1. Viral contamination in biologic manufacture and implications for emerging therapies
- Author
-
Mark Plavsic, Lionel Gerentes, Dan Gold, Jurgen Mullberg, Richard Snyder, James C. Leung, James F. Bouressa, Jacqueline Wolfrum, Richard Schicho, Anthony J. Sinskey, Robert Kiss, Michael Ruffing, Audrey Brussel, Houman Dehghani, Laurent Mallet, Paul W. Barone, Marie Murphy, Mark Moody, David J. Roush, Serge Monpoeho, Ming Chong, Nathan J. Roth, Yuling Li, Daniel Stark, Flora J. Keumurian, Chun Zhang, Dayue Chen, Christian Menzel, René Labatut, Thomas R. Kreil, James Gilbert, Michael E. Wiebe, Islam T. M. Hussein, Stacy L. Springs, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Center for Biomedical Innovation
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Drug Industry ,Biomedical Engineering ,Cell Culture Techniques ,Bioengineering ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Intensive care medicine ,Drug industry ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Biological Products ,business.industry ,Information Dissemination ,Data Collection ,Massachusetts ,Plasma products ,Viruses ,Molecular Medicine ,Viral contamination ,business ,Drug Contamination ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Recombinant protein therapeutics, vaccines, and plasma products have a long record of safety. However, the use of cell culture to produce recombinant proteins is still susceptible to contamination with viruses. These contaminations cost millions of dollars to recover from, can lead to patients not receiving therapies, and are very rare, which makes learning from past events difficult. A consortium of biotech companies, together with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has convened to collect data on these events. This industry-wide study provides insights into the most common viral contaminants, the source of those contaminants, the cell lines affected, corrective actions, as well as the impact of such events. These results have implications for the safe and effective production of not just current products, but also emerging cell and gene therapies which have shown much therapeutic promise.
- Published
- 2018