Title: Plasma standards and protein yield
1Plasma standards and protein yield
- Albert Farrugia
- Head, Blood Tissues Unit
- Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration
- Fourth World Federation of Hemophilia Global
Forum on the safety and supply of treatment
products for bleeding disorders - Montreal, Canada - September 26-27 2005
2Available standards
Plasma for manufacture
Plasma for transfusion
3Available standards
4- FVIII in 2005
- Plasma-derived FVIII production is becoming
increasingly marginal in the developed blood
economies - Fractionators still ship plasma for FVIII
manufacture in the hope of supplying the
emerging markets - Factor VIII is the most labile plasma therapeutic
protein - Conditions affecting FVIII may affect other
proteins in ways which are still unknown - Tailoring conditions to optimising FVIII
preservation is therefore still a valid goal
- The regulatory requirements underpinning blood
and plasma storage, freezing and frozen storage
are predicated on the needs of Factor VIII - Is this justified?
5European plasma standardsFVIII levels
- European Pharmacopeia
- (for fractionation)
- On a pool of not fewer than ten units,
measurement of factor VIII, using the EP
reference method and a reference plasma
calibrated against the International Standard for
blood coagulation factor VIII in plasma. The
activity is not less than 0.7 I.U. per
millilitre.
- Council of Europe
- (for transfusion)
- Requirement for gt 70 of the average normal
value controlled through measurement of FVIIIc
every two months on a pool of six units of mixed
blood groups during the first and last months of
storage
6Factors claimed to affect FVIII yield in
fractionated concentrates
- Anticoagulant
- Collection method
- Time/Temperature to separation/freezing
- Freezing rate
- Storage conditions of frozen plasma
- Thawing conditions
- Purification chemistry
- Viral inactivation
Blood/plasma centre
Fractionator
7Over et al (1990) Dev Hem Imm 2411-24
8Factors claimed to affect FVIII yield in
fractionated concentrates
- Anticoagulant
- Collection method
- Time/Temperature to separation/freezing
- Freezing rate
- Storage conditions of frozen plasma
- Thawing conditions
- Purification chemistry
- Viral inactivation
Blood/plasma centre
Fractionator
9Source vs recovered plasma FVIII yield in low
purity concentrates
10Factors claimed to affect FVIII yield in
fractionated concentrates
- Anticoagulant
- Collection method
- Time/Temperature to separation/freezing
- Freezing rate
- Storage conditions of frozen plasma
- Thawing conditions
- Purification chemistry
- Viral inactivation
Blood/plasma centre
Fractionator
11Factor VIII content Freezing rates and pack
typesSmith et al (1985) Dev Hem Imm 13 15-23
12DOES IT MATTER?
- There is no doubt that delayed blood processing
to frozen plasma decreases FVIII levels in plasma
for fractionation - Does this affect the yields and quality of
fractionated products?
13Distribution of FVIII in manufacture to LP
concentratesEffect of overnight storage
Significant
Significant
Not significant
LP
Hughes et al 1989
Hellings et al (1982)
. plasma intended for the recovery of proteins
that are labile in plasma is frozen by cooling
rapidly at 30 C or below as soon as possible
and at the latest within 24 h of collection. EP
Monograph
14DOES IT MATTER?
- There is no doubt that delayed blood processing
to frozen plasma decreases FVIII levels in plasma
for fractionation - Does this affect the yields and quality of
fractionated products? - IT DEPENDS
- Cryo yield affected
- LP IP sometimes affected
- No data for current generation of FVIII concs
15Factors claimed to affect FVIII yield in
fractionated concentrates
- Anticoagulant
- Collection method
- Time/Temperature to separation/freezing
- Freezing rate
- Storage conditions of frozen plasma
- Thawing conditions
- Purification chemistry
- Viral inactivation
Blood/plasma centre
Fractionator
16Plasma should be frozen at.
- .-18OC, -20OC, -23OC,-30OC?
- Remarkably ambiguous language in standards
- cooling rapidly at -30OC, frozen at -20OC (EP)
- shall be stored at a temperature not warmer than
-20OC (CFR) - Little recognition of the important - obvious -
parameter - THE FREEZING RATE
17Plasma freezing time to -25oC with different
equipmentCarlebjork et al (1986) Transfusion
26159-162
18Plasma freezingWhat is important?
- Rapid freezing - ca -30oC in 30 minutes - results
in better FVIII yields in cryo relative to slower
freezing - - ca -30oC in 3-4 hours - The ice crystal structure and the physical nature
of cryoprecipitate are affected by the plasma
freezing rate. - Slower freezing also increases fibrinogen in
cryo this has its pros and cons - The effect of freezing rates on FVIII yields in
current concentrates is not well recorded
19Factors claimed to affect FVIII yield in
fractionated concentrates
- Anticoagulant
- Collection method
- Time/Temperature to separation/freezing
- Freezing rate
- Storage conditions of frozen plasma
- Thawing conditions
- Purification chemistry
- Viral inactivation
Blood/plasma centre
Fractionator
20Plasma QualityEffect of poor storage conditions
Plasma temperature cycling
- .Source Plasma intended for manufacture into
injectable products that is inadvertently exposed
(i.e., an unforeseen occurrence in spite of
compliance with good manufacturing practice) to a
storage temperature warmer than -20 deg.C and
colder than 10 deg.C may be issued only if
labeled as Source Plasma Salvaged.' CFR 21-
640
Cryoprecipitate quality
21Foster et al (1985) Dev Hem Imm 13 15-23
22Plasma conditioningEffect on FVIII concentrate
CRYO
CRYO ELUATE
ELUATE
FVIII FIBRINOGEN
Farrugia et al (1992) Transfusion 32755-759
23Plasma StorageWhat is important?
- As long as freezing is optimised, storage
requirements appear to be flexible in the range
-20oC to -40oC - Maintaining a steady storage temperature is more
important than the absolute storage temperature,
within this range - While temperature changes can affect the quality
of cryoprecipitate, this can be exploited to
improve both blood bank and industrial cryo
24Eutectic point of plasma?
Phase transitions in frozen plasma
Resistivity of normal plasma saline measurements
on slow thawing after fast freezing McIntosh 1990
25Freezing of 700 ml plasmaEnergy consumption at
different stages of freezing Carlebjork et al
(1986) Transfusion 26159-162
26Plasma freezing and storage
- Conventional eutectics offer no guidance
- Freezing so that phase change is as rapid as
possible - Storage so that this is maintained - -20oC is
adequate - AND WHY SHOULD THIS BE AN ISSUE FOR REGLATORS
ANYWAY? - IS THERE ANY EVIDENCE THAT BLOOD/PLASMA
PROCESSING AFFECTS SAFETY AND QUALITY (AS OPPOSED
TO YIELD)?
27FVIII and activation of coagulation in plasma
freezingSplit 300 ml pairs from 600 ml source
plasma units, n12
NB - FAST FREEZING RESULTS IN HIGHER ACTIVATION
Hellstern et al (2001) Trans 411601-1605
28Inhibitor outbreaks caused by manufacturing
problem?
- Octavi/Bisinact - high purity pdFVIII (SD and
pasteurisation steps), marketed in Europe
(1993-95) by OctaPharma, Bisinact in Belgium - 12/109 PTPs developed inhibitors on Octavi SDPlus
- Anti-C2 specificity
- Cold-chain failure 40 kDa degradation product
found in some batches manufactured from plasma
from some countries but not all.
29FVIII from concentrates made from plasma pools
with evidence of coagulation activation
Saeneko et al 2001Thrombosis Research 101501-511
30And of course, there are other things one can get
out of plasma...
31Plasma QualityEffect on IMIG fragmentation
during storage
- . When obtained from whole blood, plasma
intended solely for the recovery of proteins that
are not labile in plasma is separated from
cellular elements and frozen at 20 C or below
as soon as possible and at the latest within 72 h
of collection.. EP Monograph
McIver 1980
32are these issues mainly of historical
interestor can other plasma proteins be
affected by poor storage conditions?..is
this part of the great unknown..and therefore
subject to regulatory precautionism?..
33How can plasma be assured to a high level of ...
- A defined manufacturing process
- Specified freezing and storage conditions
- Robustness to volume and temperature changes
- Reliability
- Consistency
- Ability to continue performance in stress or
volume situations
34Tentative conclusions and possible approaches
- There is a need for clear and unambiguous
standards for plasma freezing and storage - A process which results in a consistent product,
irrespective of scale and location, should form
the basis of any standard - Empirical observations appear to support greater
flexibility than some current requirements - There is little evidence that any of these
requirements have a bearing on product safety - Basic conditions for minimising microbial
contamination and preserving product integrity
should be defined - Other requirements reflecting product yield eg
FVIII levels should be left to be negotiated
between the manufacturer and plasma supplier