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  4. Autologous and Allogeneic Cytotherapies for Large Knee (Osteo)Chondral Defects: Manufacturing Process Benchmarking and Parallel Functional Qualification
 
research article

Autologous and Allogeneic Cytotherapies for Large Knee (Osteo)Chondral Defects: Manufacturing Process Benchmarking and Parallel Functional Qualification

Philippe, Virginie
•
Jeannerat, Annick
•
Peneveyre, Cedric
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September 1, 2023
Pharmaceutics

Cytotherapies are often necessary for the management of symptomatic large knee (osteo)-chondral defects. While autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) has been clinically used for 30 years, allogeneic cells (clinical-grade FE002 primary chondroprogenitors) have been investigated in translational settings (Swiss progenitor cell transplantation program). The aim of this study was to comparatively assess autologous and allogeneic approaches (quality, safety, functional attributes) to cell-based knee chondrotherapies developed for clinical use. Protocol benchmarking from a manufacturing process and control viewpoint enabled us to highlight the respective advantages and risks. Safety data (telomerase and soft agarose colony formation assays, high passage cell senescence) and risk analyses were reported for the allogeneic FE002 cellular active substance in preparation for an autologous to allogeneic clinical protocol transposition. Validation results on autologous bioengineered grafts (autologous chondrocyte-bearing Chondro-Gide scaffolds) confirmed significant chondrogenic induction (COL2 and ACAN upregulation, extracellular matrix synthesis) after 2 weeks of co-culture. Allogeneic grafts (bearing FE002 primary chondroprogenitors) displayed comparable endpoint quality and functionality attributes. Parameters of translational relevance (transport medium, finished product suturability) were validated for the allogeneic protocol. Notably, the process-based benchmarking of both approaches highlighted the key advantages of allogeneic FE002 cell-bearing grafts (reduced cellular variability, enhanced process standardization, rationalized logistical and clinical pathways). Overall, this study built on our robust knowledge and local experience with ACI (long-term safety and efficacy), setting an appropriate standard for further clinical investigations into allogeneic progenitor cell-based orthopedic protocols.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.3390/pharmaceutics15092333
Web of Science ID

WOS:001074859600001

Author(s)
Philippe, Virginie
Jeannerat, Annick
Peneveyre, Cedric
Jaccoud, Sandra  
Scaletta, Corinne
Hirt-Burri, Nathalie
Abdel-Sayed, Philippe
Raffoul, Wassim
Darwiche, Salim
Applegate, Lee Ann
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Date Issued

2023-09-01

Publisher

MDPI

Published in
Pharmaceutics
Volume

15

Issue

9

Article Number

2333

Subjects

Life Sciences & Biomedicine

•

Allogeneic Cytotherapies

•

Autologous Chondrocyte Implantation

•

Cartilage Defect

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Chondrogenesis

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Cell Therapy

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Fe002 Primary Chondroprogenitors

•

Manufacturing Process

•

Standardized Transplant Product

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Tissue Engineering

•

Translational Research

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LBO  
FunderGrant Number

We would like to thank the S.A.N.T.E and Sandoz Foundations for their unconditional commitment to the Swiss progenitor cell transplantation program through the years. We would like to thank the Lausanne Orthopedics Research Foundation (LORF) for their cont

Sandoz Foundations

Canton of Vaud

Available on Infoscience
February 14, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/203699
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