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Needle to needle robot-assisted manufacture of cell therapy products.
Ochs, Jelena; Hanga, Mariana P; Shaw, Georgina; Duffy, Niamh; Kulik, Michael; Tissin, Nokilaj; Reibert, Daniel; Biermann, Ferdinand; Moutsatsou, Panagiota; Ratnayake, Shibani; Nienow, Alvin; Koenig, Niels; Schmitt, Robert; Rafiq, Qasim; Hewitt, Christopher J; Barry, Frank; Murphy, J Mary.
  • Ochs J; Fraunhofer Institute for Production Technology (IPT) Aachen Germany.
  • Hanga MP; School of Biosciences, Life and Health Sciences College Aston University Birmingham UK.
  • Shaw G; Chemical Engineering University College London London UK.
  • Duffy N; Regenerative Medicine Institute, Biomedical Sciences Building National University of Ireland Galway Galway Ireland.
  • Kulik M; Regenerative Medicine Institute, Biomedical Sciences Building National University of Ireland Galway Galway Ireland.
  • Tissin N; Fraunhofer Institute for Production Technology (IPT) Aachen Germany.
  • Reibert D; Fraunhofer Institute for Production Technology (IPT) Aachen Germany.
  • Biermann F; Fraunhofer Institute for Production Technology (IPT) Aachen Germany.
  • Moutsatsou P; Fraunhofer Institute for Production Technology (IPT) Aachen Germany.
  • Ratnayake S; School of Biosciences, Life and Health Sciences College Aston University Birmingham UK.
  • Nienow A; School of Biosciences, Life and Health Sciences College Aston University Birmingham UK.
  • Koenig N; Chemical Engineering University of Birmingham Birmingham UK.
  • Schmitt R; Fraunhofer Institute for Production Technology (IPT) Aachen Germany.
  • Rafiq Q; Fraunhofer Institute for Production Technology (IPT) Aachen Germany.
  • Hewitt CJ; Faculty of Mechanical Engineering RWTH Aachen University Aachen Germany.
  • Barry F; Biochemical Engineering, Advanced Centre for Biochemical Engineering University College London London UK.
  • Murphy JM; School of Biosciences, Life and Health Sciences College Aston University Birmingham UK.
Bioeng Transl Med ; 7(3): e10387, 2022 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2027315
ABSTRACT
Advanced therapeutic medicinal products (ATMPs) have emerged as novel therapies for untreatable diseases, generating the need for large volumes of high-quality, clinically-compliant GMP cells to replace costly, high-risk and limited scale manual expansion processes. We present the design of a fully automated, robot-assisted platform incorporating the use of multiliter stirred tank bioreactors for scalable production of adherent human stem cells. The design addresses a needle-to-needle closed process incorporating automated bone marrow collection, cell isolation, expansion, and collection into cryovials for patient delivery. AUTOSTEM, a modular, adaptable, fully closed system ensures no direct operator interaction with biological material; all commands are performed through a graphic interface. Seeding of source material, process monitoring, feeding, sampling, harvesting and cryopreservation are automated within the closed platform, comprising two clean room levels enabling both open and closed processes. A bioprocess based on human MSCs expanded on microcarriers was used for proof of concept. Utilizing equivalent culture parameters, the AUTOSTEM robot-assisted platform successfully performed cell expansion at the liter scale, generating results comparable to manual production, while maintaining cell quality postprocessing.
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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Prognostic study Language: English Journal: Bioeng Transl Med Year: 2022 Document Type: Article

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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Prognostic study Language: English Journal: Bioeng Transl Med Year: 2022 Document Type: Article