| Literature DB >> 33189573 |
Catherine Lindgren1, Ashley Leinbach2, Julie Annis3, Jay Tanna4, Nan Zhang4, Jonathan H Esensten2, Patrick J Hanley5.
Abstract
``Cellular therapies first emerged as specialized therapies only available at a few "boutique" centers worldwide. To ensure broad access to these investigational therapies-regardless of geography, demographics and other factors-more and more academic clinical trials are becoming multi-center. Such trials are typically performed with a centralized manufacturing facility receiving the starting material and shipping the final product, either fresh or cryopreserved, to the patient's institution for infusion. As these academic multi-center trials increase in number, it is critical to have procedures and training programs in place to allow these sites that are remote from the production facility to successfully participate in these trials and satisfy regulatory compliance and patient safety best practices. Based on the collective experience of the Consortium for Pediatric Cellular Immunotherapy, the authors summarize the challenges encountered by institutions in shipping and receiving the starting material and final product as well as preparing the final product for infusion. The authors also discuss best practices implemented by each of the consortia institutions to overcome these challenges.Entities:
Keywords: cell processing; cellular therapy; clinical trials; immunotherapy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33189573 PMCID: PMC7855775 DOI: 10.1016/j.jcyt.2020.09.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cytotherapy ISSN: 1465-3249 Impact factor: 5.414