Viral safety in the biopharmaceutical industry is both an upstream-production and downstream-processing concern. Companies must take a multipronged approach using orthogonal methods that are validated to prevent viral contamination or to remove it from biologic drug products. On the upstream side, the focus is on prevention through risk assessment and mitigation. That begins with environmental control of facilities and includes both careful selection of raw materials and cell lines and preparatory filtration of culture media components. In downstream processing of…
Monday, December 12, 2022 Daily Archives
Triton X-100 Elimination: The Road Ahead for Viral Inactivation
The nonionic surfactant Triton X-100 (C14H22O(C2H4O)n) is a key chemical used in ensuring the viral safety of biological medicinal products. Two pharmaceutical sectors share an extensive historical background with it: biopharmaceuticals and plasma-derived products, for which it is used to inactivate lipid-enveloped viruses. Recently, environmental regulations in the European Union have encouraged or mandated a phase-out of this surfactant (1). The goal of the ruling is to protect aquatic ecosystems from potential Triton X-100 degradation products that can function as…
Worst-Case Conditions for Viral Clearance
As described in ICH Q5A on virus safety of biotechnological products (1) and the European guideline on virus safety of biotechnological products, EMEA 398498 (2), viral clearance studies are mandated as part of the viral safety evaluation of products derived from human or other mammalian cell lines. When acceptable ranges of process parameters are known, both guidelines recommend that scale-down models be evaluated under worst-case conditions for viral clearance. The BioPhorum Development Group’s viral clearance workstream performed a benchmarking survey…
Hollow-Fiber Nanofiltration for Robust Viral Clearance of Non-MAb Biologics
Monoclonal antibody (MAb) and other therapeutic biologics produced by mammalian cells have the potential to introduce endogenous retroviruses and can be infected with adventitious viruses through raw materials or other parts of the biomanufacturing process (1–3). Based on regulatory guidelines, products derived from mammalian cells must contain less than one virus particle per million doses, which requires purification processes to demonstrate virus removal capabilities of about 12–18 log10 clearance of endogenous retroviruses and 6 log10 clearance for adventitious viruses (4).…
November-December 2022: From the Editors
With this issue, we bid a reluctant farewell to our managing editor as she retires. Cheryl and I have known her and appreciated her friendship for 26 years. Her accumulated knowledge of cell and gene therapy development and the ease with which she can interpret the nuances of automation, digitalization, and equations will be sorely missed. To honor her time with us, I asked her to share her perspectives below. Maribel — it has been a thorough joy to work…
Increasing Clinical Trial Inclusivity: Technology-Enabled Community Connections
Clinical trial inclusivity strengthens analyses, speeds trial completion and Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approvals, and lowers administrative costs of clinical studies. However, a mounting body of evidence shows that eligibility criteria often limit enrollment inclusivity and compromise trial data. For example, a retrospective review of 302 drug submissions to the FDA examined the impact of insufficient data on drug approvals. Nearly 16% of the reviewed studies had insufficient data to determine safe dosages, and over 13% revealed inconsistent results…
The State of Quality Risk Management in the Pharmaceutical Industry: Commentary on the Draft ICH Q9 Revision
The International Council for Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Pharmaceuticals for Human Use (ICH) released a long-awaited draft revision of its Q9 guidance on quality risk management (QRM) for public consultation in December 2021 (1). First published in 2005, ICH Q9 has been instrumental in highlighting the importance of QRM in both the small- and large-molecule pharmaceutical industries. It was the first comprehensive guidance to explain how QRM could be used to identify, assess, and control risks to drug-product quality…
Using Synthetic Biology To Develop Novel Biotherapeutics
A multidisciplinary area of research, synthetic biology involves the use of genetic engineering to create new biological parts, devices, and systems, with potential applications in industries such as healthcare, agriculture, energy, and environmental science. As early as the 1960s, researchers combined advanced techniques in precision genetic engineering with rational drug development and explored approaches in synthetic biology to support development of innovative drug products. Later research shed new light on how molecular networks regulate cellular function and how gene expression…
Container Materials for Biopharmaceuticals: A Comparative Small-Scale Case Study of Stainless Steel and a Proprietary Nickel-Based Alloy
Evaluating compatibility of a drug substance with all surfaces that it might come into contact with during drug product manufacturing is essential to ensure product quality. Proteins can adsorb to contact surfaces, form aggregates, and desorb into a drug-substance solution. Proteins also can degrade in presence of leachables generated from contact surfaces during manufacturing. Containers and vessels used during manufacturing are single-use disposable components or metal tanks, primarily either 316L stainless steel (SS) or C-276 Hastelloy nickel-based alloy (HLY). Researchers…
BioProcess Insider State of the Industry — December 2022 Panel Discussion
This panel discussion features: Christopher Peterson, Associate Director, Latham Biopharm Group; Jason Slingsby, Chief Business & Corporate Development Officer, Oxford Biomedica; Dr. Ger Brophy, Executive Vice President of Biopharma Production, Avantor. BioProcess Insider’s State of the Industry takes a deeper look into the recent business news affecting the biomanufacturing industry, picking apart the numbers and highlighting potential trends. With a panel of industry experts, editor Dan Stanton will discuss recent M&A in the bioprocess space, bottlenecks within the manufacturing sector,…