| Literature DB >> 31983799 |
Maryam Shariatzadeh1, Amit Chandra1,2, Samantha L Wilson1, Mark J McCall1, Lise Morizur3, Léa Lesueur3, Olivier Chose3, Michael M Gepp4,5, André Schulz4,6, Julia C Neubauer4,5, Heiko Zimmermann4,5,7,8, Elsa Abranches9, Jennifer Man9,10, Orla O'Shea9, Glyn Stacey9,11, Zoe Hewitt12, David J Williams1.
Abstract
Establishing how to effectively manufacture cell therapies is an industry-level problem. Decentralised manufacturing is of increasing importance, and its challenges are recognised by healthcare regulators with deviations and comparability issues receiving specific attention from them. This paper is the first to report the deviations and other risks encountered when implementing the expansion of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) in an automated three international site-decentralised manufacturing setting. An experimental demonstrator project expanded a human embryonal carcinoma cell line (2102Ep) at three development sites in France, Germany and the UK using the CompacT SelecT (Sartorius Stedim, Royston, UK) automated cell culture platform. Anticipated variations between sites spanned material input, features of the process itself and production system details including different quality management systems and personnel. Where possible, these were pre-addressed by implementing strategies including standardisation, cell bank mycoplasma testing and specific engineering and process improvements. However, despite such measures, unexpected deviations occurred between sites including software incompatibility and machine/process errors together with uncharacteristic contaminations. Many only became apparent during process proving or during the process run. Further, parameters including growth rate and viability discrepancies could only be determined post-run, preventing 'live' corrective measures. The work confirms the critical nature of approaches usually taken in Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) manufacturing settings and especially emphasises the requirement for monitoring steps to be included within the production system. Real-time process monitoring coupled with carefully structured quality systems is essential for multiple site working including clarity of decision-making roles. Additionally, an over-reliance upon post-process visual microscopic comparisons has major limitations; it is difficult for non-experts to detect deleterious culture changes and such detection is slow.Entities:
Keywords: Cell therapies; Comparability; Low-grade infection; Mitigation strategies; Monitoring; Process deviation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31983799 PMCID: PMC6954896 DOI: 10.1007/s00170-019-04516-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Adv Manuf Technol ISSN: 0268-3768 Impact factor: 3.226
A comparison of the present work with past and other key enabling work to identify the research gap in understanding comparability in the distributed manufacturing of pluripotent stem cell therapies
| Therapeutic approach | Cell types | Manufacturing strategy | Regulatory context | Approach | Number of locations | Contribution, significance and research gap | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinically led autologous cell therapy | All | Multiple hospital based. See also [ | US [ | Industry consultation | Many | Identifies the importance of comparability to the roll out of clinically pulled therapies in multiple sites and consequently to the growth of the regenerative medicine industry. | [ |
| Generic cell therapies | All | Process scaling and decentralised supply from sites. | US [ | Stakeholder workshop | Many | Identification of key research gaps within comparability to be addressed by community. | [ |
| Mesenchymal cell therapy | hMSC | Automated process | US [ | Experimental demonstrator | One | Measuring comparability of automated and manual process steps | [ |
| Embryonic stem cell therapy | hESC | Automated process. | US [ | Experimental Demonstrator | One | Demonstration of automated hESC culture. Core enabler for work in [ | [ |
| Haplobanked cell therapy, see [ | IPSC | Automated process (based on [ | US [ | Experimental demonstrator | One | Measuring comparability of automated and manual process steps. | [ |
| Embryonic/Pluripotent cell therapy standard | hPSC | Reference cell lines. See also [ | US [ | Experimental demonstrator | - | Establishment of hPSC reference cell lines. Core enabler for current work. | [ |
| Biologics | - | All | US [ | Guidelines and overview | - | Approaches to safety [ | [ |
| Pluripotent cell therapy | hPSC | Decentralised automated process emulating multiple hospital or industrial sites. | EU [ | Experimental demonstrator | Three international | Practical identification of the comparability issues encountered in manufacturing in multiple sites. Identification of the criticality of agreed approaches to process monitoring and the handling of deviations and the monitoring of low-grade infection. | Reported here |
Pragmatic decisions made during the design of a three-site experiment
| No | Ideal scenario | Replacement | Justification |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Use the production process for a pluripotent stem cell derived therapy to transfer across to three production facilities. | Banking of pluripotent stem cell-like-cells (the surrogate product) used as the production process in this experiment. The cell line chosen is the embryonal carcinoma cell line EC 2102Ep [ | Both cells and production protocols need to be publicly or commercially available with permissions to transfer across multiple sites. In this experiment, the chosen cell line is commercially available, and the protocols derived are not commercially sensitive, hence they can be transferred across the three sites. Embryonal carcinoma cell lines test positive for a panel of gene expression markers common with pluripotent stem cell lines. The 2102Ep cell line is permitted for use in all the countries where this experiment is being carried out, in contrast to human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) which are restricted for use in many countries [ |
| 2 | Use three production facilities with a GMP certificate for production of hPSC-derived cell therapies | Three development facilities, which are currently working towards industrialisation of cell therapy products. The deviations in the non-GMP setting highlight and confirm areas of risk. | GMP-qualified labs are not practically available for such an experiment, as there is currently insufficient GMP capacity [ The use of a non-GMP setting in development facilities should provide sufficient sensitivity to detect failure. A gap analysis based on EU Regulations [ |
| 3 | Use of a production process for a mature therapy where the production process has been developed sufficiently to reflect its mature status. | The experiment uses an embryonal carcinoma cell line as a surrogate product and a production protocol automated on the Compact SelecT (Sartorius Stedim, Royston, UK) which is a development tool for expansion of adherent cell cultures. | Mature production processes are product specific. For pluripotent stem cell-derived products production processes are currently limited or non-existent. Use of product surrogates allows for identification of critical process parameters. Automation is essential in any mature production pipeline. |
| 4 | In-process quality control is automated, and the batch records are maintained by the automated platform. | Not all the Compact SelecT platforms utilised at the three sites had integrated microscopes for the in-process visual verification of the culture progress. In this case, the operators at the sites are to manually view the flasks. | A verification of the progress of the production process at each step is not a regulatory requirement for a qualified process. During this experimental process, operators will manually view the flasks and take images. These images are to be shared with the experimental teams at the three sites. Well maintained laboratory notes are to act as the batch record. |
Risks identified during the experimental design
| Ideal scenario (GMP production) | Pragmatic scenario (development laboratory) | Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Facility | ||
| The design and construction of the facility is based on its suitability to the production environment where the needs of the product are paramount. There is usually separation of areas to minimise mix-ups/contamination and careful attention to process flows. There are prescriptive regulations regarding lighting, plumbing, sewage and washing facilities under GMP, as well as specific product quality assessment tests and acceptance criteria at different production stages. | Design and construction of the research and development facilities are normally prescribed by health and safety concerns for the users. Segregation might be required for preventing mix-ups or contamination, but it is not obligatory. Other features of the facility including construction etc. are not universally defined. These decisions are set locally so are often not comparable across sites. | Potential increased risk of process deviation (for example due to facility temperature variances) and increased risk of product contamination and failure to pass acceptance criteria. |
| Production team | ||
| Responsibilities of all the operators and supervisors should be in written procedures. The production team and supervisors will be fully trained in their respective roles. | The training in the tasks will be based on the experiments to be performed. | Increased risk of deviations to the protocols. |
| Training assessed and recorded formally and regularly | Critical assessment made of the protocols of each laboratory. | |
| Release of product performed by a Qualified Person (QP) leading a team of quality assurance and quality control professionals. | There is often no product other than the results from testing and they are released by the supervisor of the team. | |
| Equipment and consumables | ||
| Equipment for use in production and testing must be qualified for the use. Data generating equipment for product testing must be calibrated regularly. The accuracy, sensitivity, specificity and reproducibility of test methods should be established and documented. | Equipment must be appropriately, maintained and calibrated. Equipment qualification with formal record keeping is not obligatory. | Increased risk of incorrect read-outs. |
| Automation platform | ||
| Automation platform qualified for the unit operation in the site. The site provides the required environment for the automation platform. | Automation platform for the unit operation installed correctly. | Increased risk of protocols varying across sites |
| Procedures | ||
| All SOPs are drafted based on guidelines by qualified personnel and approved by the quality control (QC) unit of the production facility. | SOPs are based on the local requirements and the equipment manuals. They are written and approved by research and development staff rather than quality or regulatory professionals. | Increased risk of protocols varying across sites. Increased risk of product variability. |
| SOPs are standard for the activities in the production facility. Each production task will be recorded in batch records following the SOPs for the production facility. | It is possible that different experiments have ‘experimental operating procedures’ which are specific to the experiment and may override SOPs for the facility. | |
| All batch records are signed off by the operating personnel along with the personnel verifying the steps (dual control of procedures/records). These are maintained long term. | Sign-off for experimental records is not a formal process. Often operator sign-off is sufficient. | |
| Testing is prescriptive and will be performed in the same manner for all batches. | Testing is based on the requirements of the experiment. | |
Fig. 1Schematic summary of the automated cell culture protocol on the CompacT SelecT. The robotic arm pours off the media prior to a washing step in PBS to remove any residual media. The trypsin pour-off step is performed so that only a minimal coating of the chelating agent is in contact with the cells since the automated system is incapable of centrifugation. This is followed by quenching with FBS enriched media whereby the proteins in the FBS neutralise the trypsin. The cells are mixed, and a cell count is performed using the Cedex automated system. An appropriate volume of media is then added to the new flasks to obtain the desired seeding density
Fig. 2Schematic representation of the EC 2102Ep expansion protocol, demonstrating the three cryovials that were thawed and initially seeded into three corresponding T 175 cm2 prior to expansion in triplicate over six passages
Summary of major differences and deviations identified between sites prior to and during expansion of EC 2102 Ep cells
| Air flow | |||
Laminar flow: 0.35–0.55 (m/s) Negative flow: 0.4–0.7(m/s) | Laminar flow: 0.435 Negative flow: 0.647 | Laminar flow: 0.454 Negative flow: 0.504 | Laminar flow: 0.481 Negative flow: 0.576 |
| Incubator CO2 % | 5% | 5.5% | |
| Incubator temperature | 37 °C | 37 °C | 37.6 °C |
| Lab based SOPs for machine decontamination/cleaning | Two-stage cleaning, disinfectant followed by rinsing and manual wiping | Vapour hydrogen peroxide decontamination | In-house vapour hydrogen peroxide decontamination |
| Organisational issues | First machine | Required machine move and use of alternative incubator | Prohibition of weekend working |
*The sensors were faulty/not calibrated at site 2, resulting in such a high CO2 read-out
Fig. 3a Total number of cells per flask based on Cedex automated cell counting (left axis) at different culture passage; variations in flask numbers are the result of having to exclude one flask at passage 1 at site 2 due to insufficient cell recovery post thawing. b Comparison of flask-to-flask cell viability when expanded at multiple manufacturing sites. c Percentage of co-efficient of variation (CV) for the total cell number; black solid line represents site 1, blue dashed line represents site 2, and red small dashed line represents site 3
Fig. 4Flow cytometry analysis performed on cells cultured at site 1 based on the EC 2102Ep population positive percentage expression level of pluripotency markers
Fig. 5Ishikawa or fish-bone diagram illustrating the anticipated and known manufacturing process deviations identified at the start of the experiment grouped into broad areas and by individual issues
Fig. 6Ishikawa or fish-bone diagram illustrating the unexpected manufacturing process deviations that only became apparent following experimental runs grouped into broad areas and by individual issues
Fig. 7Ishikawa or fish-bone diagram illustrating post project learning or ‘do differents’ to be considered for future manufacturing scenarios, grouped into broad areas and by individual issues