Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s 5th Annual

Analytics and Characterisation

Unlocking Biotherapeutic Potential with Advanced Technologies and Process Optimization

19 - 20 March 2024 ALL TIMES CET

Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s 5th Annual Analytics and Characterisation meeting discusses methods for ensuring biotherapeutic safety, purity, and potency. Topics include process development optimization, quality control, monitoring, advances in analytical tools and techniques as well as risk assessment and mitigation strategies. We tackle important problems such as understanding the complexity and heterogeneity of biomolecules, managing impurities, and addressing the need for analytical equipment that can keep pace with increasing demands. Here, we convene to enable more comprehensive characterisation and analysis of biotherapeutics.

Tuesday, 19 March

Registration and Morning Coffee07:00

ADVANCES IN ANALYTICAL TECHNOLOGIES AND TECHNIQUES

08:25

Chairperson's Opening Remarks

Miroslav Nikolov, PhD, Senior Scientist & Laboratory Head, Roche

08:30

FEATURED PRESENTATION: Multi-Attribute Method (MAM) Using Electron-Activated Dissociation (EAD)-Mass Spectrometry: Superior Characterisation and Monitoring of Biotherapeutic Quality Attributes

Ricardo Gomes, PhD, Senior Researcher, Mass Spectrometry Unit, iBET—Instituto de Biologia Experimental e Tecnológica

The increasing complexity of biotherapeutics requires the development of advanced bioanalytical methods. Mass spectrometry-based methods such as the multi-attribute method (MAM) allow for the simultaneous identification, quantification, and monitoring of critical quality attributes. In this work, we will discuss the use of the newly developed electron-activated dissociation (EAD)-QTOF mass spectrometer as an improved analytical tool for the accurate identification and characterisation of challenging product quality attributes.

09:00

New Developments in the Field of Developability Assessment for Therapeutic Proteins

Paul Wassmann, PhD, Senior Principal Scientist, NIBR Biologics Center, Novartis

Developability assessment is a well-established concept at pharmaceutical industry to mitigate early on possible risks for drug candidates, which in absence of identification might endanger whole programs. But are these concepts addressing all the critical parameters? And how can the higher candidate assessment demand be optimised to not overburden the resources of the organisation? Examples of new modules in the developability assessment concept for biologics will be shown.

09:30 From Cell Line To Final Formulation: Characterizing MAb Stability Throughout The Development Pathway

Paul Dyer, PhD, Field Application Scientist, Halo Labs

Antibody-producing cell lines have been used to produce antibodies, often without any consideration for aggregation. Aura+ is used to characterize antibody stability during cell line development (CLD). Aura+ enables low volume, high throughput subvisible particle imaging, counting, sizing, and identification. It easily handles and analyses biologically complex cellular and protein samples present in CLD to characterize protein stability at the point of production.

Grand Opening Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing10:00

10:45

Automating Analytical Characterisation of Next-Generation Protein Therapeutics

Miroslav Nikolov, PhD, Senior Scientist & Laboratory Head, Roche

I will present the latest advances in end-to-end automation, digitalisation and data management of the protein analytics workflows in the pharma research and early development (pRED) unit of Roche, focusing on mass spectrometry analysis of complex antibody-based drug candidates. It is routinely applied to a variety of sample types and throughput, from early binder screening to clone selection, and bioprocess development.

11:15

Development of CE-SDS-Based New Approach towards Characterisation of Spike Protein

Rahul Mishra, PhD, Senior Analytical Scientist, AstraZeneca

SARS-CoV-2 spike protein has emerged as a prime target for vaccine development  and serological assays. The heavily glycosylated structure with host-derived glycans two O-glycans sites not only aids the virus in evading the host immune response but further makes it challenging to characterise its physicochemical attributes such as its stability and fragmentation. This was overcome by performing buffer exchange and deglycosylation, thereby optimising inherent migration behaviour in capillary electrophoresis.

11:45

Analytical Challenges and Opportunities for Development of mRNA/LNP-Based Therapeutics

Gunilla Nilsson, MSc, Associate Director, Advanced Drug Delivery, Pharmaceutical Sciences, AstraZeneca

Due to the chemical properties of mRNA, including its size, charge, polydispersity, and susceptibility to degradation, the quality control of mRNA therapeutics is complex. Approaches for control strategies and the quality attributes for release and stability testing of mRNA lipid nanoparticle drug products will be outlined. The main impurities and degradation pathways to consider will be described. In addition, key methods for mRNA LNP analysis will be showcased.

12:15 Advances in Process Analytical Technology (PAT) Knowledge Management Software

Michael Sachpekidis, BEng MSc MIET, Business Development Manager - Europe, Optimal Industrial Technologies Limited

Comprehensive PAT solutions enable manufacturers to measure CQAs and provide closed-loop control in real time. PAT supports automated, multi-instrument, holistic quality assurance; provides timely critical quality predictions; and captures all necessary, regulatory-compliant data and metadata. Beyond this, advancements in PAT software provide for more targeted improvements, as required by the increasing complexity of the monitored processes. This leads to more advanced control strategies, continuous manufacturing and Real-Time Release Testing.

Networking Lunch (Sponsorship Opportunity Available)12:45

CHARACTERISATION OPTIMISATION

13:45

Chairperson's Remarks

Dan Bach Kristensen, PhD, Principal Scientist, Symphogen

13:50

Enabling Efficient and Automated Sample Preparation in Bottom-up Characterisation of mAbs Using Multidimensional Chromatography

Christoph Gstoettner, PhD, Postdoctoral Researcher, Center for Proteomics and Metabolomics, Leiden University Medical Center

Characterisation of antibody biopharmaceuticals largely relies on mass-spectrometric approaches which involves various sample preparation steps including protein digestion. These steps are time-consuming and can increase the risk of inducing artificial modifications. Using multidimensional LC-MS we have developed a platform that enables automated sample preparation (including digestion with different enzymes) and MS analysis. The results were comparable to offline approaches, while drastically reducing analysis and hands-on time.

14:20

An Optimised Platform Method for the Characterisation of Disulfide Linkages and Free Thiols in Challenging Antibodies, Fusion Proteins, and Replacement Enzymes

Yan Jiang, PhD, Principal Scientist, Biologics Development Bioanalytics, Sanofi

Disulfide bond formation plays an important role in protein folding, stability, and biological functions, and therefore should be well-characterised during biotherapeutics development to ensure correct cysteine pairing and protein-structural integrity. A mass spectrometry-based disulfide mapping method was developed to provide accurate relative quantitation of free thiols, and high recovery of disulfide-linked peptides. This platform has been successfully applied to a diverse variety of therapeutic proteins.

14:50

Robust Approaches Towards Development of Reversed Phase UPLC Assay for Relative Quantification of Percent PolyA in mRNA

Siddharth Bhoraskar, PhD, Senior Scientist, Beam Therapeutics

The talk underscores the pivotal role of polyA tailed mRNA in mRNA-based therapeutics and presents a unique approach to assay development. By crafting a generic method, we efficiently characterized both tailed and tailless mRNA molecules. Leveraging this initial data, we optimised the method into a robust analytical assay, now serving as a release assay and enabling high-throughput screening of multiple mRNA lots and plasmid batches. This innovative assay not only ensures product consistency, but also expedites the development and manufacturing processes, highlighting its paramount significance in the rapidly evolving landscape of mRNA-based therapeutics.

15:20 Host Cell Protein ELISAs: The Scientific and Business Decisions to Ensure Successful Outcomes

Eric Bishop, Vice President of Research and Development, R&D, Cygnus Technologies

Host cell protein analytics have come a long way over the last 25 years.  We have gone from a “black-box” type approach to ELISA that produced numbers that were semiquantitative at best to ground-breaking Mass Spectrometry techniques that can identify every host cell protein in a drug substance sample. This presentation will focus on the scientific, regulatory, and business decisions that should be considered when deciding to use a commercial HCP ELISA or a custom HCP ELISA when moving a product into Phase 3 clinical trials. 

Refreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing15:50

16:20

Automatic Peak Fractionation of Any LC Separation Combined with Any MS Workflow for Flexible, Robust, Ultra-Sensitive, and in-Depth Biopharmaceutical Characterisation

Dan Bach Kristensen, PhD, Principal Scientist, Symphogen

Recent progress in MS characterisation platform will be presented. Topics include automated fraction collection from any type of LC separation (including non-MS compatible LC methods) combined with a broad range of MS characterisation workflows (including intact LC-MS, peptide mapping by LC-MS/MS, and direct-infusion MS) of the individual LC fractions. The characterisation platform provides highly flexible, robust, ultra-sensitive, and in-depth characterisation of proteoforms. Case studies and perspective will be presented.

IMPROVED SAFETY, WORKFLOW, AND REGULATORY NAVIGATION

16:50

Navigating the Gaps between Phase-Appropriate and Marketing Applications—And Cleaning Up the Messes Made along the Way

Christina Vessely, PhD, Senior Consultant, CMC Analytics & Formulation Development, Biologics Consulting Group, Inc.

Product development spans many years and includes transitions in personnel, facilities, and overall strategy. By necessity, we prioritise the items required to reach the next milestone. Yet, the studies that are critical to identifying gaps are often performed late in development. Changes in technology and regulations may invalidate historical work. This presentation provides advice on gap mitigation as we approach our BLA/marketing applications.

17:20

From Liquid to Solid Transition: The Role of Phase Separation in Protein Stability and Aggregation

Vito Foderà, PhD, Associate Professor, Biophysics, University of Copenhagen

The ability of proteins to aggregate is a challenge upon the development of therapeutic products. By fluorescence microscopy, X-ray scattering, spectroscopy and molecular dynamics, we identify the interactions responsible for protein phase separation, conformational changes, and colloidal instability, and how those aspects are linked to the variability in the morphologies. Our findings provide a scenario in which heterogeneous structures can be generated as a result of interconnected aggregation pathways.

INTERACTIVE BREAKOUT DISCUSSIONS

17:50Interactive Breakout Discussions

Interactive Breakout Discussions are informal, moderated discussions, allowing participants to exchange ideas and experiences and develop future collaborations around a focused topic. Each discussion will be led by a facilitator who keeps the discussion on track and the group engaged. To get the most out of this format, please come prepared to share examples from your work, be a part of a collective, problem-solving session, and participate in active idea sharing. Please visit the Interactive Breakout Discussions page on the conference website for a complete listing of topics and descriptions.

IN-PERSON ONLY BREAKOUT:

Challenges and Opportunities Towards Analytical Development for Next Generation Manufacturing (NGM) Process Optimization

Rahul Mishra, PhD, Senior Analytical Scientist, AstraZeneca

  • How we can proceed with the High throughput analytical methods (size, charge, fragments, and glycan) to support the NGM process?
  • Is there opportunity for characterization methods to be scaled up for High throughput analysis?
  • What are the risk and challenges?​

Welcome Reception in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing18:30

Close of Day19:30

Wednesday, 20 March

Registration and Morning Coffee08:00

IMPROVED SAFETY, WORKFLOW, AND REGULATORY NAVIGATION

08:25

Chairperson's Remarks

Jahid Hasan, PhD, Lead, Technical, Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult

08:30

Defining Patient-Centric Specification in a Risk-Based Control System

Gerald Gellermann, PhD, Scientific Officer, Analytical Development, Novartis

Defining limits for analytical method outputs is a central element of a control strategy. Traditional approaches usually focus on ensuring process consistency, while, in more advanced approaches, the understanding of structural-function relationships is utilised. This enables definition of limits that may extend outside those determined by clinical experience. Where indicated, this is required to incorporate more worst-case assessments to predict future manufacturing variability as the basis to mitigate risks to patients and supply.

09:00

Process Control Strategy Development for Cell and Gene Therapy Products

Jahid Hasan, PhD, Lead, Technical, Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult

Analytical characterisation of cell and gene therapy manufacturing processes is essential for process understanding and driving quality-by-design development. Incorporation of higher-content analytical techniques that result in meaningful outputs which can be used to drive higher-quality process development and integrate into a manufacturing setting is a challenge and one that the Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult is looking to address for allogeneic cell therapy manufacturing processes.

09:30 KEYNOTE PRESENTATION

Detecting Low-Abundance HCPs in Biopharmaceuticals: Advances & Applications

Thomas Waerner, PhD, Senior Principal Scientist & Laboratory Director, Analytical Development & Quality Control, Boehringer Ingelheim Pharma GmbH & Co. KG

Host Cell Proteins (HCPs) represent undesirable contaminants in biopharmaceutical products. The presence of even low-abundance HCPs can significantly affect product quality. In this study, we present our latest research on utilising tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS), coupled with HCP enrichment techniques for detecting low-abundance HCPs. We also provide case studies demonstrating the application of these findings to enhance biopharmaceutical product quality, with a particular emphasis on CHO production.

10:00 Mass Photometry - A Fast and Accurate Analytical Tool for Biomolecular Characterisation

Benjamin Cappe, PhD, Field Applications Specialist, Sales, Refeyn

Mass photometry is a single-particle analytical technology that measures the masses of biomolecules in their native states, in solution. The TwoMP mass photometer is an easy-to-use instrument that can measure masses of biomolecules between 30 kDa and 5 MDa. In this talk, we demonstrate the utility of the TwoMP in a variety of contexts, including monitoring antibody-antigen interactions, quantifying small-molecule induced changes to complex formation, assessing sample purity and more.

Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing10:30

PLENARY KEYNOTE SESSION

BACK TO THE FUTURE OF BIOPROCESSING—ANTIBODIES TO EXTRACELLULAR VESICLES

11:15

Chairperson's Opening Remarks

Alois Jungbauer, PhD, Professor & Head, Biotechnology, Institute of Bioprocess Science and Engineering, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU)

11:20 PLENARY PRESENTATION:

What Have Monoclonal Antibodies Ever Done for Us? Past, Present, and Future Perspectives on Antibodies and How They Have Driven Bioprocessing Progress

Paul Varley, PhD, Senior Vice President, Development, Alchemab Therapeutics

Advances in bioprocessing have been pivotal to the emergence of monoclonal antibodies as one of the most successful classes of drugs in modern medicine. In this talk we will consider this journey and ask what's next for antibodies. We will also explore how advances in antibody bioprocessing continue to enable the next generation of biological medicines through the emergence of new product modalities.

11:50 PLENARY PRESENTATION:

Extracellular Vesicles as Promising Drug Modalities in Spinal Cord Injury and Other (Neuro-)Degenerative Diseases

Eva Rohde, MD, Chair, Transfusion Medicine, Director GMP Unit, Spinal Cord Injury and Tissue Regeneration Center Salzburg (SCI-TReCS), Paracelsus Medical University Salzburg

Extracellular vesicles (EVs) have emerged as promising new biologic drug modalities. EV therapeutics (EV-Tx) from mesenchymal stromal cells (MSC) exert anti-inflammatory, anti-fibrotic and regenerative effects. MSC-EV-Tx could optimise healing after acute traumatic injury. Challenges in reproducible EV-Tx manufacturing prevent comprehensive evaluation of their efficacy. In early research, the paradigm of “the-process-is-the-product” is valid for complex biologicals. A “one-size-fits-all” approach to solve technical and regulatory issues is not available for EV-Tx. The claimed disease-related mechanisms of action (MoA) of candidate EV-Tx will determine regulatory requirements to be met. This presentation will introduce concepts to accelerate EV-Tx testing in various target diseases.

Session Break12:20

Sponsored Presentation (Opportunity Available)12:35

Networking Lunch (Sponsored Opportunity Available)13:05

Close of Analytics and Characterisation Conference14:05