Abstract

Background aimsThis article describes the development of a small-scale model for Ficoll-based cell separation as part of process development of an advanced therapy medicinal product and its qualification. Because of the complexity of biological products, their manufacturing process as well as characterization and control needs to be accurately understood. Likewise, scale-down models serve as an indispensable tool for process development, characterization, optimization and validation. This scale-down model represents a cell processor device widely used in advance therapies. This approach is inteded to optimise resources and to focus its use on process characterisation studies under the paradigm of the Quality by design. A scale-down model should reflect the large manufacturing scale. Consequently, this simplified system should offer a high degree of control over the process parameters to depict a robust model, even considering the process limitations. For this reason, a model should be developed and qualified for the intended purpose. MethodsProcess operating parameters were studied, and their resulting performance at full scale was used as a baseline to guide scale-down model development. Once the model was established, comparability runs were performed by establishing standard operating conditions with bone marrow samples. These analyses showed consistency between the bench and the large scale. Additionally, statistical analyses were employed to demonstrate equivalence. ResultsThe process performance indicators and assessed quality attributes were equivalent and fell into the acceptance ranges defined for the large-scale process. ConclusionsThis scale-down model is suitable for use in process characterization studies.

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