Abstract

This article provides a strategy by which a manufacturing process with a Biosafety Level 2 (BL2) designation can be downgraded to Biosafety Level 1 (BL1). The principles of the downgrading process are based on the robust contamination controls in clinical and commercial manufacturing, which typically are not part of Research and Development processes. These strict requirements along with the application of current Good Manufacturing Practice (cGMP) principles provide a framework by which processes can be suitably managed and controlled to mitigate biohazard risk, specifically for cell lines that may be contaminated with human pathogenic viral agents. We demonstrate how a risk assessment guide was used to define the risk profile of a theoretical process with a human cell line intended for clinical/commercial application. Based on the risk assessment, key BL2 elements were identified as suitable for downgrading, including facility containment controls, emergency spill response plans, and storage and shipping requirements. For various reasons, some aspects of the systems were deemed unsuitable for downgrading due to the severity of the control risk and, therefore, remained at BL2. We have used an established risk assessment guide to show how cGMP compliments and augments biosafety containment. We provide justification for downgrading from BL2 to BL1 for clinical and commercial cell and gene therapy manufacturing with human cell lines.

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