| Literature DB >> 34210363 |
Jeremy Magalon1,2,3, Gianni Soldati4, Pauline François5,6, Giulio Rusconi4,7, Laurent Arnaud8, Luca Mariotta4, Laurent Giraudo5, Greta Minonzio4, Julie Veran5, Baptiste Bertrand9, Chloé Dumoulin5, Fanny Grimaud5, Luc Lyonnet8, Dominique Casanova9, Camille Giverne10, Audrey Cras11, Guy Magalon12, Françoise Dignat-George6,8, Florence Sabatier5,6,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Even though the manufacturing processes of the stromal vascular fraction for clinical use are performed in compliance with the good manufacturing practices applying to advanced therapy medicinal products, specifications related to stromal vascular fraction quality remain poorly defined. We analyzed stromal vascular fraction clinical batches from two independent good manufacturing practices-compliant manufacturing facilities, the Swiss Stem Cell Foundation (SSCF) and Marseille University Hospitals (AP-HM), with the goal of defining appropriate and harmonized release acceptance criteria.Entities:
Keywords: Adipose tissue; Advanced therapy medicinal product; Cell subset distribution; Flow cytometry; GMP production; Stromal vascular fraction
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34210363 PMCID: PMC8252207 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-021-02445-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Comparative description of SSCF and AP-HM methods. Comparative description of each critical steps of SVF manufacturing and associated quality controls performed at the SSCF and AP-HM cell-therapy facilities. DPBS Dulbecco’s phosphate-buffered saline, HSA human serum albumin, RL Ringer’s lactate
| SSCF | AP-HM | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Manual or automatic harvesting using various canula | Manual harvesting using a Khouri Cannula after a strict aseptic skin preparation | ||
| 10 min | 5 min | ||
| Directly packaging in 60-mL Luer Lock syringes. | Packaging in 60-mL Luer Lock syringes from a bag | ||
| Manual collection of AT | Tensioning the Celution® device, settlement of consumables, and seal check | ||
| Into three 100-ml syringes | AT transfer in the Celution® device | ||
| 10 min | Automated | Visual check of discarding infiltration liquid | |
| Yes | |||
| 150 ml of AT required | At least 100 mL of AT required | ||
| Twice with DPBS +/+ | From two to five washings with RL and visual check | ||
| Addition of Liberase® | Addition of Celase® in the device | ||
| 45 min at 37 °C | Automated | 20 min at room temperature | |
| DPBS −/− + 1% HSA | Automated | With RL | |
| 100 μm and 40 μm | NA | ||
| SVF resuspended in 5% HSA | SVF resuspended in RL | ||
1) Cell count and viability 2) Evaluation of cell subset distribution with flow cytometry | 1) Cell count and viability 2) Evaluation of cell subset distribution with flow cytometry 3) CFU-F assay | ||
| Microbiological control | Microbiological control | ||
1) Passive agar (A class) (2x) 2) Contact agar bench (2x) 3) Gloves fingerprints after SVF packaging (2x) 4) Air impacting (A and B class) | 1) Passive agar (B class) 2) Passive agar (A class) 3) Gloves fingerprints after AT transfer 4) Gloves fingerprints after enzyme reconstitution and transfer 5) Gloves fingerprints after SVF collection 6) Contact agar bench 7) Contact agar working area 8) Gloves fingerprints after SVF packaging 9) Contact agar working area 10) Air impacting (A and B class) | ||
Fig. 1The common gating strategy. Presentation of the common gating strategy and reminder of the fluorochromes conjugated according to the initial protocol of each center. EC, endothelial cell; ASC, adipose-derived stromal cell; PR, pericyte; SS, size scatter; FS, forward scatter; NC, nucleated cell; VNC, viable nucleated cell
Baseline characteristics of patients. Data are presented as mean ± SD, or as percentages
| SSCF, | AP-HM, | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 60.9%/39.1% | 88.6%/11.4% | < 0.0001 | |
| 49.23 ± 10.02 | 51.51 ± 13.77 | 0.0566 | |
| 130.1 ± 54.45 mL | 201.9 ± 56.18 mL | < 0.0001 | |
| | 18.0% | - | - |
| | - | 100.0% | |
| | 66.3% | - | |
| | 15.6% | - | |
| | 37.1% | 31.4% | 0.1138 |
| | 26.5% | 22.9% | |
| | 17.3% | 17.1% | |
| | 9.9% | 5.7% | |
| | 9.2% | 22.9% | |
Fig. 2Comparatives analyses of viability percentage and yield recovery of VNCs/mL AT between the two cohorts. Viability of SVF cells was higher in SSCF cohort compared to AP-HM cohort (p < 0.0001). Yield of VNCs/mL of AT was higher in SSCF cohort (p = 0.041). VNC, viable nucleated cell; SSCF, Swiss Stem Cell Foundation; AP-HM, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Marseille; AT, adipose tissue
Fig. 3Free of germs and contaminated batches of the finished product and environmental monitoring within the two cohorts. A AP-HM batches were significantly less contaminated compared to SSCF batches (p = 0.0008). B No significant differences were observed for environmental monitoring, data missing for 29 patients in SSCF cohort and 12 patients in AP-HM cohort; SSCF, Swiss Stem Cell Foundation; AP-HM, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Marseille
Fig. 4Validation of the common gating strategy. A multicenter analysis was performed to validate the common gating strategy. Fourteen AT samples were analyzed by flow cytometry with the two antibody panels, seven in AP-HM facilities and seven in SSCF facilities. The analysis was performed by the same operator using the common gating strategy. Each color represents a batch. Squares represent experiments realized in SSCF facilities. Rounds represent experiments realized in AP-HM facilities. No difference could be observed in cell subset distribution. EC, endothelial cell; ASC, adipose-derived stromal cell; Leuk, leukocytes; PR, pericyte
Fig. 5Comparison between the cell subset distribution of the two cohorts. Phenotypic data were reanalyzed using the common gating strategy. EC were found to be in a greater proportion in SSCF cohort (p < 0.0001). No significant difference could be evidenced for the ASCs distribution (p = 0.5559). Proportion of leukocytes was higher in AP-HM cohort (p < 0.0001). Proportion of PR was also higher in AP-HM cohort (p < 0.0001). EC, endothelial cell; ASC, adipose-derived stromal cell; Leuk, leukocytes; PR, pericyte