Recombinant antibody mixtures; optimization of cell line generation and single-batch manufacturing processes

2011 
Background Recombinant antibody mixtures represent an important new class of antibody therapeutics as demonstrated by the increasing amount of literature showing that combinations of two or more antibodies show superiority compared to monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) for treatment of cancer and infectious diseases [1-5]. Sym004, composed of two antibodies targeting non-overlapping epitopes of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) act in a synergistic manner to induce an efficient internalization of EGFR leading to subsequent degradation and exhibit superior anticancer efficacy as demonstrated in several preclinical in vivo models [5]. At Symphogen A/S, we have developed an expression platform, SympressTM, for cost-efficient production of antibody mixtures. The antibody mixtures are produced using a single-batch manufacturing approach where a polyclonal working cell bank (pWCB) prepared by mixing the individual stable cell lines producing all the desired antibodies is used as seed material for a bioreactor process [6]. By using a single-batch approach the CMC development costs of antibody mixtures are comparable to costs for monoclonal antibodies. However, the single-batch manufacturing approach raises questions with regard to control of composition ratios, compositional stability and robustness of the cell banking procedure. Here, we present experimental data addressing these key questions and demonstrate that mixtures of recombinant antibodies can be produced under predictable, reproducible and stable conditions using the SympressTM technology.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    7
    References
    8
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []