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Gene Therapy Production Facility Considerations

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Title: Gene Therapy Production Facility Considerations


1
Gene Therapy Production Facility Considerations
  • Robert Sausville
  • Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research
  • Office of Compliance and
  • Biologics Quality
  • Division of Case Management

2
  • Overview
  • General Considerations
  • Special Considerations
  • Biosafety Levels
  • Air Quality
  • Environmental Monitoring
  • Validation
  • Qualification
  • Miscellaneous

3
Overview
  • New manufacturing areas
  • retrofits of existing facilities
  • located within existing facilities
  • Designed to minimize potential for contamination
  • between products
  • between early and late stages of production
  • Operations should be well controlled
  • Personnel should be appropriately trained
  • someone responsible for facility operations,
    equipment validation and maintenance, record
    keeping

4
General Considerations
  • Good techniques and appropriate equipment used to
    minimize exposure to infectious agents
  • Strict adherence to standard practices and
    techniques (consistent manufacture of product)
  • Safety equipment (primary barrier)
  • biological safety cabinet
  • closed containers
  • other designs to minimize aerosols
  • Facility design (secondary barrier)
  • amount of protection depends on the nature of the
    infectious agent and production associated risks
    (aerosols)

5
General Considerations cont.
  • As the risk for aerosol transmission increases,
    higher levels of primary containment and multiple
    secondary barriers may become necessary

6
General Considerations cont.
  • Facility designed for aseptic processing
  • Smooth surfaces, seamless tile, etc.
  • Hard, easily cleanable and impervious finishes
  • Non shedding ceilings
  • HEPA filtered air from seperate air handling unit
  • separation of production from other areas of the
    facility (often a hospital)
  • Phase 1/II
  • Class 100,000 general manufacturing areas
    (10,000 III)
  • Class 100 all open manipulations

7
General Considerations cont.
  • Separate entrance/gowning area
  • Air locks (containment)
  • No personnel access between vector production and
    transduction areas
  • Room(s) for support areas
  • buffer media prep, glass/equipment wash
  • Storage areas
  • raw materials, cell banks
  • adjacent to production if possible to minimize
    traffic in and out of the facility

8
General Considerations cont.
  • Material and personnel flows designed to maximize
    efficiency and minimize mix-ups
  • unidirectional flows where possible
  • also controlled by procedures or temporally
  • Emergency power for critical systems (UPS)

9
General Considerations Control of the Facility
  • Production area(s) should be separate from other
    activities (research, testing)
  • Potential cross-contamination should be minimized
  • between process steps, and
  • other production activities
  • Access into the production area should be limited
  • Equipment used in production should not be shared
    with non-production activities
  • Environmental monitoring and product testing
    should be performed to ensure adequate control of
    the process/area
  • Spill/accident procedures should be in place

10
Special Considerations Multi-use scenarios
  • Concurrent vs. campaign production will impact
    design considerations
  • Personnel work on one cell line at a time
  • Procedures in place to prevent cross
    contamination
  • Appropriate changeover procedures
  • Adequate segregation of concurrent activities
  • color coded labeling
  • bar coded
  • The sponsor is responsible for assuring that the
    contract manufacturer has all the procedures in
    place

11
Special Considerations Cont.
  • Potential Routes of Cross Contamination
  • Centrifuges (generation of aerosols)
  • one sample processed at a time
  • cleaning/sanitization of centrifuges between
    lots
  • Pipettors
  • effective cleaning procedures
  • filters
  • Incubators

12
Appropriate BioSafety Level
  • In general, BioSafety Level 2
  • Transduction
  • Higher risk, BioSafety Level 3
  • Vector Preparation
  • Defined in CDC-NIH publication Biosafety in
    Microbiological and Biomedical Laboratories

13
BioSafety Level 2
  • Transduction and non-viral vector preparation
  • access limited
  • personnel trained in handling pathogenic agents
  • infectious wastes are decontaminated before
    disposal
  • gowning required (lab coat, hair cover)
  • gloves should also be worn for aseptic
    manipulations
  • Class I or II Biosafety Cabinets to be used
  • for procedures potentially creating aerosols
  • aerosol generation should be minimized
  • with high concentrations or large volumes of
    infectious agents

14
BioSafety Level 3
  • Viral Vector prep areas, higher levels of
    containment
  • Negative pressure or sink for containment
  • All activities with infectious materials are
    conducted in biological safety cabinets
  • Class I, II or III may be used
  • Passage between two sets of doors is a basic
    requirement
  • An autoclave for decontaminating waste is
    available
  • preferably in the laboratory
  • Ducted exhaust provided
  • not recirculated
  • may be discharged to the outside without being
    filtered

15
BioSafety Level 4
  • Class III biosafety cabinets
  • or personnel in suits with life support systems
  • All materials must be autoclaved before leaving
    BSL4 area
  • Exhaust air HEPA filtered

16
Air Quality
  • Recommend that production areas receive single
    pass air (no recirculation) for vector production
  • Dedicated air handler where possible
  • Segregating air supply from rest of facility
    important, (hospital setting)
  • HEPA-filtered air
  • Objective to meet Class 100,000 specifications
    for Phase I/II
  • In-line vs. terminal

17
Air Quality cont.
  • Air pressure differentials between areas should
    be balanced to maintain cleanliness or
    containment
  • Positive (aseptic processing)
  • Negative (containment) for steps needing greater
    than BSL-2
  • Open steps in biosafety cabinets (Class II)
  • Quality monitored to assure facility is
    acceptable for production

18
Environmental Monitoring
  • Testing of surfaces and for viable and non-viable
    particulates
  • Demonstrate facility under control
  • as part of validation
  • routine monitoring program
  • Frequency and intensity dependent on how close to
    GMPs the facility will operate
  • specifications based on desired Class

19
Environmental Monitoring cont.
  • Viable particulates
  • active air monitoring devices (slit to agar,
    centrifugal samplers)
  • settling plates (passive, less desirable)
  • Non-viable particulates
  • particle counters
  • room classifications, certification of biosafety
    cabinets
  • Surface contact plates or swabs
  • monitor cleaning efficacy and personnel asepsis

20
NASA Standards Viable Air Particulates
  • Room classification, defined by Federal Standard
    209E, determined by non-viable particulate
    monitoring under dynamic conditions.
  • Class 100,000
  • 2.5 CFU/ ft3
  • Class 10,000
  • 0.5 CFU/ ft3
  • Class 100
  • 0.1 CFU/ ft3

21
Settling Plates Exposure times
  • Class 100,000
  • 1 CFU/ 9cm plate
  • 0.11 hours
  • 2 CFU/ 9cm plate
  • 0.21 hours
  • 1 CFU/ 14cm plate
  • 0.04 hours
  • 2 CFU/ 14 cm plate
  • 0.09 hours
  • Class 100
  • 1 CFU/ 9cm plate
  • 2.65 hours
  • 2 CFU/ 9 cm plate
  • 5.31 hours
  • 1 CFU/ 14 cm plate
  • 1.10 hours
  • 2 CFU/ 14 cm plate
  • 2.21 hours

22
Validation
  • Establishing documented evidence which provides
    a high degree of assurance that a specific
    process will consistently produce a product
    meeting its predetermined specifications and
    quality attributes.

23
Validation
  • Sliding Scale approach for clinical
    manufacturing
  • Facilities involved in clinical manufacturing
    should be in compliance with the concepts of
    cGMPs
  • Do not expect full validation in early stages
    (may not have 3 repetitive runs, worst case
    configuration, etc.)
  • facility supplying clinical material to other
    institutions implies that it meets cGMPs and
    should approach what is expected for commercial
    facilities
  • Phase 3 material should be manufactured at close
    to full cGMP

24
Sliding Scale Approach, An Example
  • Autoclave used to prepare sterile materials
  • Early (I/II)
  • demonstrate proper cycle achieved
  • monitor temperature, pressure, and time
  • use of biological indicators for verification
  • loads not well defined

25
Autoclave cont.
  • Middle (II/III)
  • temperature mapping done to determine cold/hot
    spots
  • biological indicators placed to verify cycle at
    problems points
  • loads are somewhat defined

26
Autoclave cont.
  • Late (III)
  • lethality of cycle determined at monitored points
  • loads are well defined and standardized
  • each load configuration has been mapped or
    worst-case load has been validated
  • Another example
  • Sanitizer effectiveness
  • Phase I/II supported by literature
  • Phase III supported by validation

27
Process Validation
  • Sterilization
  • Decontamination
  • Aseptic Processing
  • Cleaning
  • Inactivation/removal of adventitious agents and
    other contaminants

28
Equipment Qualification
  • Program in place to demonstrate that equipment
    operates as expected
  • Should include periodic monitoring

29
Equipment cont.
  • Air handlers
  • Biological safety cabinets
  • pressures
  • filter integrity
  • airflows velocities
  • leak testing

30
Equipment cont.
  • Incubators
  • uniform temperature
  • carbon dioxide
  • filters
  • Centrifuges
  • speed
  • vacuum (ultras)
  • temperature

31
Equipment cont.
  • Autoclaves
  • temperature
  • pressure
  • kill cycle
  • Lyophilizers
  • shelf temperature
  • vacuum

32
Raw Materials
  • Critical raw materials - established criteria for
    acceptance from vendors
  • sterility
  • adventitious agents
  • activity/purity
  • Vendors Certificate of Analysis
  • identity test where possible
  • Inventory Control
  • proper storage
  • FIFO

33
Water
  • Should meet Water for Injection (WFI)
    specifications
  • microbial lt10 CFU/100ml
  • endotoxin lt0.25 EU/ml
  • chemical tests per USP
  • WFI for all product contact surfaces and
    formulations
  • May be purchased

34
Personnel
  • Designated person in charge of facility
  • Responsible for
  • limiting access
  • training
  • maintenance/safe operations
  • writing and enforcing procedures
  • Production personnel are trained (periodic
    retraining)
  • Appropriately gowned for production step

35
Final Thoughts
  • Design facility for worst-case maximum
    flexibility
  • Consider filing a Master File for facilities
    handling several IND products
  • Meet with FDA to discuss your Phase I/II (or
    III!) facility
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