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Plasma fractionation and viral inactivation/removal procedures

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Presentation on theme: "Plasma fractionation and viral inactivation/removal procedures"— Presentation transcript:

1 Plasma fractionation and viral inactivation/removal procedures
Thierry Burnouf, PhD

2 Human plasma: a unique & complex raw material

3 Human plasma: a unique & complex raw material
+/- 60 g proteins / liter 2 abundant proteins hundreds of other proteins (some present as traces) ~20 medicinal, plasma-derived products

4 established clinical value
Close to 55 out of 60 g have established clinical value

5 Modern Fractionation: interconnection of production lines
Produce several products from each pool for optimal use of plasma and selective hemotherapy albumin IgG Clotting factors Anti-Proteases Anti-coagulants

6 Plasma product range Coagulation factors Factor VIII
Prothrombin complex Fibrinogen Von Willebrand Factor Factor VII Factor XI Factor XIII Albumin Protease inhibitors Alpha 1-antitrypsin C1-inhibitor Anticoagulants Antithrombin WHO model list of essential medicines

7 Immunoglobulins POLYVALENT Intravenous Intramuscular Sub-cutaneous
HYPERIMMUNE Anti-D (Rhesus) Anti-Hepatitis B Anti-tetanus Anti-Rabies Anti-Varicella/Zoster Anti-Cytomegamovirus Anti-hepatitis A WHO model list of essential medicines

8 Flow-chart of plasma fractionation

9 PREPARATION OF PLASMA RAW MATERIAL
Storage of plasma donations [Freezer,  °C] Preparation of plasma donations for pooling

10 LARGE-SCALE PROCESSING
POOLING and LARGE-SCALE PROCESSING Opening of bags Cryoprecipitation (2-4°C) Bulk fractionation steps (Ethanol fractionation + chromatography) Protein purification and viral Inactivation In-process filtration steps Batch size: L

11 Air-classified environment
POOLING and LARGE-SCALE PROCESSING Opening of bags Cryoprecipitation (2-4°C) Bulk fractionation steps (Ethanol fractionation + chromatography) Protein purification and viral Inactivation In-process filtration steps Batch size: L Air-classified environment

12 Sterile filtration (0.2 m)
(Nanofiltration) ASEPTIC DISPENSING Sterile filtration (0.2 m) Aseptic filling +/- Freeze-drying

13 QUARANTINE – QUALITY CONTROL
LABELLING – PACKAGING BOXING - SHIPMENT

14 Fractionation methods
Step Protein target Cryoprecipitation Factor VIII, vWF, Fibrinogen Chromatography Coagulation factors, Protease inhibitors Anticoagulants Ethanol fractionation Albumin, IgG, alpha 1-AT

15 cryoprecipitation Ethanol precipitation
Integrated plasma protein fractionation process cryoprecipitation Ethanol precipitation Burnouf, T. Transfusion Medicine Reviews, 2007;21:

16 Cryoprecipitation Batch size: L

17 Processing of cryoprecipitate

18 Capture of labile proteins from cryo-poor plasma
PCC, PC, PS C1-esterase Antithrombin Ethanol

19 Ethanol precipitations and chromatography

20 Evolving production methods of IVIG to improve recovery
Radosevich & Burnouf Vox Sang. 2010:98:12-28 Traditional method

21 Chromatography Protein purification Viral inactivation
Fractionation into several therapeutic protein products Removal of unwanted proteins (e.g. IgA; FXIa) Removal of viral inactivating agents (solvent/detergent)

22 Chromatographic methods
1 – 500 liters column Anion-exchange Cation-exchange Affinity (e.g. heparin; copper; gelatin) Immuno-affinity (anti-FVIII; -FIX) Hydrophobic interaction Size-exclusion

23 Ethanol fractionation
4000 Liters Stainless-steel tank

24 Protein separation Separation of Precipitates by depth Filtration
(or centrifugation) 24 24

25 Ethanol precipitations
Protein purification Viral safety Separate proteins into pre-purified fractions: albumin, IgG, alpha 1-antitrypsin These fractions can be stored frozen Contributing factor to the removal/inactivation of some viruses

26 Viral safety keys Donor screening
Testing of donations and manufacturing plasma pool Viral reduction treatments GMP 26 26

27 Viral reduction technologies
HIV HBV HCV HAV B19V WNV, DENV, CHIKV, etc. robustness

28 Viral reduction Two major methods to ensure viral safety
Inactivation = virus destruction/kill by alteration of its capacity to replicate Removal = partitioning of viruses and plasma proteins in different fractions

29 Viral reduction treatments
Inactivation = virus destruction by alteration of: Lipid structure Proteins (enzymes) Nucleic acids Examples: Chemicals Heat Low pH Irradiation (UV)

30 Viral reduction treatments
Removal = virus partitioning/separation from the protein of interest Dedicated/ on purpose treatment Nanofiltration Non dedicated/non specific treatments, e.g. Centrifugation Chromatography

31 Target of viral reduction treatments
Balanced compromise between the extent of microbial kill and the unwanted side effects on active ingredients of the product: Coagulation factors Immunoglobulins Albumin Etc.

32 Viral reduction treatments
Inactivation Removal Solvent-detergent Pasteurisation Low pH Caprylic acid Dry-heat treatment Nanofiltration Chromatography Precipitation Non- Dedicated, Contributing steps

33 Solvent Detergent Incubation of plasma protein solution in the presence of Tri n-butyl phosphate (TnBP) and detergent(s) [e.g.Tween-80 and/or Triton X-100] 25 – 35 ˚C (validated) 1 - 6 hr (validated) Target: HIV, HBV, HCV, WNV, DENV, CHIKV etc. Coagulation factors, IVIG, alpha 1-AT, etc.

34 SOLVENT-DETERGENT TREATMENT AT LARGE SCALE
Up to 1% TnBP Up to 1% detergent (Tween 80, Triton X-100, Triton X-45) 20-35°C 1 to 6 hrs Depending upon validation data Protein solution Mixing device

35 Elimination of the SD agents
Proteins + SD Hydrophobic interaction chromatography Chromatographic column SD are adsorbed proteins

36 Elimination of the SD agents
Proteins + SD Ion-exchange chromatography Chromatographic column Proteins are adsorbed S/D

37 Elimination of the SD agents
Oil extraction Oil + SD Proteins + SD + OIL Mixing and decantation proteins

38 Pasteurisation Heat-treatment of a protein solution 60˚C 10 hr
Protein stabilizers Target: HIV, HBV, HCV, WNV, DENV, HAV, B19V Albumin, FVIII, IVIG, alpha 1-AT Risk of protein denaturations to be controlled

39 Low-pH treatment Treatment in the liquid state: pH 4.0 30-37°C
> 24 hrs HIV, HBV, HCV, [HAV, B19V] Only IgG products (historically performed to allow IV infusion)

40 Caprylic acid treatment
Treatment in the liquid state: < pH 6.0 1 hr 20-25°C HIV, HBV, HCV, WNV, CHIKV etc. Only IgG products (also a purification method)

41 Nanofiltration Filtration on dedicated small pore-size filters (15, 20, or 35 nm, or equivalent) HIV, HBV, HCV, WNV, DENV, CHIKV, HAV, B19V Coagulation factors, IgG, AT, alpha 1-AT, etc;

42 Removal mechanism Multi-step filtration with multi-layered structure
Product solution passes through capillary-void structure repeatedly. Product, smaller than the size of capillary, passes through effectively, whereas, viruses relatively larger than the size of capillary, are trapped effectively. Layer Layer Layer150 VIRUS PROTEIN

43

44 Dry heat treatment (historical use)
60 +/- 0.1°C for 96 hrs 68 +/- 0.1°C for 96 hrs 80 +/- 0.1°C for 72 hrs 100 +/- 0.1°C for 30 min HIV inactivation HCV inactivation HAV /B19 inactivation

45 Combination of treatments
SD Pasteurisation Acid pH Nanofiltration Dry-heat F VIII or FIX X F VIII vWF AT IgG

46 Combination of treatments
SD Pasteurisation Acid pH Nanofiltration Dry-heat F VIII or FIX X F VIII vWF AT IgG Combine treatments with different mechanisms of viral inactivation or removal

47 Each treatment has limits: Viral validations are needed (relevant viruses and model viruses)

48 In vitro validation of viral reduction treatments
Scientific understanding of the capacity of a process to inactivate / remove viruses in a robust and consistent manner Determination of process robustness > 4 logs of reduction of infectivity under conditions demonstrated to be not significantly affected by potential process variations (pH, temperature, content of inactivating agents, etc.)

49

50 “Good implementation viral reduction practices”

51 Product batch release specifications
Potency / Specific activity Residual “contaminant” proteins Specialized assays [e.g. thrombogenicity] Ingredients [stabilizers] Residual content in virus sterilizing agents Physicochemical tests Sterility Pyrogen / endotoxin tests Toxicity assays Quality and safety of each batch is intimately dependent upon process validation and process monitoring through GMP

52 Thank you for your attention


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