Review
Very Large Scale Monoclonal Antibody Purification: The Case for Conventional Unit Operations
Article first published online: 5 SEP 2008
DOI: 10.1021/bp070117s
Copyright © 2007 American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE)
Additional Information
How to Cite
Kelley, B. (2007), Very Large Scale Monoclonal Antibody Purification: The Case for Conventional Unit Operations. Biotechnol Progress, 23: 995–1008. doi: 10.1021/bp070117s
Publication History
- Issue published online: 5 SEP 2008
- Article first published online: 5 SEP 2008
- Manuscript Accepted: 6 JUL 2007
- Manuscript Received: 17 APR 2007
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Abstract
Technology development initiatives targeted for monoclonal antibody purification may be motivated by manufacturing limitations and are often aimed at solving current and future process bottlenecks. A subject under debate in many biotechnology companies is whether conventional unit operations such as chromatography will eventually become limiting for the production of recombinant protein therapeutics. An evaluation of the potential limitations of process chromatography and filtration using todayapos;s commercially available resins and membranes was conducted for a conceptual process scaled to produce 10 tons of monoclonal antibody per year from a single manufacturing plant, a scale representing one of the worldapos;s largest single-plant capacities for cGMP protein production. The process employs a simple, efficient purification train using only two chromatographic and two ultrafiltration steps, modeled after a platform antibody purification train that has generated 10 kg batches in clinical production. Based on analyses of cost of goods and the production capacity of this very large scale purification process, it is unlikely that non-conventional downstream unit operations would be needed to replace conventional chromatographic and filtration separation steps, at least for recombinant antibodies.

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