Biotechnology and Cytotherapeutics: The Swiss Progenitor-Cell Transplantation Program
Definition
:1. Introduction
2. Methodological Aspects of Starting Biological Material Procurement for Modern Primary Progenitor-Cell-Type Establishment
- Donor of female sex and female gender.
- Donor of biological age between 18 years and 25 years.
- Donation performed at 12–14 weeks following conception.
- Donor of specified nationality and place of residence.
- Donor pregnancy resulting from natural insemination.
- Donor performing voluntary, gratuitous, and legal donation.
- Documentation of informed consent for the gestation termination.
- Documentation of informed consent for the donation.
- Donor in good overall health.
- Donor not suffering from any chronic disease or affection.
- Qualifying serological screening of the donor for specified pathogens (e.g., HIV, HBV, HCV, HTLV, CMV, S-West Nile virus, Treponema pallidum, Toxoplasma gondii, etc.).
- Availability of the donor after three months for repeat serological testing.
- No treatment of the donor with anti-inflammatory or other therapeutic drugs in the past six months.
- No inoculation of the donor with vaccines in the past four weeks.
- No donor history of post-travel sickness in the past six months.
- No history of immunotherapeutic treatment of the donor.
- No history of transplantation receipt by the donor.
- No history of Creutzfeldt–Jacob disease in the donor’s family.
3. Optimized Modern Industrial Manufacturing of Primary Progenitor Cells in Tiered Cell-Bank Systems
4. Industrial Applications of Primary Progenitor Cells as Biotechnological Substrates or as Therapeutic APIs and Related Quality Requirements
- Full traceability may be made available back to the (anonymized) origin of the primary cell source, around the derivation of the primary cell type and around the materials used in the preparation of the cell seed stocks.
- The technical possibility exists to create, by means of serial in vitro sub-cultures in a defined sustainable cell-bank system, sufficient amounts of consistent populations of cells to satisfy a globalized industrial-scale demand for high-quality biological substrates (e.g., millions of standardized WCB vials of the same original cell type).
- The technical possibility exists to cryopreserve extensive and homogenous cell lots at relatively early population-doubling levels or passage levels within the qualified in vitro lifespan of the primary cell type of interest.
- A standardized approach may be adopted for the original establishment of appropriate cell types and for the characterization of the derived cryopreserved cell banks, which may later be used as starting materials for further multi-tiered cell banking and for the sustainable provision of standardized cell sources for research and industrial applications.
- The technical possibility exists (i.e., due to the high sustainability of the cell sources) for the implementation of extensive and appropriate (i.e., risk analysis-based) biosafety testing schemes for the qualification of manufacturer-specific cell banks before the use in vaccine-production activities.
- Numerous technical possibilities exist for the demonstration that the considered cellular materials are exempt from detectable adventitious agents and that they are unable to form tumors when inoculated into immunosuppressed animal models or equivalent models.
- The possibility exists that the original research is subject to open international scientific scrutiny and to collaborative technical investigations of the characteristics of the cells or of the possible presence of adventitious agents. The cell-characterization results may be peer-reviewed and published.
- A single source of cells may exist, with a growing scientifically and technically updated body of safety-testing data and a safe history of use, giving increased confidence to manufacturers, regulators, and public-policy makers.
- The supply of cells may be free of any constraint related to intellectual-property rights on final products.
- The possibility exists, based on intrinsic cellular characteristics, to propagate diverse viral materials (i.e., viral pathogens infecting humans) with extremely high efficiency of replication in the manufactured primary cell populations.
- (i)
- Product and process development stages, in order to identify the optimal mechanisms for viral-material replication and to select the optimal manufacturing processes and materials to be used for production.
- (ii)
- Process confirmation or validation stages, in order to ensure that the selected processes and materials may be tangibly transposed into production.
- (iii)
- Production-validation stages, in order to validate that the selected substrates, materials, and processes may be tangibly used in the final manufacturing system for the final-product formula.
5. Formulation Possibilities for Therapeutic Primary Progenitor Cells in Tissue Engineering and in Regenerative Medicine
6. Regulatory Considerations for Therapeutic Primary Progenitor Cells and for Related Regenerative Medicine Products
7. Preclinical and Clinical Experience with Therapeutic Primary Progenitor Cells in the Swiss Progenitor-Cell-Transplantation Program
8. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Entry Link on the Encyclopedia Platform
Abbreviations
API | Active pharmaceutical ingredient |
ATCC | American-type culture collection |
ATMP | Advanced-therapy medicinal product |
cATMP | Combined advanced-therapy medicinal product |
CD | Cluster of differentiation |
cGMP | Current good manufacturing practices |
CH | Helvetic Confederation |
CHUV | Centre hospitalier universitaire vaudois |
CMV | Cytomegalovirus |
DMEM | Dulbecco’s modified Eagle medium |
DMSO | Dimethyl sulfoxide |
DNA | Deoxyribonucleic acid |
EBV | Epstein–Barr virus |
EC | European Commission |
ECACC | European collection of authenticated cell cultures |
ECB | Extended cell bank |
ECM | Extra-cellular matrix |
EDQM | European Directorate for the Quality of Medicines & Healthcare |
EDTA | Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid |
EMA | European Medicines Agency |
EOPCB | End-of-production cell bank |
EU | European Union |
FBS | Fetal bovine serum |
FDA | US Food and Drug Administration |
FIRDI | Food Industry Research and Development Institute |
FOPH | Swiss Federal Office of Public Health |
FPC | Fibroblast progenitor cell |
GLP | Good laboratory practices |
GMP | Good manufacturing practices |
HACCP | Hazard analysis critical control point |
HAV | Hepatitis A virus |
HBoV | Human bocavirus |
HBV | Hepatitis B virus |
hCMV | Human cytomegalovirus |
HCV | Hepatitis C virus |
HHV | Human herpes virus |
HIV | Human immunodeficiency virus |
HLA | Human leucocyte antigen |
HPV | Human papillomavirus |
HTLV | Human T-cell lymphotropic virus |
HuPyV | Human polyomavirus |
ICH | International Council for Harmonization |
IMPD | Investigational medicinal product dossier |
IPC | In-process control |
ISO | International Organization for Standardization |
KIPyV | KI polyomavirus |
MCB | Master cell bank |
MD | Medical device |
MoA | Mechanism of action |
MRC | Medical research council |
NAT | Nucleic-acid amplification techniques |
PBB | Progenitor biological bandage |
PCB | Parental cell bank |
PD | Population doublings |
PDT | Population-doubling time |
PDV | Population-doubling value |
Ph. Eur. | European pharmacopoeia |
PPC | Post-process control |
PRC | People’s Republic of China |
QA | Quality assurance |
QC | Quality control |
QFPERT | Quantification of reverse-transcriptase activity by ultracentrifugation and quantitative fluorescent product-enhanced reverse transcriptase |
RH | Relative humidity |
RT-PCR | Real-time polymerase chain reaction |
SFPC | Skin-fibroblast-progenitor cells |
SV40 | Simian virus 40 |
TEM | Transmission electron microscopy |
TEP | Tissue-engineering product |
TrSt | Standardized transplant product |
UK | United Kingdom |
USA | United States of America |
WCB | Working cell bank |
WHO | World Health Organization |
WI | Wistar Institute |
WUPyV | Wu polyomavirus |
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Personnel Identification | Key Professional Competences | Roles in the Cell-Transplantation Program |
---|---|---|
Program Manager 1 | Experience in tissue and cell banking. Qualifications for GMP cell manufacture. Experience in multidisciplinary professional group coordination. | Selection of the optimal biological starting materials. Establishment and coordination of the cell-transplantation program; acting as the legally responsible person. Custodian of the cell-transplantation-program records and biobank administrator. |
Technical Manager 1 | Experience in tissue and cell banking. Qualifications for GMP cell manufacture. | Selection of the optimal biological starting materials. Oversight of the tissue processing, in vitro cell culture initiation, and of cell banking. Responsible person for GMP processes. |
Medical Doctor | Experience in medical pregnancy termination. | Screening of potential donors, eligibility documentation, procurement of the donation, and implementation of the biospecimen and information coding. |
Legal Advisor | Experience in applicable laws and regulations on transplantation and on therapeutic products. | Support in the establishment of the cell-transplantation program and liaison with local ethics committees and with local or national health authorities. |
Pathologist | Experience in pre-natal pathology and in histopathology. | Anatomical and histopathological QC examination of the donated tissues. |
Immunologist | Experience in medical analytics. Qualifications and accreditations for pathogen screening and sample analysis. | Screening for pathogen detection in the blood samples of potential donors and QC testing of the donated materials and of the progeny cells. |
Material Safety and Quality Assessments: Testing Class and Testing Parameters | Considered Cell Bank Tiers and Applicability of Testing | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cell Seed/PCB | MCB | WCB | ECB/EOPCB | ||
1. Identity and Purity | Cellular morphology | + | + | + | + |
Cell-type identification (genetic and biochemical, immunological, or cytogenetic profiling) | + | + | + | + | |
Cell-type karyotype (diploid cells) | + | + | + (1) | + (1) | |
Cell type in vitro lifespan (diploid cells) | − | + | + | − | |
2. Extraneous Agents | Tests for bacterial and fungal contamination | − | + | + | − |
Tests for mycobacteria | − | + (2) | + (2) | − | |
Tests for mycoplasmas | − | + | + | − | |
Tests for spiroplasmas (3) | − | + | + | − | |
Electron microscopy | − | + (4) | − | + (4) | |
Tests for extraneous agents in cell cultures (intact cells or equivalent cell lysates) | − | + | + | + | |
Tests in animals and in eggs | − | − | + (5) | + (5) | |
Tests for specific viruses | − | + (6) | + (6) | + (6) | |
Tests for retroviruses | − | + (4) | − | + (4) | |
3. Tumorigenicity | Cell-type tumorigenicity | + (7,8) | − | − | + (7) |
Nomenclature Terms | Term Definitions/Material Descriptions |
---|---|
Cell Bank System | A system whereby the successive final lots of a product are manufactured by culture in cells derived from the same MCB 1. A number of containers from the MCB are used to prepare a WCB. The in vitro age of the cells is counted from the MCB 2. The cell-bank system is validated for the highest in vitro passage level achieved during routine production 3. The use, identity, and inventory control of the individual cell-bank containers is carefully documented. |
Diploid Cell Type | Cryopreserved stocks and cultures of diploid cells that have a high but finite capacity for multiplication in vitro 4. In diploid cell types, the cells have essentially the same characteristics as those of the tissues of origin. |
Primary Cell Cultures | Cultures of cells directly obtained by trypsinization or by mechanical treatment of a suitable starting tissue or organ fragment 5. The cells are essentially identical to those of the tissue of origin and are no more than five in vitro passages from the initial preparation from the mammalian tissue of origin. The primary cell cultures are harvested to form the preliminary cell pool. |
Parental Cell Bank (PCB) | A preliminary cell pool distributed into containers in a single operation, processed together, and stored in such a manner as to ensure uniformity and stability and to prevent contamination 6. |
Master Cell Bank (MCB) | A culture of cells derived from the cell seed/PCB, distributed into containers in a single operation, processed together, and stored in such a manner as to ensure uniformity and stability and to prevent contamination. The MCBs are usually stored at −70 °C or at lower temperatures 7. |
Working Cell Bank (WCB) | A culture of cells derived from a MCB and intended for use in the preparation of production cell cultures. The WCB lot is distributed into containers, processed, and is stored as described for the MCBs. |
Production Cell Culture | A culture of cells intended for use in production; it may be derived from one or more containers of a WCB or it may be a primary cell culture. |
End-of-Production Cell Bank (EOPCB) or Extended Cell Bank (ECB) | A culture of cells derived from a WCB, at or beyond the maximum in vitro cell-population-doubling level used for production, distributed into containers in a single operation, processed together, and stored in such a manner as to ensure uniformity and stability and to prevent contamination 3. |
Final Lot or Batch | A collection of closed, final containers or other final dosage units that are expected to be homogenous and equivalent with respect to risk of contamination during filling or preparation of the final product. The dosage units are filled, or otherwise prepared, from the same final bulk and are closed in one continuous working session. They bare a distinctive number or code identifying the final lot or batch. |
Target Diseases | Diploid Cell Substrate Types | Identified Industrial Manufacturers |
---|---|---|
Smallpox | MRC-5 | Acambis |
Chickenpox | WI-38, MRC-5 | Merck, GlaxoSmithKline |
Shingles | WI-38, MRC-5 | Merck |
Poliomyelitis | MRC-5 | Sanofi Pasteur |
Mumps | WI-38 | Merck |
Measles | WI-38 | Merck, GlaxoSmithKline |
Rubella | WI-38 | Merck |
Hepatitis A | MRC-5 | Merck, GlaxoSmithKline, Sanofi, Berna |
Hepatitis B | MRC-5 | GlaxoSmithKline, Sanofi |
Typhoid | MRC-5 | Sanofi Pasteur |
Rabies | MRC-5 | Sanofi Pasteur |
Product Category (Jurisdiction) | Therapeutic-Product Definition Excerpts 1 |
---|---|
ATMP (EU) | A medicinal product for human use consisting of (…), a somatic cell therapy medicinal product, or a tissue-engineered product. Somatic-cell-therapy medicinal product means a biological medicinal product that contains or consists of cells or tissues that have been subject to substantial manipulation so that the biological characteristics, physiological functions, or structural properties relevant for the intended clinical use have been altered, or of cells or tissues that are not intended to be used for the same essential function(s) in the recipient and the donor and is presented as having properties for, or is used in or administered to human beings with a view to treating, preventing, or diagnosing a disease through the pharmacological, immunological, or metabolic action of its cells or tissues. |
cATMP (EU) | An ATMP that must incorporate, as an integral part of the product, one or more medical devices (…), and its cellular or tissue part must contain viable cells or tissues, or its cellular or tissue part containing non-viable cells or tissues must be liable to act upon the human body with an action that can be considered as primary to that of the devices (…). |
TEP (EU) | A product that contains or consists of engineered cells or tissues, and is presented as having properties for, or is used in or administered to human beings with a view to regenerating, repairing, or replacing a human tissue. A tissue-engineered product may contain cells or tissues of human or animal origin, or both. The cells or tissues may be viable or non-viable. It may also contain additional substances, such as cellular products, bio-molecules, biomaterials, chemical substances, scaffolds, or matrices. Products containing or consisting exclusively of non-viable human or animal cells and/or tissues, which do not contain any viable cells or tissues and which do not act principally by pharmacological, immunological, or metabolic action, shall be excluded from this definition. |
TrSt (CH) | A transplant product that is intended for transfer to a human and/or whose production process can be standardized, which consists of, or contains, autogenous, allogeneic, or xenogeneic vital organs, tissues, or cells and which is manufactured by means of a standardized procedure. When transplanted, these organs, tissues, or cells are generally manipulated in such a way that their original biological characteristics, physiological functions, or structural properties are affected, or the cells or tissues are not intended to perform essentially the same function(s) in the recipient as in the donor. These can be products from somatic-cell therapy (…) or tissue engineering. Among other aspects, the transplant product serves to regenerate, improve, or influence the human physiological body functions by means of a pharmacological, immunological, or metabolic effect on humans, or it can be used to replace human tissue in order to heal or protect against illnesses, injuries, or impairments. |
Starting Tissue Types | Progenitor-Cell-Type Examples | Research, Preclinical, and Clinical Application Work and Milestones | Cell-Type Deposit References |
---|---|---|---|
Skin | FE002-SK2 1 | Manufacturing: Industrial GMP cell-manufacturing upscaling and international transposition [20,51]. Clinical trials: Severe burns, refractory cutaneous ulcers, and skin donor-site wounds [38,40,41,43]. | ECACC 12070301-FE002-SK2; FIRDI BCRC 960460 |
Cartilage | FE002-Cart 1 | Manufacturing: Industrial cell-banking and cell-manufacturing optimization [52]. Preclinical studies: Safety of cell transplantation in caprine model [52]. | ECACC 12070303-FE002-Cart; FIRDI BCRC 960459 |
Tendon | FE002-Ten 1 | Manufacturing: Industrial cell-banking and cell-manufacturing optimization [53,94]. Preclinical studies: Safety of cell transplantation in lagomorph model [53]. | ECACC 12070302-FE002-Ten; FIRDI BCRC 960461 |
Bone | FE002-Bone | Manufacturing: Optimized cell banking and cell manufacturing [50]. Preclinical studies: Safety of cell transplantation in rat models [103]. | NA |
Muscle | FE002-Mu | Manufacturing: Optimized cell banking and cell manufacturing [48]. Preclinical studies: Safety of cell transplantation in murine model [104]. | NA |
Intervertebral disc | FE002-Disc | Manufacturing: Optimized cell banking and cell manufacturing. | NA |
Lung | FE002-Lu | Manufacturing: Optimized cell banking and cell manufacturing. | NA |
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Laurent, A.; Scaletta, C.; Abdel-Sayed, P.; Michetti, M.; de Buys Roessingh, A.; Raffoul, W.; Hirt-Burri, N.; Applegate, L.A. Biotechnology and Cytotherapeutics: The Swiss Progenitor-Cell Transplantation Program. Encyclopedia 2022, 2, 336-364. https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia2010021
Laurent A, Scaletta C, Abdel-Sayed P, Michetti M, de Buys Roessingh A, Raffoul W, Hirt-Burri N, Applegate LA. Biotechnology and Cytotherapeutics: The Swiss Progenitor-Cell Transplantation Program. Encyclopedia. 2022; 2(1):336-364. https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia2010021
Chicago/Turabian StyleLaurent, Alexis, Corinne Scaletta, Philippe Abdel-Sayed, Murielle Michetti, Anthony de Buys Roessingh, Wassim Raffoul, Nathalie Hirt-Burri, and Lee Ann Applegate. 2022. "Biotechnology and Cytotherapeutics: The Swiss Progenitor-Cell Transplantation Program" Encyclopedia 2, no. 1: 336-364. https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia2010021
APA StyleLaurent, A., Scaletta, C., Abdel-Sayed, P., Michetti, M., de Buys Roessingh, A., Raffoul, W., Hirt-Burri, N., & Applegate, L. A. (2022). Biotechnology and Cytotherapeutics: The Swiss Progenitor-Cell Transplantation Program. Encyclopedia, 2(1), 336-364. https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia2010021