Horiba has announced its participation in a new consortium formed to accelerate the development of process analytical technologies (PAT) in cell and gene therapy manufacturing. Horiba’s new A-TEEM Molecular Fingerprinting technology has shown great promise for fast QC/QA of complex biological systems and is a core technology being assessed for reducing batch failures and manufacturing costs, to enable faster time to market.
Headed by the Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult, the consortium is said to be the first of this scale, functional expertise and mission within the cell and gene therapy space. Comprising technology providers, pharmaceutical companies, therapy developers and charities, it will evaluate the application and combination of new and existing technologies from multiple industries to develop PAT specifically for cell and gene therapy (CGT) manufacturing.
Working within the consortium will allow analysts to couple data from the Horiba system with information from many other sensors to obtain a broad scientific overview of the process. Through this model of collaborative work and sharing of data, partners will accelerate their expertise in this area and gain industry specific knowledge to integrate and combine cell and gene therapy process analytical technologies into their offering.
Dr Simon FitzGerald, Technical Manager at Horiba UK, said: “This consortium offers a unique blend of expertise and capability covering technology, pharmaceutics, therapy and patient need. Our continued spirit of addressing new scientific challenges with an ever-evolving suite of core technologies comes together perfectly within this consortium, where the power of A-TEEM Molecular Fingerprinting will be truly explored and harnessed. Data and knowledge in context are key to progress – this consortium will deliver both, helping to bring advanced therapies to patients more quickly.”
Matthew Durdy, Chief Executive Officer at Cell Gene Therapy Catapult commented: “The industry needs to make a giant leap in terms of analytical capability and the dynamic use of information to control and improve processes, product and costs. The coming together of these leaders in the field is a very important first step towards achieving this.”
The organisations that have formed the process analytics consortium are: ABER Instruments; Anthony Nolan; BD; Bio-Techne; Cambridge Consultants; Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult; ChemoMetec; C-CIT Sensors; Cytiva; Eppendorf; GlaxoSmithKline (GSK); Horiba; IMSPEX Diagnostics Ltd; Kaiser Optical Systems, an Endress+Hauser company; Lonza; Ocean Insight; Ori Biotech; Oxford Nanoimaging; Quantex; See-Through; TeloNostiX; Terumo Blood and Cell Technologies and Univercells Technologies.