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Dendritic cells for active immunotherapy: Optimizing design and manufacture in order to develop commercially and clinically viable products

Journal

VACCINE
Volume 25, Issue -, Pages B47-B60

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2007.06.006

Keywords

human dendritic cells; cancer; production for therapy; regulatory requirements; quality control; active immunotherapy

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Dendritic cell (DC) active immunotherapy is potentially efficacious in a broad array of malignant disease settings. However, challenges remain in optimizing DC-based therapy for maximum clinical efficacy within manufacturing processes that permit quality control and scale-up of consistent products. In this review we discuss the critical issues that must be addressed in order to optimize DC-based product design and manufacture, and highlight the DC based platforms currently addressing these issues. Variables in DC-based product design include the type of antigenic payload used, DC maturation steps and activation processes, and functional assays. Issues to consider in development include: (a) minimizing the invasiveness of patient biological material collection; (b) minimizing handling and manipulations of tissue at the clinical site; (c) centralized product manufacturing and standardized processing and capacity for commercial-scale production; (d) rapid product release turnaround time; (e) the ability to manufacture sufficient product from limited starting material; and (f) standardized release criteria for DC phenotype and function. Improvements in the design and manufacture of DC products have resulted in a handful of promising leads currently in clinical development. (C) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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