Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s 4th Annual

Cell Culture and Bioproduction

Best Practices, Efficiencies and Emerging Technologies

16 - 17 March 2021 ALL TIMES CET

Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s Cell Culture and Bioproduction conference examines the strategies that lead to greater productivity when cultivating cells and scaling up production. Emerging research and technologies are breathing new life into bioproduction, especially with genomic research and CRISPR engineering. Also, predictive technologies, such as PAT and DoE, have changed the way scientists develop methods and assess risks. The conference explores novel approaches for increasing productivity, while minimizing time and cost, to provide support for the production of next-generation biopharmaceuticals.

Tuesday, 16 March

BIOPRODUCTION DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC

09:00 KEYNOTE PRESENTATION:

Pandemic Response Manufacturing Supply Chain Challenges Capacity & Economics

Andrew Sinclair, President & Founder, BioPharm Services Ltd., United Kingdom

Rapid development of treatments for COVID presents the supply chain challenges with the dual requirements for the supply of vaccines and therapeutic treatments. Key is the ability to rapidly manufacture these costs effectively. This talk considers how the supply chain is responding, where the capacity is coming from, how much it's costing us, and in the end,  how many people do we need  treat in the coming years.

09:20

Production of Premium Quality SARS-CoV2 Antigens – An Ultra-fast Process Development Approach

Gerald Striedner, PhD, Associate Professor, Biotechnology, University of Natural Resources & Life Sciences, Vienna (BOKU), Austria

The Covid pandemic has made society aware of the importance of having appropriate concepts and strategies to prevent the spread of an infectious disease, to treat infected people and to provide preventive treatment. For the area of biotechnological production, the availability of a versatile toolbox comprising different expression systems and generic processing concepts, is the basis for fast and efficient development and availability of high-quality products like antigens or vaccines.

CELL LINE DEVELOPMENT AND PROTEIN EXPRESSION

Julian Riba, PhD, cytena Bisociences, CYTENA

For the first time a single instrument combines single-cell cloning with a new imaging technology for 3D full well imaging to generate cell lines with probability of monoclonality of >99.99%. After single-cell cloning, the UP.SIGHT allows continues monitoring of cell proliferation and clone recovery. In combination with the C.BIRD  - a microbioreactor for early suspension culture in well plates - the timeline for generating high producer clones can be significantly reduced.

10:00 Session Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall
10:15

Featured Presentation: Implementation of New Strategies for Multiprotein Complex Analysis

Arnaud Poterszman, PhD, Research Director, Integrated Structural Biology, IGBMC, France

As they carry out most essential processes in cells, multi-protein complexes have become the focus of intense research both in academia and industry. Despite tremendous technological progress, their characterization and preparation for structural and functional analysis remains a major bottleneck. Using the 10 subunits transcription/DNA repair factor TFIIH, I will illustrate characterization of endogenous assemblies from CRISPR/Cas9 edited cell lines and reconstitution of multisubunit complexes using the baculovirus expression system.

10:35

Learning from High-Throughput Engineering Data: From Data to Predictions

Norbert Furtmann, PhD, Section Head, Data Science & Computational Design, Biologics Research, Sanofi, Germany

Our novel, automated high-throughput engineering platform enables the fast generation of large panels of multi-specific variants (up to 10.000) giving rise to large data sets (more than 100.000 data points). By combining data science and structure-based design workflows we leverage the potential of our unique data sets to guide the engineering of our next generation antibody therapeutics.

Lars Stöckl, Dr., Division Manager, FyoniBio - Service Branch of Glycotope

During the live cycle of a biopharmaceutical project the production needs to stay up to date with productivity and quality demands from early pre-clinical to market phase. Optimization can be done at different stages and on different levels with selecting the right cell line, selecting the right clone or optimizing the media/feed combination and / or optimizing process parameters. We provide case studies which address the different possibilities of optimization.
 

11:15 Session Break
11:25 LIVE PANEL DISCUSSION:

Optimizing and Accelerating Upstream Processing

Panel Moderator:
Andrew Sinclair, President & Founder, BioPharm Services Ltd., United Kingdom
Panelists:
Norbert Furtmann, PhD, Section Head, Data Science & Computational Design, Biologics Research, Sanofi, Germany
Arnaud Poterszman, PhD, Research Director, Integrated Structural Biology, IGBMC, France
Gerald Striedner, PhD, Associate Professor, Biotechnology, University of Natural Resources & Life Sciences, Vienna (BOKU), Austria
Julian Riba, PhD, cytena Bisociences, CYTENA
Lars Stöckl, Dr., Division Manager, FyoniBio - Service Branch of Glycotope
11:55 Session Break
12:05 Breakout Session

Join your colleagues and fellow delegates for a focused, informal discussion moderated by a member of our speaking faculty.  A small group format allows participants to meet potential collaborators, share examples from their own work and discuss ideas with peers.

Alan Baines, Director, Project Lead Testing Solutions, Lonza BioScience Solutions
Rob Lutskus, Associate Director, Lonza Global Informatics
  • Productivity increases – data from aseptic sampling and automation case studies
  • Improved data quality from automated sampling and automated data capture
  • Quality and data integrity improvements from electronic batch records
  • Automated data collection and removal of redundancies with paperless systems

 

12:25 Session Break

PLENARY: COVID-19 VACCINE MANUFACTURING

12:35

PLENARY SESSION: Developing and Manufacturing mRNA Vaccines at Scale – Lessons Gained from the Pandemic

Andreas N. Kuhn, PhD, Senior Vice President & Head, RNA Biochemistry and Manufacturing, BioNTech SE

Messenger (m)RNA is increasingly investigated as a platform technology for multiple therapeutic applications including as a vaccine against infectious diseases. With respect to manufacturing, mRNA has several advantages compared to other biopharmaceuticals. Most importantly, one process can be essentially used to manufacture any RNA sequence, significantly shortening development time for a new project. With the outbreak of COVID-19 in early 2020, our mRNA platform was thus ideally suited to develop an mRNA-based vaccine in “lightspeed." In this talk, an overview about the program and the challenges that we faced will be given.

13:00

PLENARY SESSION: CMC Challenges when Developing COVID-19 Vaccines

Ingrid Kromann, Head, CMC, Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI)

CEPI’s mission is to accelerate the development of vaccines against emerging infectious diseases and enable equitable access to these vaccines for affected populations during outbreaks? CEPI is currently supporting 8-10 different vaccines in their development, up- and out scaling of manufacturing processes to secure doses to be distributed across all regions through the COVAX facility. Developing a vaccine production process is often a multi-year task, long and very expensive. During the COVID-19 pandemic, vaccine development has been challenged by the speed vaccines are expected to hit the market. It has been CEPI’s approach to invest at risk in vaccine process development scale up and out activities.

13:25 LIVE PLENARY Q&A:

Manufacturing COVID-19 Vaccines in a Pandemic

Panel Moderator:
Margit Holzer, PhD, Owner, Ulysse Consult
Panelists:
Ingrid Kromann, Head, CMC, Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI)
Andreas N. Kuhn, PhD, Senior Vice President & Head, RNA Biochemistry and Manufacturing, BioNTech SE

BIOPRODUCTION 4.0

13:45

Break Through Data Silos and Unlock the Full Potential of Your Data Treasure

Eugen Probst, PhD, Scientist, Late Stage NBE Projects, Boehringer Ingelheim, Germany

The challenge of processing more projects with lower budgets and more aggressive timelines (e.g., development of drugs like for COVID-19 treatment) force the pharma industry to apply their historical process knowledge in combination with novel technologies. Time needed for experimental testing shall be reduced to a minimum. Therefore the access to and easy evaluation of all historical knowledge of different departments (development, manufacturing…) is essential.


Initial data storage systems such as LIMS or MES enable an optimal storage of development and manufacturing data but also complicating the analysis of those with one software as data are not harmonized and no standards are defined.

This presentation shows a case study of how we can unlock the full potential of our data treasure by breaking through the data silos of different departments. The application of data lakes and harmonization of data between different departments enable scientists to get easy access to data and work on more value-adding activities such as integration of hybrid models and machine learning approaches. Furthermore, I will present how the connection of innovative web UI software with the data lake allows scientists to work highly efficient on topics like manufacturing deviations, development reports and submission documents.

14:05

Digital Twin-Based Experimental Design

Julian Kager, PhD, Postdoctoral Researcher, TU Vienna, Austria

Digital methods for process design can convert classical trial-and-error bioprocess development to a more systematized and targeted approach. The key component within such a framework is a digital twin interacting with its physical process counterpart. By interconnecting hardware, software, data and humans, currently untapped potential can be accessed. The underlying digital twin acts as a powerful knowledge management tool and a decisions support system along the full process development chain.

STRATEGIES TO ACCELERATE BIOPROCESS DEVELOPMENT

Joaquina Mascarenhas, PhD, Manager, Cell Culture Process Development, Thermo Fisher Scientific

Changes in the biologics pipeline as well as changes in commercialization needs trigger changes in the technologies we use and work flows for cell line development. In this presentation, we will cover how Thermo Fisher Scientific leverages various innovative technologies to accelerate biologics development. The presentation will highlight the incorporation of the Berkeley Lights Beacon optofluidic system into our cell line development platform and the impact delivered on enabling an accelerated, more efficient, and regulatory ready cell line and cell culture development.

14:45 Session Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall
15:00 LIVE PANEL DISCUSSION:

Adopting and Implementing Bioproduction 4.0

Panel Moderator:
Eugen Probst, PhD, Scientist, Late Stage NBE Projects, Boehringer Ingelheim, Germany
Panelist:
Julian Kager, PhD, Postdoctoral Researcher, TU Vienna, Austria
15:30 Bioprocessing Summit Connects
16:00 Close of Day

Wednesday, 17 March

INNOVATIONS IN BIOPRODUCTION

09:00

Seamless Integration of Glucose Control Using Raman Spectroscopy in CHO Cell Culture

Celia Sanchez, Bioprocess Project Engineer, R&D, Merck Life Science, France

In this study, a Raman analyzer has been successfully used to implement a feedback control loop in a CHO cell culture based on glucose concentration. The feedback control loop implied a direct OPC UA connectivity between the analyzer and the bioreactor control system. The culture was fed with a complex feed containing glucose. As a result, glucose concentration was maintained steady for three days. The process performance remained similar to the ones of regular fed batch cultures and a noteworthy decrease in lactate concentration production was observed. The process was completely automated.

09:20

Accelerating Bioprocess Development with Iterative Learning Approaches

Moritz von Stosch, PhD, Chief Innovation Officer, Datahow, Switzerland

Platform bioprocesses offer standardized bioprocess development for a novel biologic with less experimentation than historically. Yet, the fine-tuning of the process conditions and scale-up to production consistently takes several month to years. By using an iterative learning approach we can reduce these times, efficiently transferring knowledge from project to project, scale to scale. Hybrid models constitute the core of our learning approach, efficiently integrating different knowledge sources. Our results suggest that significant acceleration can be achieved.

Fiona Bellot, Protein Sales Manager, Proteintech Europe Ltd

We will present the advantage of using human expressed cytokines and growth factors and GMP ancillary materials in bioprocessing.  Included with be a brief case study of Thermostable FGF-basic.

10:00 Session Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall
10:15 Breakout Session

Join your colleagues and fellow delegates for a focused, informal discussion moderated by a member of our speaking faculty.  A small group format allows participants to meet potential collaborators, share examples from their own work and discuss ideas with peers.

BREAKOUT SESSION: Technologies for the Future of Bioprocess Development: What Are They and How to Choose?

Moritz von Stosch, PhD, Chief Innovation Officer, Datahow, Switzerland
  • What are the bioprocess (development) technologies of the future?​
  • How to focus effort on the most relevant technologies for bioprocess (development) of the future?
  • Will our current business models still work?
  • How do new modalities change the bioprocess (development) landscape?
10:45

Developments in Scale-Down Bioreactors

Stefan Junne, PhD, Senior Scientist & Group Leader, Bioprocess Engineering, Technische Universität Berlin, Germany

Scale down has lost none of its importance for faster bioprocess development and optimization. Miniaturization and parallelization, and the availability of better analytics, also in combination with tailored bioreactors, allow better possibilities to identify cellular stress responses to conditions on a large scale. Processes that differ from classical suspension cultures are also becoming the focus of scale-down approaches. The talk shall provide an overview of recent developments in the field.

11:05

Medium Choice and Development for Perfusion Processes

Vicky Goralczyk, PhD, Director, Cell Line & Bioprocess Development, GLYCOTOPE GmbH, Germany

Although perfusion processes gain interest in the biotech community, available perfusion media are scarce. Shifting from a fed-batch process to a competitive perfusion process moreover requires reduction in medium cost. We present case study data for a comparison of commercial perfusion media versus Glycotope's well developped own perfusion medium, show approaches to improve medium formulation, and present data for using a high-performing fed-batch medium in a perfusion process.

Giovanni Campolongo, Market Segment Manager Process Analytics, Process Analytics, Hamilton Bonaduz AG

The major challenge of industrial production of mAb or vaccines is to reduce batch-to-batch variability. Initiatives such as the PAT, push the implementation of in-line sensors for real-time monitoring and control of the Critical Process Parameters and the Key Performance Indicators of those productions. To enable efficient automated control, process sensors must deliver reliable measurements: this is best addressed by the so-called “intelligent sensors”, which will be described in this contribution.

Wolfgang Sommeregger, PhD, Product Manager - Qubicon, Research & Development, Bilfinger Industrietechnik Salzburg GmbH

QUBICON® stands for better product quality in pharmaceutical manufacturing. The software enables the close monitoring of processes and the immediate, advanced control response to deviations by collecting data and performing complex calculations in real-time. Through diverse examples in mammalian cell culture technology – such as feed-on-demand control and continuous mAb manufacturing – we demonstrate the versatile applicability of the software for better performing processes.

11:55 LIVE PANEL DISCUSSION:

Exploring New Innovations in Bioprocessing

Panel Moderator:
Moritz von Stosch, PhD, Chief Innovation Officer, Datahow, Switzerland
Panelists:
Vicky Goralczyk, PhD, Director, Cell Line & Bioprocess Development, GLYCOTOPE GmbH, Germany
Stefan Junne, PhD, Senior Scientist & Group Leader, Bioprocess Engineering, Technische Universität Berlin, Germany
Celia Sanchez, Bioprocess Project Engineer, R&D, Merck Life Science, France
Giovanni Campolongo, Market Segment Manager Process Analytics, Process Analytics, Hamilton Bonaduz AG
Fiona Bellot, Protein Sales Manager, Proteintech Europe Ltd
Wolfgang Sommeregger, PhD, Product Manager - Qubicon, Research & Development, Bilfinger Industrietechnik Salzburg GmbH
12:25 Session Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall

PROCESS MONITORING AND CONTROL

12:55

Accelerated Bioprocess Development and Optimization Using Hybrid Models and Optimal Experiments on Robotic Cultivation Platforms

Lukas Hebing, PhD, Scientist, Engineering & Technology, Bayer AG, Germany

The development of bioprocesses is a complicated task due to the large number of design variables (media composition, feeding, control, etc.), the complex process behavior and the limited experimental resources. We will present methods for cultivations, mathematical modeling, design-of-experiments and process control which are applied at Bayer in order to be able to find optimal process designs in short development timelines.

13:15

A Tale of Two Models: Using Predictive Modelling and Machine Learning to Create Advanced Process Control in Mammalian Bioprocesses

Jonathan Jones, Scientist, Upstream Processing, Centre for Process Innovation, United Kingdom

Establishing a productive yet consistent mammalian bioprocess is an ongoing challenge throughout the industry. With case studies, we demonstrate how the application of predictive modelling can be applied across a range of parameters for the optimisation of process control within a cell culture bioreactor. Encompassing at-line analysis for predictive feeding, and machine learning controller tuning for DO and pH control, the two strategies demonstrate a novel approach for bioprocess control.

Clint Pepper, Senior Manager, BioSciences, Lonza

Deployment of automated sampling solutions in bioprocess development laboratories has demonstrated product quality attribute data can be generated in hours instead of weeks. Access to real-time product quality data allows development of dynamic experimental designs, reducing the overall cost of product development. Using an automated approach, scientists can save non-productive time spent manually sampling and running analyses, allowing focus on evaluation of the product quality data and rapid decision making.

13:55

Novel Methods for Continuous Monitoring of Cell Viability

Michael Butler, PhD, Principal Investigator, Cell Technology, National Institute for Bioprocessing Research & Training (NIBRT), Ireland

Standard methods of monitoring cell growth in bioreactors are often by inefficient procedures of off-line cell staining, using methods that have been in use for decades. These can be replaced by continuous optical and dielectric methods that offer real-time analysis of not only cell density but the metabolic state of cells. This presentation will evaluate alternative methods of continuous monitoring cells and the information they provide during a bioprocess.

14:15

Characterization to Support Identification of Cell Culture CQAs

Chris M. Chumsae, PhD, Associate Director, Analytical Development, Bristol-Myers Squibb, United States

As recombinant protein drugs become more complex, post-translational and chemical modifications can have a significant influence on the structure function relationship. To ensure that the desired critical quality attributes are obtained, advanced analytics should be applied to understand how Process Development can influence the recombinant protein drug. This talk will focus on the challenges and approaches that can be employed to produce a protein drug with the desired CQA profile.



Geoffrey Esteban, CEO, Sales & Marketing, IPRASENSE

From cell line to process development, the tested conditions are intensified with the aim of automation and reduction of cell culture volume, reconsidering historical method for cell viability and viable cell count. The label-free cell counters NORMA allow the High Throughput cell culture monitoring from small volume of unprepared samples. Integrated to High Throughput microbioreactors, the NORMA is easy to use, accurate and provides a fully automated solution

14:55 Session Break
15:05 LIVE PANEL DISCUSSION:

New Directions in Process Monitoring and Control

Panel Moderator:
Michael Butler, PhD, Principal Investigator, Cell Technology, National Institute for Bioprocessing Research & Training (NIBRT), Ireland
Panelists:
Chris M. Chumsae, PhD, Associate Director, Analytical Development, Bristol-Myers Squibb, United States
Lukas Hebing, PhD, Scientist, Engineering & Technology, Bayer AG, Germany
Jonathan Jones, Scientist, Upstream Processing, Centre for Process Innovation, United Kingdom
Clint Pepper, Senior Manager, BioSciences, Lonza
Geoffrey Esteban, CEO, Sales & Marketing, IPRASENSE
15:35 Close of Summit