Gene and cell therapy expert Dr. Gerhard Bauer explores the powerful therapies that use a patient's own immune cells to treat cancer
In this article, we hear from Dr. Gerhard Bauer, Professor of Hematology-Oncology at the UC Davis Medical Center within the School of Medicine and Director and Designer of the UC Davis Good Manufacturing Practice Facility. Following his earlier research on stem cell gene therapy for HIV and severe combined immune deficiency (SCID), Bauer discusses his current work overseeing the development of life-saving CAR-T cells, highlights how new self-sterilizing instruments have been critical to his teams production of safe gene therapy products for patients, and shares his hopes for the future.
Tell us more about the Good Manufacturing Practice Lab at the UC Davis Institute, and your journey to becoming director
GB: In my early years, I helped operate a laboratory in Vienna testing laboratory blood products for HIV. Until finally, I thought, if I really want to do something about HIV and want to find a treatment or cure for it, then I need to do more than just testing test kits. I was subsequently hired by the University of Maryland at Baltimore to run the HIV laboratory. Whilst there I was able to find a predictor for HIV transmission, from mother to child, which at that time was a cell-based assay designed to predict the transmission rate. From this, we were able to demonstrate that higher viral load leads to more transmission.
I was then asked to move over to the Johns Hopkins University, where I started on the development of stem cell gene therapy for HIV. And then on to Dr. Donald Kohn's laboratory at Children's Hospital Los Angeles, where I was fortunate enough to be able to work on developing all the clinical-grade procedures to transport genes into hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells. This research led to the development of a completely new treatment for ADA-deficient SCID, severe combined immune deficiency.
After the success of the clinical-grade procedures, I was asked to go to Washington University in St. Louis, to build them a completely new Good Manufacturing Practice facility for cell and gene therapy. This was because I had built a GMP facility among the first academic GMP facilities at Children's Hospital Los Angeles. A few years later I moved to California to help build another GMP facility at University of California, Davis, where I am still conducting my research.
The UC Davis Medical Center is a manufacturing facility for cell and gene therapy products that are being used in clinical trials to help treat patients with currently incurable diseases. In this aspect, I overlook all the manufacturing efforts for novel clinical trials. Since 2010, we have been operating very successfully and have a whole pallet of applications, cell and gene therapy, and other applications that we manufacture here.
What are the main goals for your projects using homegrown CAR-T cell therapy approaches?
GB: A very interesting project that we have been tackling is CAR-T cells. Everybody talks about CAR-T cells these days because they have turned from an experimental project into commercialized applications. CAR-T cells are chimeric antigen receptor T cells. They are gene-modified immune cells from the patient. You can take a patient's immune cells, specifically T cells, out in a blood collection procedure, put them into a laboratory, and then insert genes that will produce a completely novel receptor on the cell surface that can recognize cancer cells. Chemotherapy and radiotherapy only kill the fast-growing tumor cells but often a patient will have a relapse. The relapse comes from cells that have survived the chemotherapy or radiation.
The immune system, if properly equipped, allows for the surveillance of all the cancer cells that may still be there even after chemotherapy. With CAR-T cells, we have developed such a weapon that allows the patient's own immune system to recognize the cancer and eliminate it. This can also be sustained elimination because the T cells develop memory T cells that will be reactivated when the cancer comes back.
In my career here at UC Davis, I have been involved in several CAR-T cell projects initiated by biotech companies. Also, another one initiated by UC Davis in collaboration with University of California, San Francisco. And we are manufacturing such CAR-T cells in the laboratory currently and we are initiating investigational new drug applications, INDs, with the FDA to apply these homegrown CAR-T cells as we call them to patients in San Francisco and also here at UC Davis.
What role do incubators play in cell and gene therapy development?
GB: Within a Good Manufacturing Practice laboratory, we need equipment that can be calibrated and that can maintain the operational status in a very precise way, from beginning to end of the process. Also, we must be able to clean these pieces of equipment appropriately. This means we maintain a very clean environment so as not to cross-contaminate or bring any other infections in. It is very important that we get laboratory equipment that can handle all of this.
I have had a good experience with the incubators that we have had over the years in our laboratories. Some had lasted for over 10 years until we replaced them with newer incubators with a unique feature. That feature is a self-sterilizing incubator, which has helped us tremendously in our efforts. We need to keep the time that we work on maintenance of the equipment low because our technicians are needed for making the products. We do not have to do an autoclaving step on the shelves and everything that is in there. We can leave everything in, and it sterilizes itself. It has saved us so much time and effort and our technicians are grateful for that.
Without these incubators, I do not think we would be able to efficiently produce as many products as we do currently. We also must make sure that we produce a safe and efficacious patient product if we do not have reliable incubators, we cannot make reliable products.
What is your vision for the future of gene therapy?
GB: Up to now we have been able to demonstrate that gene therapy is very safe. We have seen so many patients cured with ADA-deficient SCID safely. In CAR-T cell therapy, which is also a gene therapy, we have saved the lives of so many patients safely.
In the future, we need to expand these already working methods. We must make CAR-T cell therapy available for the many people that need it. Often scaling up is not possible because it is an autologous therapy. I would say scale out, not scale up. Scaling out means that you have many different laboratories where you can make these products and each product is being made in an efficient way. We are going to have to develop methods to efficiently manufacture these products side by side. This will be possible with automation.
Hopefully, in a few years down the road, we will be able to provide those who need it with cell and gene therapy. The second thing is that it is likely that genetic diseases will be curable with gene therapy, more of these cures are being worked on currently. Not only is cell therapy involved in that, but gene therapy vectors can also be administered directly into the patient to look for the cells they need to cure, and then illicit the cure directly without having to transplant cells. So, the future is very interesting, and having seen it from the very beginning to where we are now is something that I really enjoy.
More on the impact of PHCbi technology:
Find out more about Dr. Gerhard Bauers research here>>
Do you use PHCbi products in your lab? Write a review today for your chance to win a $400 Amazon gift card>>
Read the original:
Editorial Article: Combating cancer: The incubation technology accelerating CAR-T cell therapy development - SelectScience
- Regenerative Medicine - Stem Cell Therapy Little Rock - March 8th, 2021
- Center for Stem Cell Biology & Regenerative Medicine ... - March 8th, 2021
- Dynamic Stem Cell Therapy Offers Regenerative Medicine - Las Vegas Review-Journal - March 8th, 2021
- Anti-EGFR VHH-armed death receptor ligandengineered allogeneic stem cells have therapeutic efficacy in diverse brain metastatic breast cancers -... - March 8th, 2021
- Research Antibodies Market Size to Reach USD 5325.8 Million by 2027 | Increasing R&D; Activities in the Fields of Oncology, Neurobiology, and Stem... - March 8th, 2021
- Microwave Processing Isolates Red Ginseng Compounds That Suppress Lung Cancer Metastasis - Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News - March 8th, 2021
- Longeveron Expands Enrollment Criteria for its Phase 1 RECOVER Trial Evaluating Lomecel-B Infusion to Treat Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome due to... - March 8th, 2021
- Be The Match BioTherapies Announces Expansion of Multi-Year Strategic Alliance with Orchard Therapeutics to Support European Commercial Launch of... - March 8th, 2021
- Autologous Stem Cell and Non-Stem Cell Based Therapies Market 2021: Focuses at the key worldwide companies to Define, Describe and Analyses the sales... - March 8th, 2021
- Editing Reproduction: CRISPR and preventing heritable diseases, With Dr. Dietrich Egli and Dr. Sam Sternberg - Columbia University Irving Medical... - March 8th, 2021
- U. Cancer Center pilot projects: investigating cancer connections - The Brown Daily Herald - March 8th, 2021
- COVID-19 can kill heart muscle cells, interfere with contraction Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis - Washington University School... - March 8th, 2021
- Vaccinating by age groups is unfair, particularly to minorities, advisory panel tells CDC - USA TODAY - March 8th, 2021
- Winter Weather Impacting Blood and Platelet Donations - Milwaukee Community Journal - February 17th, 2021
- Joshua Shirk continues to fight the odds; mom says God placed people where they needed to be to help him - Keyser Mineral Daily News Tribune - February 17th, 2021
- Evotec and Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf Enter Partnership to Develop iPSC-Based Tissue Therapy for Heart Failure - GuruFocus.com - February 7th, 2021
- ProgenCell - Stem Cell Therapies offers an updated Stem Cell Therapy for Anti Aging Protocol - PR Web - January 30th, 2021
- Doctors urge immunocompromised to get COVID vaccine when it becomes available - KMTV - 3 News Now - January 30th, 2021
- Autologous Stem Cell and Non Stem Based therapies Market Share, Size 2021 Global Industry Future Trends, Growth, Strategies,, Segmentation, In-depth... - January 30th, 2021
- Studies Indicating T-Cells May Be Needed For Long-Term Protection From The SARS-Cov-2 Virus - PRNewswire - January 30th, 2021
- Researchers use patients' cells to test gene therapy for rare eye disease - National Institutes of Health - January 30th, 2021
- Two Gene Therapies Fix Fault in Sickle Cell Disease and -thalassemia - MD Magazine - January 30th, 2021
- If I Have Cancer, Dementia or MS, Should I Get the Covid Vaccine? - Kaiser Health News - January 30th, 2021
- L-MIND Trial Results Show CD19 Antibody Is Reasonable in R/R DLBCL - Targeted Oncology - January 30th, 2021
- Profile of T Cells, Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies, Anti-Viral Targets: COVID-19 Updates - Bio-IT World - January 30th, 2021
- HealthLynked's The Future of Healthcare Summit Brings Healthcare Experts and Technology Innovators from Around the World to Naples, Florida - WFMZ... - January 30th, 2021
- Tevogen Bio Secures Funding from Team of Doctors to Support Clinical Trials of Its Investigational Curative T Cell Therapy for COVID-19 - PRNewswire - January 25th, 2021
- Novel Treatment Leads to Dog's Recovery - The Bark - January 25th, 2021
- Identification and Targeting of ThomsenFriedenreich and IL1RAP | OTT - Dove Medical Press - January 25th, 2021
- Regenerative Medicine Market Size Worth $74831.35 Million With CAGR of 22.27% By 2024 | Segmented by Product Type, Top Manufacturers, By End-User... - January 25th, 2021
- Immunotherapy Inches Forward in Development of Myeloid Malignancies - OncLive - January 14th, 2021
- Cytovia Therapeutics Partners with National Cancer Institute to Develop Novel Gene-Edited, iPSC-Derived GPC3 CAR NK Cells for the Treatment of Solid... - January 14th, 2021
- Kaleido Biosciences Announces Positive Interim Results of Controlled Study of KB109 in Patients with Mild-to-Moderate COVID-19 - BioSpace - January 14th, 2021
- Doctors Make Medical Breakthrough In Treating Severe Cases Of COVID - CBS San Francisco - January 9th, 2021
- Mana joins the hectic fight against solid tumors with an 'off-the-shelf' candidate angling for an IND this year - Endpoints News - January 9th, 2021
- Versiti Blood Centers and Noodles & Company Serve Up Thanks to Blood Donors - PRNewswire - December 31st, 2020
- Global CAR-T Pipeline Insight Report 2020: Overview, Landscape, Therapeutic Assessment, Current Treatment Scenario and Emerging Therapies -... - December 31st, 2020
- 2020 health care year in review - Crain's Cleveland Business - December 31st, 2020
- The Top 10 FDA Oncology Drug Approvals of 2020 - Curetoday.com - December 31st, 2020
- Gut microbiota: How does it interact with the brain? - Medical News Today - December 31st, 2020
- Numerous Indian American STEM Researchers Named Fellows of American Association for the Advancement of Sciences - India West - December 31st, 2020
- Four years after devastating spinal injury, former St. Paul's football player reunites with caregivers - NOLA.com - December 24th, 2020
- New Combination Therapy Tested By Children's May Offer Hope For Leukemia Patients - WVXU - December 24th, 2020
- Real-time observation helpful in Stem cell for vascular diseases: Study - Hindustan Times - December 21st, 2020
- NurOwn May Be Given to Early ALS Patients in US Who Finished Phase... - ALS News Today - December 21st, 2020
- Follow the Money: Spatial Omics, CAR-NK Cells, AI-Powered Biology - Bio-IT World - December 21st, 2020
- Explained: Process of transporting stem cell from donor to patient for a successful transplant - Firstpost - December 18th, 2020
- Research That Saves Lives: Four COVID-19 Therapies Being Tested at UVA - University of Virginia - December 18th, 2020
- Even if You've Had COVID-19 You Still Need the Vaccine - Healthline - December 18th, 2020
- What Patients With Cancer, Survivors Need to Know About the Emergency Use Authorization of COVID-19 Vaccine - Curetoday.com - December 16th, 2020
- 2020 at the U: The year in review - University of Miami - December 16th, 2020
- Five Mobile County hospitals to get Pfizer vaccine this week - AL.com - December 16th, 2020
- Donor Stem Cell Transplant Improves Survival in Older Patients with Myelodysplastic Syndrome - Cancer Health Treatment News - December 10th, 2020
- Positive Phase 2 Proof-of-Concept Data for Viralym-M and Burden of Disease Data Presented in Oral Presentations at the 62nd American Society of... - December 10th, 2020
- Dr. Kansagra: Quadruplet Therapy for Newly Diagnosed Multiple Myeloma and Combination CAR T-Cell Opportunities - DocWire News - December 10th, 2020
- Silicon Therapeutics Announces Members of Scientific Advisory Board - Business Wire - December 10th, 2020
- Israeli Neurogenesis' NG-01 slows progressive MS by up to 90% in phase II study - BioWorld Online - December 10th, 2020
- ADC Therapeutics Announces Updated Clinical Data on Lead Antibody Drug Conjugate Programs Loncastuximab Tesirine (Lonca) and Camidanlumab Tesirine... - December 10th, 2020
- Magenta Therapeutics Announces Commencement of First Phase 2 Clinical Trial of MGTA-145 for Stem Cell Mobilization, Oral Presentation of MGTA-145... - December 8th, 2020
- Precigen Presents New Data Supporting the Safety, Clinical Activity, Expansion and Persistence of PRGN-3006 UltraCAR-T at the 62nd ASH Annual Meeting... - December 8th, 2020
- ALLO-715, Off-the-Shelf CAR T-Cell Therapy, Produces Early Promise in Multiple Myeloma - Cancer Network - December 8th, 2020
- Rocket Pharmaceuticals Presents Positive Clinical Data from its Fanconi Anemia and Leukocyte Adhesion Deficiency-I Programs at the 62nd American... - December 8th, 2020
- Negrin Shines Light on the Orca-T Story in GVHD - OncLive - December 8th, 2020
- Preliminary Results from NexImmune's Phase 1/2 Trial of NEXI-001 in AML Presented at 62nd ASH Annual Meeting and Exposition - GlobeNewswire - December 8th, 2020
- BeiGene Announces the Approval in China of BLINCYTO (Blinatumomab) for Injection for Adult Patients with Relapsed or Refractory B-Cell Precursor Acute... - December 8th, 2020
- Sutro Biopharma Presents Data from Ongoing Phase 1 Dose-Escalation Study for STRO-001 for the Treatment of B-cell Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma at the 62nd... - December 8th, 2020
- Data from the ANDROMEDA Study Show Hematologic Response for DARZALEX FASPRO (daratumumab and hyaluronidase-fihj) in Newly Diagnosed Light Chain (AL)... - December 8th, 2020
- US FDA Approves Naxitamab for the Treatment of Neuroblastoma - OncoZine - November 29th, 2020
- Coronavirus treatments and vaccines. Here are the latest developments - San Francisco Chronicle - November 29th, 2020
- Dr Apar Kishor Ganti Outlines the Effectiveness of Lurbinectedin and Benefits Over Competition - AJMC.com Managed Markets Network - November 26th, 2020
- Commonly used antibiotic shows promise for combating Zika infections - National Institutes of Health - November 26th, 2020
- A real life Superman celebrates 5 years of survival from one of the deadliest cancers - Newswise - November 26th, 2020
- Global Cell Harvesting Market to Reach US$381,4 Million by the Year 2027 - Salamanca Press - November 26th, 2020
- Tanya Siddiqi, MD, Discusses the Promise of Reduced Toxicity With Liso-Cel - AJMC.com Managed Markets Network - November 26th, 2020
- Tetracycline-based Antibiotics Show Promise for Combating Zika Infections - Global Biodefense - November 26th, 2020
- Study Suggests AYAs Treated for AML Have High Risk of Developing Long-Term Complications - Cancer Network - November 26th, 2020
- Mustang Bio Announces Positive Opinion from the European Medicines Agency on Orphan Drug Designation for Its Lentiviral Gene Therapy for the Treatment... - November 26th, 2020
- Study Finds Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Treatment of AL Amyloidosis - DocWire News - November 22nd, 2020
- New Virtual Reality Tool, Domestic Cats are SARS-CoV-2 Carriers, Combination Therapy Advances: COVID-19 Updates - Bio-IT World - November 22nd, 2020
- SEE | Smoking worsens Covid-19 infection in the airways, new study reveals - Health24 - November 22nd, 2020
