Cutaneous Cell Therapy Manufacturing Timeframe Rationalization: Allogeneic Off-the-Freezer Fibroblasts for Dermo-Epidermal Combined Preparations (DE-FE002-SK2) in Burn Care.
Xi ChenAlexis LaurentZhifeng LiaoSandra JaccoudPhilippe Abdel-SayedMarjorie FlahautCorinne ScalettaWassim RaffoulLee Ann ApplegateNathalie Hirt-BurriPublished in: Pharmaceutics (2023)
Autologous cell therapy manufacturing timeframes constitute bottlenecks in clinical management pathways of severe burn patients. While effective temporary wound coverings exist for high-TBSA burns, any means to shorten the time-to-treatment with cytotherapeutic skin grafts could provide substantial therapeutic benefits. This study aimed to establish proofs-of-concept for a novel combinational cytotherapeutic construct (autologous/allogeneic DE-FE002-SK2 full dermo-epidermal graft) designed for significant cutaneous cell therapy manufacturing timeframe rationalization. Process development was based on several decades (four for autologous protocols, three for allogeneic protocols) of in-house clinical experience in cutaneous cytotherapies. Clinical grade dermal progenitor fibroblasts (standardized FE002-SK2 cell source) were used as off-the-freezer substrates in novel autologous/allogeneic dermo-epidermal bilayer sheets. Under vitamin C stimulation, FE002-SK2 primary progenitor fibroblasts rapidly produced robust allogeneic dermal templates, allowing patient keratinocyte attachment in co-culture. Notably, FE002-SK2 primary progenitor fibroblasts significantly outperformed patient fibroblasts for collagen deposition. An ex vivo de-epidermalized dermis model was used to demonstrate the efficient DE-FE002-SK2 construct bio-adhesion properties. Importantly, the presented DE-FE002-SK2 manufacturing process decreased clinical lot production timeframes from 6-8 weeks (standard autologous combined cytotherapies) to 2-3 weeks. Overall, these findings bear the potential to significantly optimize burn patient clinical pathways (for rapid wound closure and enhanced tissue healing quality) by combining extensively clinically proven cutaneous cell-based technologies.
Keyphrases
- cell therapy
- wound healing
- stem cell transplantation
- bone marrow
- stem cells
- mesenchymal stem cells
- metal organic framework
- hematopoietic stem cell
- extracellular matrix
- case report
- high dose
- healthcare
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- palliative care
- ejection fraction
- low dose
- cell fate
- quality improvement
- prognostic factors
- peritoneal dialysis
- single cell
- chronic pain
- pain management
- escherichia coli
- soft tissue
- preterm birth
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- biofilm formation
- patient reported outcomes
- platelet rich plasma
- gestational age
- smoking cessation