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result(s) for
"Good Manufacturing Practice"
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Food safety in collective catering: knowledge, attitudes and correct application of GHP/GMP knowledge among foodservice workers
by
Celano, Giuseppe
,
Quaglia, Nicoletta Cristiana
,
Tritto, Antonio
in
Attitudes
,
Food handling
,
Food law
2021
Food safety critically reliant on the behaviors adopted by foodservice personnel, involved in various stages of meal preparation, from the supply of raw food materials until its distribution to the consumer. The purpose of this work was to collect information on the level of knowledge on food safety, the correct application of the Good Hygiene Practices (GHP) and Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) and the attitudes of the operators involved in collective catering. The survey was conducted among 15 social catering companies in Apulia (Italy) using a modified Sharif and Al-Malki (2010) anonymous questionnaire intended to assess the knowledge, attitudes and practices of the food handlers. The results highlight the need to improve both knowledge and practices regarding food hygiene and safety in order to minimize the risk of transmitting foodborne diseases. More careful planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of training programs for foodservice workers is required, taking into consideration the provisions of European food laws.
Journal Article
Toward an Optimized Process for Clinical Manufacturing of CAR-Treg Cell Therapy
2020
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) technology and its application to regulatory T cells (Tregs) has garnered interest among researchers in the field of cell and gene therapy. Merging the benefits of CAR technology with Tregs offers a novel and promising therapeutic option for durable reshaping of undesired immune responses following solid organ or hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, as well as in immune-related disorders. However, major challenges remain for developing a standardized and robust good manufacturing practice (GMP)-compliant manufacturing process for CAR-Treg cells. We review current progress in the field and recommend ways to improve CAR-Treg manufacturing processes based on lessons learned from first-generation Treg therapeutics as well as from anticancer CAR-T cell development.
Advances in the field of cell therapy have led to promising novel approaches to treat malignancies and other debilitating diseases. Redirecting the target antigen specificity of CAR-Treg cells represents one such promising approach.The clinical success of anticancer CAR-T cells will, in all likelihood, accelerate the clinical translation of CAR-Treg therapeutics aimed at reshaping undesired immune responses following solid organ or hematopoietic stem cell transplantation as well as in immune-related disorders.Current manufacturing processes for CAR-Tregs demonstrate challenges in cell purification, yield, expansion, CAR selection and gene delivery, supply chain, and quality control/product release testing.We propose a GMP-compatible manufacturing framework to enhance the CAR-Treg production process for clinical application.
Journal Article
Human Platelet Lysate for Good Manufacturing Practice-Compliant Cell Production
2021
Numerous cell-based therapeutics are currently being tested in clinical trials. Human platelet lysate (HPL) is a valuable alternative to fetal bovine serum as a cell culture medium supplement for a variety of different cell types. HPL as a raw material permits animal serum-free cell propagation with highly efficient stimulation of cell proliferation, enabling humanized manufacturing of cell therapeutics within a reasonable timeframe. Providers of HPL have to consider dedicated quality issues regarding identity, purity, potency, traceability and safety. Release criteria have to be defined, characterizing the suitability of HPL batches for the support of a specific cell culture. Fresh or expired platelet concentrates from healthy blood donors are the starting material for HPL preparation, according to regulatory requirements. Pooling of individual platelet lysate units into one HPL batch can balance donor variation with regard to essential platelet-derived growth factors and cytokines. The increasingly applied pathogen reduction technologies will further increase HPL safety. In this review article, aspects and regulatory requirements of whole blood donation and details of human platelet lysate manufacturing are presented. International guidelines for raw materials are discussed, and defined quality controls, as well as release criteria for safe and GMP-compliant HPL production, are summarized.
Journal Article
Scaling nanopharmaceutical production for personalized medicine: challenges and strategies
by
de Oliveira Mota, Milena
,
Sousa-Batista, Ariane Jesus
,
de Carvalho Favareto, Isabela
in
Characterization and Evaluation of Materials
,
Chemistry and Materials Science
,
Comparative analysis
2025
Nanomedicine has emerged as a transformative field, offering enhanced drug delivery systems with reduced toxicity through the use of nanopharmaceuticals. Scaling up the production of these systems is critical for the successful translation of personalized nanomedicine into clinical practice. This review addresses the challenges and strategies involved in large-scale manufacturing, focusing on key methodologies such as nanocrystallization, extrusion, supercritical fluid technology, and microfluidics. A detailed comparative analysis of these production methods reveals their scalability, cost implications, and impact on nanoparticle characteristics, such as size and reproducibility. Additionally, we examine the complex regulatory landscape, highlighting regional differences in approval requirements from agencies. These regulatory variations pose significant challenges for global manufacturers seeking to scale up production while maintaining compliance with diverse standards. The review also explores the critical role of good manufacturing practices (GMP) and quality-by-design approaches in ensuring batch-to-batch consistency, offering a roadmap for overcoming the technical and regulatory hurdles essential for advancing nanomedicine to widespread clinical applications. Therefore, by addressing these barriers, nanopharmaceuticals hold the potential to revolutionize personalized medicine with more effective, targeted therapies for complex diseases.
Journal Article
Pulp regeneration by transplantation of dental pulp stem cells in pulpitis: a pilot clinical study
2017
Background
Experiments have previously demonstrated the therapeutic potential of mobilized dental pulp stem cells (MDPSCs) for complete pulp regeneration. The aim of the present pilot clinical study is to assess the safety, potential efficacy, and feasibility of autologous transplantation of MDPSCs in pulpectomized teeth.
Methods
Five patients with irreversible pulpitis were enrolled and monitored for up to 24 weeks following MDPSC transplantation. The MDPSCs were isolated from discarded teeth and expanded based on good manufacturing practice (GMP). The quality of the MDPSCs at passages 9 or 10 was ascertained by karyotype analyses. The MDPSCs were transplanted with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) in atelocollagen into pulpectomized teeth.
Results
The clinical and laboratory evaluations demonstrated no adverse events or toxicity. The electric pulp test (EPT) of the pulp at 4 weeks demonstrated a robust positive response. The signal intensity of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the regenerated tissue in the root canal after 24 weeks was similar to that of normal dental pulp in the untreated control. Finally, cone beam computed tomography demonstrated functional dentin formation in three of the five patients.
Conclusions
Human MDPSCs are safe and efficacious for complete pulp regeneration in humans in this pilot clinical study.
Journal Article
Good manufacturing practice production of CD34+ progenitor-derived NK cells for adoptive immunotherapy in acute myeloid leukemia
2023
Allogeneic natural killer (NK) cell-based immunotherapy is a promising, well-tolerated adjuvant therapeutic approach for acute myeloid leukemia (AML). For reproducible NK cell immunotherapy, a homogenous, pure and scalable NK cell product is preferred. Therefore, we developed a good manufacturing practice (GMP)-compliant, cytokine-based ex vivo manufacturing process for generating NK cells from CD34+ hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPC). This manufacturing process combines amongst others IL15 and IL12 and the aryl hydrocarbon receptor antagonist StemRegenin-1 (SR1) to generate a consistent and active NK cell product that fits the requirements for NK cell immunotherapy well. The cell culture protocol was first optimized to generate NK cells with required expansion and differentiation capacity in GMP-compliant closed system cell culture bags. In addition, phenotype, antitumor potency, proliferative and metabolic capacity were evaluated to characterize the HSPC-NK product. Subsequently, seven batches were manufactured for qualification of the process. All seven runs demonstrated consistent results for proliferation, differentiation and antitumor potency, and preliminary specifications for the investigational medicinal product for early clinical phase trials were set. This GMP-compliant manufacturing process for HSPC-NK cells (named RNK001 cells) is used to produce NK cell batches applied in the clinical trial ‘Infusion of ex vivo-generated allogeneic natural killer cells in combination with subcutaneous IL2 in patients with acute myeloid leukemia’ approved by the Dutch Ethics Committee (EudraCT 2019-001929-27).
Journal Article
Simian adenovirus vector production for early-phase clinical trials: A simple method applicable to multiple serotypes and using entirely disposable product-contact components
by
Peralta-Alvarez, Marco Polo
,
Fedosyuk, Sofiya
,
Warimwe, George M
in
Adenoviridae
,
Adenoviruses
,
Adenoviruses, Simian - immunology
2019
A variety of Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) compliant processes have been reported for production of non-replicating adenovirus vectors, but important challenges remain. Most clinical development of adenovirus vectors now uses simian adenoviruses or rare human serotypes, whereas reported manufacturing processes mainly use serotypes such as AdHu5 which are of questionable relevance for clinical vaccine development. Many clinically relevant vaccine transgenes interfere with adenovirus replication, whereas most reported process development uses selected antigens or even model transgenes such as fluorescent proteins which cause little such interference. Processes are typically developed for a single adenovirus serotype – transgene combination, requiring extensive further optimization for each new vaccine.
There is a need for rapid production platforms for small GMP batches of non-replicating adenovirus vectors for early-phase vaccine trials, particularly in preparation for response to emerging pathogen outbreaks. Such platforms must be robust to variation in the transgene, and ideally also capable of producing adenoviruses of more than one serotype. It is also highly desirable for such processes to be readily implemented in new facilities using commercially available single-use materials, avoiding the need for development of bespoke tools or cleaning validation, and for them to be readily scalable for later-stage studies.
Here we report the development of such a process, using single-use stirred-tank bioreactors, a transgene-repressing HEK293 cell – promoter combination, and fully single-use filtration and ion exchange components. We demonstrate applicability of the process to candidate vaccines against rabies, malaria and Rift Valley fever, each based on a different adenovirus serotype. We compare performance of a range of commercially available ion exchange media, including what we believe to be the first published use of a novel media for adenovirus purification (NatriFlo® HD-Q, Merck). We demonstrate the need for minimal process individualization for each vaccine, and that the product fulfils regulatory quality expectations. Cell-specific yields are at the upper end of those previously reported in the literature, and volumetric yields are in the range 1 × 1013 – 5 × 1013 purified virus particles per litre of culture, such that a 2–4 L process is comfortably adequate to produce vaccine for early-phase trials. The process is readily transferable to any GMP facility with the capability for mammalian cell culture and aseptic filling of sterile products.
Journal Article
Development of a CLDN18.2-targeting immuno-PET probe for non-invasive imaging in gastrointestinal tumors
2023
Claudin18.2 (CLDN18.2) is a tight junction protein that is overexpressed in a variety of solid tumors such as gastrointestinal cancer and oesophageal cancer. It has been identified as a promising target and a potential biomarker to diagnose tumor, evaluate efficacy, and determine patient prognosis. TST001 is a recombinant humanized CLDN18.2 antibody that selectively binds to the extracellular loop of human Claudin18.2. In this study, we constructed a solid target radionuclide zirconium-89 (89Zr) labled-TST001 to detect the expression of in the human stomach cancer BGC823CLDN18.2 cell lines. The [89Zr]Zr-desferrioxamine (DFO)-TST001 showed high radiochemical purity (RCP, >99%) and specific activity (24.15 ± 1.34 GBq/μmol), and was stable in 5% human serum albumin, and phosphate buffer saline (>85% RCP at 96 h). The EC50 values of TST001 and DFO-TST001 were as high as 0.413 ± 0.055 and 0.361 ± 0.058 nM (P > 0.05), respectively. The radiotracer had a significantly higher average standard uptake values in CLDN18.2-positive tumors than in CLDN18.2-negative tumors (1.11 ± 0.02 vs. 0.49 ± 0.03, P = 0.0016) 2 days post injection (p.i.). BGC823CLDN18.2 mice models showed high tumor/muscle ratios 96 h p.i. with [89Zr]Zr-DFO-TST001 was much higher than those of the other imaging groups. Immunohistochemistry results showed that BGC823CLDN18.2 tumors were highly positive (+++) for CLDN18.2, while those in the BGC823 group did not express CLDN18.2 (−). The results of ex vivo biodistribution studies showed that there was a higher distribution in the BGC823CLDN18.2 tumor bearing mice (2.05 ± 0.16 %ID/g) than BGC823 mice (0.69 ± 0.02 %ID/g) and blocking group (0.72 ± 0.02 %ID/g). A dosimetry estimation study showed that the effective dose of [89Zr]Zr-DFO-TST001 was 0.0705 mSv/MBq, which is within the range of acceptable doses for nuclear medicine research. Taken together, these results suggest that Good Manufacturing Practices produced by this immuno-positron emission tomography probe can detect CLDN18.2-overexpressing tumors.
[Display omitted]
•Development of radiolabeled a GMP grade anti-CLDN18.2 antibody PET probe.•High affinity to CLDN18.2 in vitro and in vivo.•This tracer can noninvasively report CLDN18.2 expression in different tumors.
Journal Article
Regulatory T cells in the era of cell and gene therapy: biology, clinical translation, and future prospects
2026
Regulatory T cells (Tregs) play a central role in maintaining immune homeostasis. Therefore, owing to their unique immunomodulatory function, their adoptive transfer has been investigated as a novel therapeutic modality. Recent progress in cell manufacturing has allowed the application of Tregs as cell therapy products, and several are being tested in human clinical trials. Furthermore, several clinical trials are aimed at evaluating Treg modulation methods, including cytokine administration, monoclonal antibodies, Treg depletion, and adoptive Treg transfer. Among these, adoptive Treg transfer is a promising cell and gene therapy modality that is potentially beneficial for both genetic and non-genetic diseases, including autoimmunity. To determine the current trends in research on Treg-based therapies, we performed a database search and found that investigational clinical trials have been performed not only for autoimmunity but also for a wide range of diseases. In this mini review, we introduce early benchmarking Treg trials together with recent advances in research on Treg biology shown in non-genetic diseases and not just limited to autoimmunity.
Journal Article
Isolation and prolonged expansion of oral mesenchymal stem cells under clinical-grade, GMP-compliant conditions differentially affects “stemness” properties
by
Aggelidou, Eleni
,
Geurtsen, Werner
,
Volk, Joachim
in
Alveolar bone
,
Alveolar bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells
,
Analysis
2017
Background
Development of clinical-grade cell preparations is central to meeting the regulatory requirements for cellular therapies under good manufacturing practice-compliant (cGMP) conditions. Since addition of animal serum in culture media may compromise safe and efficient expansion of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) for clinical use, this study aimed to investigate the potential of two serum/xeno-free, cGMP culture systems to maintain long-term “stemness” of oral MSCs (dental pulp stem cells (DPSCs) and alveolar bone marrow MSCs (aBMMSCs)), compared to conventional serum-based expansion.
Methods
DPSC and aBMMSC cultures (
n
= 6/cell type) were established from pulp and alveolar osseous biopsies respectively. Three culture systems were used: StemPro_MSC/SFM_XenoFree (Life Technologies); StemMacs_MSC/XF (Miltenyi Biotek); and α-MEM (Life Technologies) with 15% fetal bovine serum. Growth (population doublings (PDs)), immunophenotypic (flow cytometric analysis of MSC markers) and senescence (β-galactosidase (
SA-β-gal
) activity; telomere length) characteristics were determined during prolonged expansion. Gene expression patterns of osteogenic (ALP, BMP-2), adipogenic (LPL, PPAR-γ) and chondrogenic (ACAN, SOX-9) markers and maintenance of multilineage differentiation potential were determined by real-time PCR.
Results
Similar isolation efficiency and stable growth dynamics up to passage 10 were observed for DPSCs under all expansion conditions. aBMMSCs showed lower cumulative PDs compared to DPSCs, and when StemMacs was used substantial delays in cell proliferation were noted after passages 6–7. Serum/xeno-free expansion produced cultures with homogeneous spindle-shaped phenotypes, while serum-based expansion preserved differential heterogeneous characteristics of each MSC population. Prolonged expansion of both MSC types but in particular the serum/xeno-free-expanded aBMMSCs was associated with downregulation of CD146, CD105, Stro-1, SSEA-1 and SSEA-4, but not CD90, CD73 and CD49f, in parallel with an increase of SA-gal-positive cells, cell size and granularity and a decrease in telomere length. Expansion under both serum-free systems resulted in “osteogenic pre-disposition”, evidenced by upregulation of osteogenic markers and elimination of chondrogenic and adipogenic markers, while serum-based expansion produced only minor changes. DPSCs retained a diminishing (CCM, StemPro) or increasing (StemMacs) mineralization potential with passaging, while aBMMSCs lost this potential after passages 6–7 under all expansion conditions.
Conclusions
These findings indicate there is still a vacant role for development of qualified protocols for clinical-grade expansion of oral MSCs; a key milestone achievement for translation of research from the bench to clinics.
Journal Article