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ASCO Annual Meeting
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Advancing Oncology Therapies for Patients in Need
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Cell and gene therapies (CGT) are at the frontline of clinical research and offer the potential to transform treatment for serious medical conditions. There are two types of cell therapies in development – autologous and allogeneic. Each provides distinct clinical and production advantages and challenges, and therapeutic capabilities. In this blog, we explore both autologous and allogeneic approaches, the solutions needed to optimize the development processes for commercial viability, and the future landscape of cell therapies in the rare disease space.
Autologous therapies are proven to have the potential to significantly improve clinical outcomes in patients or cure rare diseases. In autologous therapies, the patient donates their own cells as starting material. These cells are then cultured, expanded, and modified ex vivo or outside of the body, and reintroduced back into the patient as a therapeutic intervention. Autologous products are specially tailored to the patient and cannot be administered to other individuals. Since an autologous therapy is derived from the patient, there is also minimal risk of adverse autoimmune complications post-transplant such as graft versus host disease (GvHD).
Despite the success of autologous therapies, this method poses several challenges in clinical development, production, and potential therapeutic capabilities. These challenges include:
Although autologous therapies are here to stay, this high cost, low yield approach is not sustainable long-term. Autologous therapies are therefore a non-viable option for manufacturers and patients.
Rather than using the patient’s own cells and starting material, allogeneic therapies are derived from cell sources from healthy donors, stem cell sources or cell banks. These healthy sources provide a reliable number of functional cells. The starting material goes through various stages of differentiation, expansion, modification, and activations before the final product is released for administration to the actual patient.
Since allogeneic therapies are derived from healthy sources, the starting material offers a greater quantity of functional cells. Allogeneic methods also allow for the development of many treatments from a single, reliable source. One batch has the potential to yield hundreds or even thousands of doses for a larger patient population. The cost of an allogeneic therapy can therefore be significantly lower per dose than compared to autologous therapies. In theory, you can send an off the shelf, final product to any patient at any center in the world, improving patient accessibility and engagement globally.
Although allogeneic methods can potentially circumvent production obstacles, there are several challenges that must be resolved before its potential is fully realized.
Allogeneic cell therapies have the potential to disrupt the industry and rare disease space. However, it is critical to develop solutions to relieve manufacturing obstacles, high costs, and concerns about immunological risk and long-term safety.
The industry is seeing increasing competition for rare disease patients in CGT studies, a complex and continuously evolving regulatory environment, clinical trial capacity constraints, and manufacturing limitations. At present, the availability of fully characterized, consistent, and validated starting materials has posed significant limitations in this field.
Despite this, there continues to be favorable regulatory outcomes and a high demand for novel, on-demand cell and gene therapies. We are seeing progress being made in the development of allogeneic cell banks, and new higher throughput processes are gaining momentum, lowering material costs, and increasing scalability.
We can also expect to leverage the lessons learned from autologous therapies, approved cell and gene therapies, and COVID-19 vaccines, and apply them to the rare disease fields. Allogeneic therapies are poised to be significantly safer for patients and more commercially viable in the rare disease space in the next five to ten years. With efficiencies on the horizon, there is promising potential for rapid development and improvements in clinical research in the cell and gene landscape in a very real way.
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Apr 23, 2025 Veristat Events
Advancing Oncology Therapies for Patients in Need
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Apr 9, 2025 Veristat Events
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