Title: EU directive on tissue and cells
1EU directive on tissue and cells
2Why a regulation on tissue and cells?
- Each year in Europe, hundreds of thousands of
patients undergo some form of therapeutic
treatment based on the use of tissues and cells
of human origin. These tissues or cells are
frequently acquired through cross-border
exchange. - Having a common set of high standards helps
facilitate cooperation between healthcare
systems. It also assures EU citizens that if they
go for treatment in another EU country, they will
benefit from the same protection from
transmissible diseases as they would in their own
Member State. Member States also have the option
to apply stricter standards than those set down
by the EU should they wish to do so.
3EU Directive 2004/23/EC Setting standards of
quality and safety for the donation, procurement,
testing, processing, preservation, storage and
distribution of human tissues and cells
- This Directive should apply to tissues and cells
including hematopoietic peripheral blood,
umbilical-cord (blood) and bone marrow stem
cells, reproductive cells (eggs, sperm), foetal
tissues and cells, and adult and embryonic stem
cells - It was published in the Official Journal of the
European Union on April 7, 2004 and entered into
force - Members States will have to implement it before
April 7, 2006
4EU Directive 2004/23/EC Setting standards of
quality and safety for the donation, procurement,
testing, processing, preservation, storage and
distribution of human tissues and cells
DLI?
- This Directive excludes
- blood and blood products (other than
Hematopoietic progenitor cells) and human organs,
as well as organs, tissues, or cells of animal
origin. Blood and Blood products are currently
regulated in other Directives - Tissues and cells used as an autologous graft
(tissues removed and transplanted back within the
same surgical procedure and without being
subjected to any banking - Not applicable for research (animal studies)
- Organs or parts of organs if it is their function
to be used for the same purpose as it functions
in the human body.
5EU Directive 2004/23/EC Setting standards of
quality and safety for the donation, procurement,
testing, processing, preservation, storage and
distribution of human tissues and cells
- Establishment of a register of entities operating
in the field - Designation of the competent authority (ies) in
Member States - Implementation of a quality system for tissue
establishments, including specification of
activities relating to a quality system (SOPs,
guidelines, training reference manuals,
reporting forms, donor records, information on
final destination of tissues or cells, etc.) - Introduction of a system of accreditation of
tissue establishments by Member States and a
system for notification of adverse events and
reactions - Organisation of inspections and control measures
within Member States - Ensurance of data protection and confidentiality.
- Assurance of traceability of tissues and cells
through laboratory identification procedures,
record maintenance and an appropriate labelling
system - Design of a single European coding system to
provide information on the main characteristics
and properties of tissues and cells
6EU Directive 2004/23/EC Setting standards of
quality and safety for the donation, procurement,
testing, processing, preservation, storage and
distribution of human tissues and cells
- Chapter I General provisions (article 1-4)
- Chapter II Obligations on Member State
Authorities (article 5-11) - Chapter III Donor Selection and Evaluation (
article 12-15 ) - Chapter IV Provisions on the quality and safety
of cells (article 16-24) - Chapter V Exchange of information, reports and
penalties (article 24 - 30) - Chapter VI Final provisions on the quality and
safety of cells (article 31-33) - Annexes Technical information.
7EU Directive 2004/23/EC Setting standards of
quality and safety for the donation, procurement,
testing, processing, preservation, storage and
distribution of human tissues and cells
- EU Directive implementing EU Directive 2004/23/EC
of the European Parliament and of the Council as
regards certain technical requirements for - the donation, procurement and testing of human
tissues and cells - JACIE part B and C
- coding, processing, preservation, storage and
distribution of human tissues and cells - JACIE part D
- Aim In order to prevent the transmission of
diseases by human tissues and cells for human
application to ensure an equivalent level of
quality and safety
8Technical requirements of 2004/23/EC
For further information, see http//europa.eu.in
t/comm/health/ph_threats/human_substance/tissues_e
n.htm
9Time frame technical requirements
- The implementing Directive adopted on February 8,
2006 covers the first phase of the donation and
procurement process. - This will be followed up with a proposal for a
second Directive in the 2nd half of 2006, which
will cover the second phase, including storage,
processing and preservation criteria for tissues
and cells.
Member States have until November 2006 to put in
place national measures implementing the new rules
10Technical requirements of 2004/23/ECdonation,
procurement and testing of tissues and cells
- Article 2 Requirements for the procurement of
human tissues and cells - Article 3 Selection criteria for donors of
tissue and cells (Annex I) - Article 4 Laboratory tests required for donors
(Annex III) - Article 5 Procurement procedures
- Article 6 requirements for distribution
- Article 7/8 transposition entry into force
- staff must be properly trained
- the facilities must be maintained to prevent
contamination - proper, sterile instruments must be used for
procurement - SOPs for
- the donation and testing process
- during transport
- at the point of reception in tissue
establishments - selection of tissue and cell donors (live or
deceased) - A unique identifier code for proper
identification and traceability.
11Technical requirements of 2004/23/ECdonation,
procurement and testing of tissues and cells
12Technical requirements of 2004/23/ECcoding,
processing, preservation, storage and
distribution of tissues and cells
- Article 3 Requirements for the accreditation,
designation, authorisation or licensing of
Tissues establishments (Annex I) - Article 4 Criteria for accreditation,
designation, authorisation, licensing of tissue
and cell preparation processes at the tissue
establishments (Annex II) - Article 5/6 Notification and serious adverse
reactions/events (Annexes III) - Article 7 Annual reports
- Article 8Communication between competent
authoristies - Article 9 Tracability
- Article 10 European Coding System
13Technical requirements of 2004/23/ECcoding,
processing, preservation, storage and
distribution of tissues and cells
Licensing of Tissues establishments (Annex I) A.
Organisation and management B. Personnel C.
Equipment and materials D. Facility and
premises E. Documentation and registry F. Quality
review
14Technical requirements of 2004/23/ECcoding,
processing, preservation, storage and
distribution, procurement and testing
Tissue and cell preparation processes (Annex
II) A. Reception at tissue establishment B.
Processing C. Storage and release of products D.
Distribution and recall E. Final labelling for
distribution F. External labelling of the
shipping container
15Technical requirements of 2004/23/ECbottle-neck
I
- The air quality standard is a key factor for
risk of tissue or cell contamination - Unless otherwise specified, where tissues or
cells are exposed to the environment during
processing, without a subsequent microbial
inactivation process, an air quality of Grade A
as defined in the current European Guide to Good
Manufacturing Practice, Annex 1 (Commission
Directive 2003/94/EC) is required with a
background environment appropriate for the
processing of the tissue/cell concerned.
16Technical requirements of 2004/23/ECbottle-neck
II
- Storage facilities must be provided that clearly
separate and distinguish tissues and cells prior
to release/in quarantine from those that are
released and from those that are rejected, in
order to prevent mix up and cross-contamination
between them. Physically separate areas or
storage devices must be allocated in both
quarantine and released storage locations for
holding certain tissue and cells collected in
compliance with special criteria (e.g
Autologous/allogeneic directed donations or known
infective material).
17JACIE /EC directives
18Modifications to Standards
- Members of JACIE Exc. Board currently working
with FACT Sub-committees developing 3rd edition
of standards and manual - Part B Diana Samson
- Part C Derwood Pamphilon
- Part D Ineke Slaper-Cortenbach
Available to the membership
Membership review
Publisher
Crosswalk with cGTP and EU Directive New edition
standards and manual
Consistency and Legal review
Changes review
1
5/ 6 8
9 10
11 12
19Technical requirements of 2004/23/EC
Crosswalks between JACIE and EU directives
- Diana Samson performed crosswalks on the
2004/23/EC directive and the 2 technical
directives with JACIE standards and WMDA
standards (collection). - No major differences
- JACIE is specifying the issues for cellular
therapy products in depth
20Advanced Therapies
More information http//pharmacos.eudra.org/F2/adv
therapies/index.htm
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25More general information www.cytotherapy.org
european LRA committee www.jacie.org JACIE
standards