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プロテインプロセスマネジメントに関する会議 - 2日目
ショートコース |
1日目 |
2日目
アジェンダ (英語PDF)
Friday, January 11
7:30am - 4:00pm Registration
7:30 - 8:15 Breakfast Workshop
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MANAGING PEOPLE & PROCESSES |
8:15 Chairperson’s Remarks
8:20 Increased Process Knowledge, Efficiency, and Control in Bioprocesses with On-line Liquid Chromatography
Rick E. Cooley, Manager, Process Analytics Center of Excellence, Dionex Corporation, Eli Lilly and Company (retired)
Biotech manufacturing processes can be quite challenging for those wanting to utilize PAT tools to monitor their processes due to the complexity of the typical biotech process stream. Liquid chromatography’s attributes of high resolution and excellent sensitivity are well suited to reliably quantitate specific components in these highly challenging applications. This presentation will provide examples of how on-line liquid chromatographic based analyzers have been utilized in the biopharmaceutical industry to provide timely information for process monitoring, automation, and/or control purposes.
8:50 The Product is the Process - Well Perhaps Not!
Mark A. Carver, Ph.D., Chief Scientific Officer, Avecia Biotechnology
Through-life process development, or quality by design, integrated with new advances in process science, manufacturing and analytical technologies should lead to much greater understanding of the characteristics of the product during scale-up. Predictable manufacturing will lead to greater flexibility in the site of manufacture as the process and the product become increasingly decoupled.
9:20 Pearls of Wisdom in Process Management
Eric Morfin, PMP PMI Pharmaceutical SIG and LIG, PMI New Product Development SIG Chair, Senior Group Director, Global Project Management, Biotech Unit, Quintiles
Process Management Leadership is getting people to do what needs to be done because they want to. Achieving this level of leadership requires that you possess critical thinking skills as well as charisma. Leaders in many industries have had to demonstrate and refine these skills for many years. We will specifically discuss the following four “Pearls of Wisdom”:
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The Art of Making Strategic Decisions
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Motivating others with the establishment of a Human Performance Process
- What Leadership Style should you use to Maximize your Team’s Involvement
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Solving Problems at the Speed of Light
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These four “Pearls of Wisdom” will be illustrated with concrete
examples
9:50 Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall
10:45 Poster Awards in Exhibit Hall
11:00
Decreasing Process Development Times and
Increasing Process Understanding -- Application
of Advanced Chemometrics
Bo Kara, Director, Science and
Technology, Biologics, Avecia Biologics Ltd.
The focus is moving to the importance of gaining
a thorough understanding
of biologics drug substance, drug product and
the underlying rationale and
design of the manufacturing processes. Key to
the latter is that the
design transferred to manufacturing should be
demonstrably fit for its
intended use. The availability, quality and
validity of process
development data from early process definition
through to formal process
characterisation studies and ultimately from
commercial production will
thus be crucial. This presentation looks at how
various advanced chemometric methods have been
successfully exploited to aid process
development and increase process understanding.
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Interactive
Panel Discussion |
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11:30 How Intellectual Property Issues Affect Process Management
Kristie Prinz, J.D., Founder, The Prinz Law Office
John Iwanicki, J.D., Senior Partner, Banner & Witcoff Ltd.
Anne Schneiderman, J.D., Ph.D., Patent Attorney, Law
Offices of
Anne M. Schneiderman
Jonathan Loeb, J.D., Ph.D., Partner, Day Casebeer
Madrid & Batchelder LLP |
12:30pm Luncheon Workshop
or Lunch on Your Own
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Joint Plenary Keynote Session
LYOPHILIZATION PROTEIN PRODUCTION PROCESS MANAGEMENT |
| 1:45 Chairperson’s Remarks
1:50 Policy, Regulatory and Engineering Considerations when Transitioning from Lab to Manufacturing Scale
| 2:20 Vaccines vs. Biologics: Protein Production, Process Management and Lyophilization Considerations |
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Susan Behrens, Ph.D., Senior Director, Biological Sciences & Strategy, Merck & Co., Inc. |
Vaccine production shares many process features with biologics manufacturing. Common unit operations include fermentation, cell culture, chromatography, filtration, formulation, vial & syringe filling and lyophilization. As the demand for vaccine products is projected to increase by 2X over the next 5 years, the ability to transfer knowledge gained from large scale protein production provides an opportunity to maximize efficiency of production for both product areas.
- Synergies between biologics and vaccine manufacture
- Vaccines vs. biologics: Distinctive qualities and impact on production, process management and lyophilization
- Key supply chain issues for both vaccines and biologic products and how the two interact
- Leveraging lessons from biologics production as the vaccine business grows globally
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3:00 Refreshment Break
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Joint Interactive Workshop
DEVELOPING A STREAMLINED MATRIX APPROACH FOR QUALIFICATION AND VALIDATION |
MEET
ADDRESS ISSUES
TRANSFER KNOWLEDGE
REACH OUT TO PEERS
INTRODUCE YOURSELF
XCHANGE IDEAS
| 3:20 Interactive Case Studies for Matrix Validation Approaches |
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Robert Darius, Director, Global Quality Assurance, GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals |
The goal of the program is to address the challenge of whether more data be provided while using less active pharmaceutical product.Whether your product is lyophilized or not, budgetary, timing, validation and regulatory concerns all coalesce during the rapid development and fast track approval processes for pharmaceutical development, scale-up and new CMO approval for pharmaceutical products. These challenges have become increasingly complex in the highly competitive global environment.Through these interactive case scenarios, participants will work in small teams to review scenarios and challenges associated with development, implementation and regulatory approval of matrix validation approaches for lyophilized products. Several different case studies will be provided and group input will allow for in-depth discussion of key points to consider.
- Reinforcement of basic matrix validation approaches
- Exposure and use of currently available (and accepted) technologies to assess key physical formulation characteristics
- Increased understanding of regulatory concerns and requirements
- Use of different approaches to assess multi-variate challenges in validation
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| 4:00 Interactive Team Project - Sharing Ideas to Develop a MATRIX |
| Meeting delegates will be given a problem scenario and a set of questions and discussion points. Delegates at each table will review scenarios and challenges associated with development, implementation and regulatory approval of matrix validation approaches. Table moderators will interrogate the issues and facilitate the discussion focused on the group’s MATRIX design. |
| Moderators: |
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Edward H. Trappler, President and Founder, Lyophilization Technology, Inc. |
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Jeff Schwegman, Ph.D., Founder/Chief Scientific Officer, BioConvergence LLC |
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Palani Palaniappan, Ph.D., Senior Director, Pharmaceutical Sciences, Millennium Pharmaceuticals |
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Robert Darius, Director, Global Quality Assurance, GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals |
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Narlin Beaty, Ph.D., Managing Partner, Mechanical Engineering, Qualification Process Solutions, LLC |
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5:00 Closing Comments and Take Home Message
5:30 End of the Process Management Conference
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