It is a public corporation owned by the Department of BEIS. | Drug discovery, manufacture and formulation, medical devices, tissue imaging, data analysis, biophysics, radiotherapy, environmental monitoring. |
| LGC | Provide a comprehensive range of reference materials, proficiency testing schemes, genomics reagents and instrumentation, research and measurement services. Also, manages and operates laboratories on behalf of the UK government to provide independent resolution of technical appeals in the UK food and feed enforcement system and give advice to government, the public sector, and the wider analytical community on measurement science particularly in relation to legislation and regulation. | Bioanalytical services pertaining to small molecules and biotherapeutics, CMC advice for drug manufacture, oligonucleotide therapeutics. |
| Pharmacopoeia (various, UK, US, China, Europe, etc.) | Publish written standards (monographs) for pharmaceutical substances and medicinal products; supported by physical reference materials. Can include veterinary substances and products. Provides a legal and scientific basis for quality control during the development, production, and marketing processes. Covers qualitative and quantitative composition, tests to be carried out on medicines, raw materials used in production of medicines, and on the intermediates of synthesis. | Written standards and physical reference materials for dosage forms, active pharmaceutical ingredients, formulated preparations and excipients, herbal drugs and herbal medicinal products, blood-related products, immunological products, radiopharmaceutical preparations, infrared reference spectra. |
Abbreviations: ARM, Alliance for Regenerative Medicine; BEIS, Business, Energy, and Industrial Strategy; CEN, European Committee for Standardisation; CMC, Chemistry, Manufacture, and Control; EDQM, European Directorate for the Quality of Medicines and Healthcare; LGC, Laboratory of Government Chemists; NIBSC, National Institute for Biological Standards and Control; NIST, National Institute of Standards and Technology; NMI, National Metrology Institute; NPL, National Physics Laboratory; OMCL, Official Medicines Control Laboratory; SCB, Standards Coordinating Body