Detection of residual pluripotent stem cells in cell therapy products utilizing droplet digital PCR: an international multisite evaluation study

Author:

Yasuda Satoshi1ORCID,Bando Kiyoko2,Henry Marianne P3,Libertini Silvana4,Watanabe Takeshi5,Bando Hiroto6,Chen Connie7,Fujimori Koki2,Harada Kosuke5,Kuroda Takuya1,Lemmens Myriam4,Marginean Dragos3,Moss David3,Pereira Mouriès Lucilia7,Nicholas Nicole S3,Smart Matthew J K3,Terai Orie2,Sato Yoji8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Cell-Based Therapeutic Products, National Institute of Health Sciences , Kawasaki , Japan

2. Sumitomo Pharma Co., Ltd. , Kobe , Japan

3. Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult , London , United Kingdom

4. Biomedical Research, Novartis , Basel , Switzerland

5. Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited , Fujisawa , Japan

6. Minaris Regenerative Medicine , Yokohama , Japan

7. Health and Environmental Sciences Institute , Washington, DC , United States

8. Division of Drugs, National Institute of Health Sciences , Kawasaki , Japan

Abstract

Abstract The presence of residual undifferentiated pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) in PSC-derived cell therapy products (CTPs) is a major safety issue for their clinical application, due to the potential risk of PSC-derived tumor formation. An international multidisciplinary multisite study to evaluate a droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) approach to detect residual undifferentiated PSCs in PSC-derived CTPs was conducted as part of the Health and Environmental Sciences Institute Cell Therapy-TRAcking, Circulation & Safety Technical Committee. To evaluate the use of ddPCR in quantifying residual iPSCs in a cell sample, different quantities of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) were spiked into a background of iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes (CMs) to mimic different concentrations of residual iPSCs. A one step reverse transcription ddPCR (RT-ddPCR) was performed to measure mRNA levels of several iPSC-specific markers and to evaluate the assay performance (precision, sensitivity, and specificity) between and within laboratories. The RT-ddPCR assay variability was initially assessed by measuring the same RNA samples across all participating facilities. Subsequently, each facility independently conducted the entire process, incorporating the spiking step, to discern the parameters influencing potential variability. Our results show that a RT-ddPCR assay targeting ESRG, LINC00678, and LIN28A genes offers a highly sensitive and robust detection of impurities of iPSC-derived CMs and that the main contribution to variability between laboratories is the iPSC-spiking procedure, and not the RT-ddPCR. The RT-ddPCR assay would be generally applicable for tumorigenicity evaluation of PSC-derived CTPs with appropriate marker genes suitable for each CTP.

Funder

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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