2023 ARCHIVES
Wednesday, 15 March
Registration Open (Garden Room)10:30
Chairperson's Opening Remarks
Margit Holzer, PhD, Owner, Ulysse Consult
Overcoming CMC and Supply Chain Challenges for mRNA Technologies
Gregory Troiano, Chief Manufacturing Officer, mRNA Center of Excellence, sanofi
Thanks to the rapid development of mRNA vaccines for COVID-19, the industry now has the momentum and resources to overcome many of the early CMC challenges and realize its enormous potential. This presentation will discuss the strategies in place to overcome CMC and supply chain challenges for mRNA technologies already and future innovations primed to take it to the next level.
Affinity Proteins for Biotechnological and Medical Purposes
Sophia Hober, PhD, Professor, School of Biotechnology, KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Affinity proteins are crucial for life, for building structures, performing reactions, and for signaling purposes. In life sciences and medicine, affinity proteins are used to generate knowledge, but also for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes. This talk will cover how antibodies and small affinity molecules can be used to map the human proteome, develop diagnostic tools for in vivo visualization as well as efficiently purify therapeutics based on antibodies.
Transition to Sessions12:20
Judith Koliwer, PhD, Principal Consultant, Consulting & Training, Körber Pharma
Using our experience of over thirty CGT implementations, we will provide a best practice phased approach to establish a digital ecosystem, where different software solutions are used efficiently and feasibly in every stage of the product lifecycle including R&D, clinical trials and commercial production. We furthermore describe an approach to using all available sources of digital data for automatic data analysis using a centralized data hub to maximize data efficiency.
Networking Lunch13:00
Chairperson's Remarks
Christiane Niederlaender, PhD, Vice President, Technical CMC, Parexel
CMC Challenges and Opportunities for Cell and Gene Therapies
Vasileios Paraskevas, Scientist, Cell Process Development, Technical Operations & Global Technical Development, Orchard Therapeutics
Developing next generation products to release current bottlenecks in CGT. Technical overview on CMC strategies for real CGT products, presentation of actual scientific data showing the progress done to release current bottlenecks in the manufacture and COGs of CGT products. The critical points in the CMC strategy for CGT products, with real examples. Current bottlenecks in the manufacture of CGT products and development areas to focus on.
A Consortium Investigation for Extensive Analytical Characterisation of T Cell Immunotherapy Processes
Rhys Macown, PhD, Lead Scientist, Cell & Gene Therapy Catapult
There are longstanding challenges in the commercialisation of ATMPs that can be addressed by the implementation of process analytical technologies (PATs). Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult (CGTC) has led a consortium project with 23 collaborators to investigate the application of PAT and advanced analytics for a T cell immunotherapy process. We will discuss the extensive approach we applied to analytical characterisation of the process and the opportunities and challenges it presented.
Cell Sorting and Analytical Development Considerations for GMP Manufacture of Cell Therapies
Harish Adoni, Scientist, Analytics Cell Therapy, ElevateBio
Over the past decade, the development of cell therapies has gained significant momentum. Processes executed in a hospital setting such as the isolation of tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs), transformed clones of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), or other rare cells, are challenging to replicate in a cGMP environment. We will discuss the cell sorting process and analytical development considerations when implementing fluorescence activated cell sorting (FACS) in a cGMP environment.
Please Visit Another Conference Track15:35
Refreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing (Verdi/Vivaldi)16:05
Establishment of Process Intensification and Automated Process Control Strategies for CAR-T Production
Qasim A. Rafiq, PhD, Associate Professor, Biochemical Engineering, University College London
Manufacturing clinically-relevant cell numbers with desired phenotypes is a major hurdle for ex vivo genetically modified cellular immunotherapies, such as CAR-T. The high cost of goods and inherent variability of gene-modified cell therapies presents a translational and manufacturing challenge. This talk will focus on providing process optimisation and process intensification case studies for CAR-T cell manufacture and how applying these strategies may prove essential for commercial viability. Specifically, this talk will focus on: Identifying critical process parameters for improved, consistent CAR-T expansion, scaling up critical parameters to the stirred-tank bioreactor process and optimizing perfusion parameters to maximize growth and function?.
CMC & Emerging Analytical Methods
Close of Day17:40
Thursday, 16 March
Registration and Morning Coffee (Garden Room)08:00
Christopher Bravery, PhD, Consulting Regulatory Scientist, Advanced Biologicals Ltd.
Implementing Risk-Based Approaches for Cell Therapies
Florence Salmon, PhD, Vice President, Regulatory Affairs and Preclinical Development, Ridgeline Discovery
Genetically modified cells are remarkably complex medicinal products that require smart, risk-based manufacturing and control strategies to meet regulatory expectations. Nonetheless, changes are inevitable at each stage of development of cell therapies, sometimes late or even post-approval. Comparability is therefore a key exercise and should be accounted for from the very beginning. Having the right analytical and regulatory tools at hand at the right time is the key to success.
Life-Cycle Comparability Approaches for Genetically Modified Cells
Comparability of biological products is always challenging, but even more so when the product is a complex mixture of cells of which a proportion have been genetically modified. The frequently short development timelines for cell and gene therapies mean that comparability is often considered too late during the implementation of process changes. The talk outlines key considerations that ensure that an appropriate comparability plan can be put in place and executed, and that can be adapted throughout the product lifecycle.
Regulatory Strategies for Cell Therapy
Raj Puri, MD, PhD, Executive Vice President, Regulatory Strategy and Translational Medicine, Iovance Biotherapeutics
Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) are circulating cytotoxic and helper T-cells that have infiltrated a tumor, recognize tumor-specific neoantigens unique to each patient, and mediate tumor cell death. TIL cell therapy involves the adoptive transfer of billions of polyclonal, patient-specific TIL recovered from a patient’s tumor tissue that are amplified and reinvigorated using a proprietary process. I will discuss unique opportunities and challenges in TIL cell therapy manufacturing, logistics and development.
Ensuring Quality of Cell Therapy Products
Maura Kibbey, PhD, Director, Biologics Marketing, USP
Assessment of cell therapy quality from raw materials to final product is critical to ensuring their safety and efficacy. Lack of standards for cell therapy has slowed down product development since the path and tools to commercialization are not clear. USP continues to publish best practices and methods that support their innovation. Existing standards as well as new work related to plasmid DNA and rapid microbial methods will be shared.
Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing (Verdi/Vivaldi)10:30
Establishing Process Controls and Data in Preparation For PPQ
Sara Mills, Principal, Dark Horse Consulting Group
Curating and refining a comprehensive in-process and final product testing plan throughout development is an invaluable and arguably essential tool. This talk will discuss best practices for maintaining the data throughout clinical development, implementation of the proper statistical methodologies and a clearly defined risk-based approach that will lead the way to a data-driven PPQ design and successful execution.
Achieving Global Regulatory Harmonization and Centralized QA in a Decentralized Model
Chaya Mazouz, Vice President, Quality & Global Regulatory Affairs, Orgenesis, Inc.
Decentralized manufacturing (DCM) strategy consists of a platform comprising manufacturing and testing units, installed to the same specifications at multiple locations placed close to or at medical centers, networked and managed by a central remote Quality Management System. A regulatory framework is required to enable the development of point of care (POCare) manufacture, providing control measures equivalent to those currently in place, confirming that POCare products have appropriate quality, safety, and efficacy attributes. To ensure compliance to quality and regulatory DCM requirements, Orgenesis has established a comprehensive approach supporting oversight of POCare centers.
Sterility Control for Cell Therapies from a Regulatory Perspective
The nature of cell therapy products means they cannot be terminally sterilised or even sterile-filtered; this puts a greater onus on other aspects of sterility control. This talk will discuss how a holistic approach is needed to ensure safety of these products, including facilities, testing and methods of sterilisation.
Please go to Another Session12:30
Networking Lunch (Verdi/Vivaldi)13:00
Ricardo Baptista, PhD, CTO, Alder Therapeutics
Development of a Novel Costimulatory Platform to Improve Adoptive Cell Therapies
Owen Moon, PhD, Research Scientist, Instil Bio UK
Utilizing a novel platform to overcome poor endogenous costimulation and leverage the diverse TCR repertoire of TILs while amplifying antitumor activity.
Raw Materials and Reagents Supply to Develop Scalable Manufacturing Processes – Considerations for Pluripotent Stem Cell Therapies
Evaluation of critical raw materials should start at early stages of product cycle. This talk will focus on risk analysis and mitigation strategies to support process and analytical development for the manufacture of allogeneic therapies from pluripotent stem cells.
Replacing Manual Gating of Flow Cytometry Data in Cell Therapy Manufacturing
Ryan Brinkman, PhD, Vice President and Research Director, Dotmatics Inc.; Professor Emeritus, Medical Genetics,, University of British Columbia
Flow cytometry data analysis is extremely time-consuming and the principal source of variation in the application of the technology. As an alternative, we have developed the best performing automated approach for cell population identification in the peer-reviewed literature. It consistently achieves up to 94% accuracy, and is in use by pharma for clinical studies and cell therapy manufacturing. Looking to the future our preliminary data supports that machine learning will exceed even this, providing a scalable solution for all users of the technology.
Close of Summit15:20
2025 Programs