the chemistry, manufacturing and controls (cmc) section of a gene therapy ind

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Food and Drug Administration Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research The Office of Cellular, Tissue, and Gene Therapies Web Seminar Series presents: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND Andrew P. Byrnes, Ph.D. Chief, Gene Transfer and Immunogenicity Branch Division of Cellular and Gene Therapies

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The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND. Andrew P. Byrnes, Ph.D. Chief, Gene Transfer and Immunogenicity Branch Division of Cellular and Gene Therapies. What are gene therapy products?. Gene therapy products: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Food and Drug AdministrationCenter for Biologics Evaluation and Research

The Office of Cellular, Tissue, and Gene Therapies Web Seminar Series

presents:

The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a

gene therapy INDAndrew P. Byrnes, Ph.D.

Chief, Gene Transfer and Immunogenicity BranchDivision of Cellular and Gene Therapies

Page 2: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

What are gene therapy products?

• Gene therapy products:– Are administered as nucleic acids, viruses or

genetically-engineered microorganisms, and – Mediate effects via:

• Transcription or translation of transferred genetic material, or

• Integration into the genome

• How are gene therapy products used?– To modify cells directly in patients, or– To modify cells in vitro that are then administered

to patients

Page 3: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Examples of gene therapy products

1. Plasmid expressing an enzyme

2. AAV expressing a coagulation factor

3. T cells modified with a retrovirus to express a novel receptor

4. Bacterium expressing a tumor antigen

5. Oncolytic adenovirus expressing a cytokine

Page 4: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Complexity of a gene therapy manufacturing process

Growth factors

Donor-derived PBMCs CD34+

cells

Retroviral vector

Transduced CD34+ cells

CD34+ selection

Fibronectin coated flask

Page 5: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Before you begin manufacturing…

2008 Guidance for FDA Reviewers and Sponsors: Content and Review of Chemistry, Manufacturing, and Control (CMC) Information for Human Gene Therapy Investigational New Drug Applications (INDs)

Page 6: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Presentation outline• Components used in product

manufacture

• Final product testing and characterization

• Good manufacturing practices (GMPs)

Page 7: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Components used to manufacture the product

• Vector• Cells• Banking system

– Master cell bank (MCB)– Master viral bank (MVB)

• Reagents

Page 8: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Vector• Description, history and details on

derivation of construct

• Vector diagram

• Sequence analysis (from MVB)– Full sequence for vectors <40 kb– Vectors >40 kb: sequence inserts,

flanking regions, modified regions– Description of unexpected sequences

• Raw sequence data is not sufficient

Page 9: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Cells• Cell substrate for production of vector

– History, source, general characteristics

• Cells used as cell therapies – Source

• tissue and cell type– Collection procedure

• mobilization, surgery, leukapheresis, devices used– Donor Eligibility

• infectious disease screening & testing, 21 CFR 1271

Page 10: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

MCB and MVB safety testing

• Sterility• Mycoplasma• Adventitious Virus

– In vitro and in vivo adventitious virus assays– Bovine and porcine viruses

• Not needed if reagents tested– For human cell lines:

• Typically EBV, HBV, HCV, CMV, HIV 1&2, HTLV 1 & 2, B19– For murine cell lines:

• Typically mouse antibody production test, retroviruses– Replication-competent virus (for MVB)

Page 11: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Master cell bank characterization

• Identity– Examples:

• Isoenzyme• Karyotype• Short tandem repeat (STR) profiling

• Viability• Stability

Page 12: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Reagents used in manufacturing

• Tabulation of reagents– Final concentration– Vendor– Source (human, bovine, etc.)– Grade

• e.g. licensed product, clinical grade, reagent grade

• May need to provide details on reagent manufacturing

• Certificates of Analysis• Cross reference letters• Qualification program

– Safety testing and quality assessment

Page 13: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Product Manufacturing

• Vector production / purification– Describe all steps

• e.g. cell growth, infection, harvest, purification, formulation, vialing, storage

– Flowchart

• Describe the formulation– Buffer components– Excipients– Product concentration– Storage

Page 14: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Final Product Testing

• Goals:– Safety– Product characterization– Product lot consistency

• List all of your:– Release tests– Test methods– Acceptance criteria (specifications)

Page 15: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Final product testing: safety

• Sterility

• Mycoplasma

• Endotoxin

• Adventitious Virus – In vitro virus– Replication competent virus

Page 16: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Final product testing: characterization

• Final product lot release testing– Concentration– Purity

• e.g. residual cellular DNA, empty viral particles – Identity

• e.g. restriction digest– Activity

• e.g. infectious titer– Potency

• e.g. transgene-specific protein expression– Cell viability (if a cell-based product)

• Stability– Storage– Shipping– Compatibility with delivery devices

Page 17: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Product characterization: why?

• To demonstrate lot-to-lot consistency

• To generate solid clinical data– For pivotal trials, characterization assays will

need to be established with appropriate release limits

• To show comparability after manufacturing changes

Page 18: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Current Good Manufacturing Practices (cGMP)

• Goals:– A product with defined and

reproducible quality– Increased control of the

manufacturing process as clinical trials advance

• 2008 Guidance for Industry: CGMP for Phase 1 Investigational Drugs

Page 19: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

cGMPsQuality control

• Quality (QC) Program – QC independent of production unit

– Authority to accept or reject materials, lots, procedures and specifications

– Prevent, detect, and correct deviations and failures

Page 20: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

cGMPsQuestions for phase I

• Is the manufacturing process reproducible?

• Do you have appropriate testing at critical steps?

• Is there adequate control of the quality of the raw and source materials?

• Are the records and record keeping systems adequate?

Page 21: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

cGMPsExamples for early development

• Procedures to prevent contamination & cross-contamination– Aseptic processing– Facility and equipment cleaning and changeover– Tracking and segregation of patient-specific

products • Methods qualification

– Appropriate method specificity, sensitivity, reproducibility

– Lack of interference• Process qualification of safety related

processes– Removal of potentially dangerous impurities

Page 22: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

• For a phase I submission, product safety is the focus of the CMC assessment – Freedom from microbes and adventitious agents– Safety-related characterization – Appropriate GMPs

• Gene therapies and other complex biologics can be a challenge to characterize, and often require unique assays

• Product control and process control should increase with clinical development

Summary

Page 23: The chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of a gene therapy IND

Further information

CBER guidance documents:http://www.fda.gov/BiologicsBloodVaccines/GuidanceComplianceRegulatoryInformation/default.htm

If the webinar series and referenced websites leave you with unanswered questions:[email protected] or 301-827-5102