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MARK LOWDELL: Hello,
I'm Mark Lowdell.
I'm the Director of Cell
Therapy here at the Royal Free
Hospital & UCL Medical School.
And today I'm going to talk to you
about the field of cell and tissue
therapies, how they're
regulated, and the impact
that regulation has on the ethics.
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So I'm a Cell Therapist.
I'm not a doctor here
that treats cells.
I'm a scientist that uses human
cells and tissues to make medicines
for tissue engineering,
regenerative medicine, and treating
cancer and immune deficiencies.
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Now these types of
medicines are called
Advance Therapy Medicinal Products.
It's a clumsy term,
and it was defined
really in the first directive of
2001, 83, the Medicines Directive.
And they consist of gene
therapies, somatic cell therapies,
and tissue engineered
products for the purposes
of regenerative medicine.
Here are some examples:
In the lower screen
there you can see
a decellularized human
trachea that we were using
to rebuild a trachea in a child.
On the right of that there
is a bioengineered nose made
out of a biocompatible material.
On the right hand side, a
photograph from a different group
using a similar sort of bio materials
to produce an ear structure.
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So how are these things regulated?
Well, as I said, in 2001 the
European Medicines Directive
came in and for the first time
it included human blood and blood
products as a medical substance,
and there was an implicit application
that somatic cells from humans
could be regulated as medicines.
And they talked about
them being substantially
modified, but no definition
of what substantial meant.
In 2004, when the clinical
trials directives was enacted,
the same term, 'substantially
modified somatic cells' arose.
And so these for
the first time could
be a trial medicine,
an Investigational
Medicinal Product, or IMP.
And this required the manufacturer
full pharmaceutical standards
of good manufacturing practice, GMP,
plus a manufacturing authorization
held by the manufacturer.
And in Europe, a qualified person,
the person with a status to legally
release these, was very
challenging at the time
because qualified
persons were pharmacists,
and they didn't come from
a cell therapy background.
In 2006, tissues and cells were
regulated by the European Union
under the Tissues
and Cells Directives.
And these were enacted
into UK law, meaning
that tissues and cells that are
used for transplantation purposes
are regulated.
And indeed those that are used as
starting materials to make ATMPs
are also regulated.
In 2007 those regulations
were published
and we had to start applying them.
And procurement of the
starting material in the UK
is regulated by the
Human Tissue Authority.
And in each member state there
is a different regulator,
and that requires a
license to procure.
The problem of
nonsubstantial manipulation
was finally defined with
some examples of what
nonsubstantial manipulation was.
But no definition of what
substantial manipulation is.
And this still comes down to a
decision by each member state.
Within the ATMP
regulations there was
this inclusion of a
strange clause called
the Hospital Exemption Clause.
Which allowed these
medicinal products
to be made one-off
in a non-routine basis,
no definition of non-routine,
and for non-clinical trials.
So these work for
patients in extreme need,
who needed treatment with
a therapy that was not yet
licensed and was
not in clinical trial.
And all of these regulations
were then combined together
in a rewriting of the European
Medicines Directive in 2009
to produce the new
Medicines Directive
which includes these advanced
therapy medicinal products.
So a quick race through the
regulation, if anybody is
interested obviously those
references are there, and one
can struggle through them.