Isasi Rosario, Rahimzadeh Vasiliki, Charlebois Kathleen
University of Miami Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine, 1501 NW 10th Avenue, Biomedical Research Building (BRB), Miami, FL 33136, United States.
Centre of Genomics and Policy (CGP) Faculty of Medicine, Dpt. of Human Genetics, McGill University, Canada.
Appl Transl Genom. 2016 Nov 11;11:27-39. doi: 10.1016/j.atg.2016.11.001. eCollection 2016 Dec.
The purpose of this qualitative study is to elucidate stakeholder perceptions of, and institutional practices related to cell-based therapies and products (CTP) regulation and commercialization in Canada. The development of reproducible, safe and effective CTPs is predicated on regulatory and commercialization environments that enable innovation. Manufacturing processes constitute a critical step for CTP development in this regard. The road from CTP manufacturing to translation in the clinic, however, has yet to be paved. This study aims to fill an empirical gap in the literature by exploring how CTP manufacturing facilities navigate Canadian regulatory and commercialization environments, which together drive the translation of novel CTPs from bench to bedside. Using the multi-level model of practice-driven institutional change proposed by Smets et al., we demonstrate how CTP manufacturing practices are governed by established standards, yet meaningfully shape higher-order regulatory and commercial norms in CTP research and development. We identify four key themes that undergird such processes of innovation: 1) managing regulatory uncertainty, which stems from an inability to classify CTPs within existing regulatory categories for approval and commercialization purposes; 2) building a 'business case' whereby a CTP's market potential is determined in large part by proving its safety and effectiveness; 3) standardizing manufacturing procedures that mobilize CTPs from a research and development phase to a commercialization one; and 4) networking between researchers and regulators to develop responsible commercialization processes that reflect the uniqueness of CTPs as distinct from other biologics and medical devices.
这项定性研究的目的是阐明利益相关者对加拿大基于细胞的疗法和产品(CTP)监管与商业化的看法,以及与之相关的机构实践。可重复、安全且有效的CTP的开发取决于能够促进创新的监管和商业化环境。在这方面,制造工艺是CTP开发的关键步骤。然而,从CTP制造到临床转化的道路尚未铺平。本研究旨在通过探索CTP制造设施如何在加拿大监管和商业化环境中运作来填补文献中的实证空白,这些环境共同推动新型CTP从实验室走向临床应用。利用斯梅茨等人提出的实践驱动型制度变革多层次模型,我们展示了CTP制造实践如何受既定标准的制约,但又如何在CTP研发中切实塑造更高层次的监管和商业规范。我们确定了支撑此类创新过程的四个关键主题:1)管理监管不确定性,这源于无法将CTP归类到现有监管类别中以进行审批和商业化;2)建立“商业案例”,即CTP的市场潜力在很大程度上取决于证明其安全性和有效性;3)标准化制造程序,将CTP从研发阶段推进到商业化阶段;4)研究人员与监管机构之间建立网络,以制定负责任的商业化流程,体现CTP与其他生物制品和医疗设备不同的独特性。