Discover Single-Use Fermenters for Biopharmaceutical Production
Whitepaper
Published: September 28, 2023
Microbial fermentation has been used for the commercialization of biologics for many years, with the efficient fermentation of recombinant proteins such as insulin in large stainless steel (SS) bioreactors.
Single-use fermenters (SUFs) use disposable sterile plastic bags that don’t require the traditional high-intensity preparation of SS bioreactors, which are expensive and time-consuming processes.
This whitepaper highlights the benefits of SUFs and how they fit into a clinical-to-commercial scale program.
Download this whitepaper to learn how to:
• Improve process flexibility and turnaround times
• Enhance quality and reduce regulatory burden
• Enable better use of facility capacity
• Enhance quality and reduce regulatory burden
• Enable better use of facility capacity
© Copyright BIOVECTRA 2022. All Rights Reserved.
WHITE PAPER
SINGLE-USE FERMENTERS
FOR THE PRODUCTION OF
BIOLOGICS
Large-scale single-use fermentation technology
using aerobic microbial expression systems offers an
excellent complement to stainless steel
bioreactors for clinical-to-commercial scale
production of recombinant proteins.
For decades, microbial fermentation has been used for the
commercialization of biologics, with the efficient fermentation of
such recombinant proteins as insulin in stainless steel (SS)
bioreactors as large as 100,000 L. The biopharmaceutical industry
is now at a pivotal stage due to the development and clinical
success of a diverse range of new modalities— RNA therapeutics,
plasmid DNA (pDNA) and mRNA vaccines, cell and gene therapy,
and antibody fragments—that are being used for indications such
as oncology, multiple sclerosis, and autoimmune disorders.
While SS equipment continues to be vital for commercial manufacturing of many biologics, it
comes with high upfront costs and the ongoing expense in time and labor required to operate
it. This works well when a company is producing large amounts of drug substance but has
limitations for the smaller volumes needed during development and clinical studies. The early
stages of a drug clinical development program need processes that increase speed to
market. What has been missing is a fast, cost-effective solution for fermentation studies that
can be used during development and clinical-phase manufacturing.
Recent innovations in single-use fermenters (SUFs) mean that startups and large
biopharmaceutical companies alike can now produce biologics for tech-transfer scale up of
recombinant proteins for phase 1 or early-phase 2 clinical trials, and even to treat orphan or
rare indications. These closed, sterile SUFs—100 L and large-scale 1,000 L—are designed
to provide mixing, oxygen transfer, and cooling capabilities comparable to SS bioreactors
while being more agile and avoiding the high fixed costs of stainless steel.
A valuable niche exists to manufacture personalized medicines, for which multiple discrete
batches are required, and single use equipment would have a huge advantage over SS with
respect to batch segregation and cross-contamination risks.
Companies that want to start a clinical program and take it all the way to commercial launch
are no longer faced with an either/or choice of single-use versus SS bioreactors. The
combination of the two can be ideal for those engaged in clinical-to-commercial scale
production. They would begin with SUFs for production of biologics needed for development,
early-phase clinical trials, and orphan indications. Then, for large-scale production of
successful drug products—mRNA vaccines or blockbuster biologics— manufacturers can
transition to larger SS bioreactors (e.g., >1,000 L up to 17,000 L, or larger) to manufacture
enough product for phase 3 clinical trials and commercialization.
SUFs have overcome the challenges that existed in the early days, when single-use cell
culture systems for microbial fermentation were simply repurposed from bioreactors
designed for mammalian cell culture. Early versions demonstrated poor oxygen transfer,
limited mixing, and insufficient temperature control. With engineering and design innovations,
SUFs are now able to complement SS fermenters.
The addition of SUFs improves process flexibility, leads to faster
turnaround times, enhances quality, reduces regulatory burden,
and lowers costs by enabling better use of facility capacity.
© Copyright BIOVECTRA 2022. All 2 Rights Reserved.
The addition of SUFs improves process flexibility, leads to faster turnaround times,
enhances quality, reduces regulatory burden, and lowers costs by enabling better use of
facility capacity. In this white paper we will discuss these benefits of SUFs and how they
fit into a clinical-to-commercial scale program.
Single-use fermentation technology is similar in many ways to conventional stainless-steel
systems. The main difference is that SUFs use disposable sterile plastic bags that don’t
require the traditional high-intensity preparation for cleaning, sterilization, and
decontamination of SS bioreactors, which are expensive and time-consuming processes.
SUFs come in various sizes, including 10–30 L process development fermenters, 100 L
seed fermenters, and the industry-leading 1,000 L fermenter from ABEC. They can be
used for all drug substances expressed in microbial cells, including pDNA, proteins,
enzymes, Fabs, and bioconjugates. High-intensity mixing of microbial cultures, which
optimizes oxygen transfer, is possible because of the generally low sensitivity of these
cells to shearing. Mixing the cells within the SUF can be achieved by using a variety of
different impeller styles and designs to ensure an optimal oxygen transfer rate (OTR).
A complete biologics program, from development and clinical studies to commercialization,
can include smaller process development bioreactors, SUFs for clinical studies drug
production (in 100 L and 1,000 L fermenters), and SS for large- scale cGMP production of
commercial drug products (in 100 L, 3,000 L, and up to 17,000 L fermenters).
SUFs can grow with a clinical-tocommercialization
program
What is microbial fermentation?
Microbial fermentation is the process of growing bacterial or yeast cells in liquid
culture so the cells can express a drug substance, usually a recombinant protein
such as insulin, human growth hormone, cytokines, monoclonal antibodies
(mAbs), or antibody fragments (Fabs). When compared to mammalian cell culture,
microbial fermentation has the benefits of less complex genetic engineering,
simpler growth media, faster cell growth, and a much shorter production time. The
main microbes used are the bacterium, E. coli, and the yeasts, S. cerevisiae and
Pichia pastoris.
© Copyright BIOVECTRA 2022. All 3 Rights Reserved.
It takes one-third the time to qualify SUF equipment compared to SS systems.
Typically, SUFs are provided with a base unit that contains the automation required toperform the process. Support systems can be easily linked to the base units.
SS systems have more complex piping systems and utility connections, making the costof automation much higher, both for instruments and programming. The fermenter sterileenvelope is directly tied to the performance of the automated sequences, thereforeincreasing the risk of failure if there is any automation issue.
Perhaps the main benefit of SUFs is the rapid changeovers that are possible withdisposable equipment. SS systems can be costly for a number of reasons—most notably,the costs of fixed equipment and labor—but the cleaning time between successivebatches may be the most significant cost differential when compared to SUFs.Changeovers of SS systems can take several weeks causing downtime that results insignificant loss of throughput. In contrast, switching to a new batch with SUFs can occurwithin one day. This means that a new production run can begin every five days, makingfacility utilization much higher.
While the consumable costs of disposable fermenter bags, tubing, and filtration equipmentrecur for each SUF run, they are more than offset by higher throughput and capacity useper annum.
Much of the lag between batches in SS fermenters occurs because the equipment mustundergo CIP and sterilize-in-place (SIP) before a new batch can be processed. This cantake as long as seven days to complete and requires water for injection (WFI) andspecialized cleaning chemicals, the supply of which is often constrained.
Cleaning and sterilizing is unnecessary for SUF equipment as it is received as a sterileconsumable and is disposable. This reduces the need for CIP chemicals, WFI, and steamfor sterilization processing.
SUFs are more automated
Equipment qualification is faster
Quicker changeovers between batches
No need for cleaning and sterilization between batches
© Copyright BIOVECTRA 2022. All Rights Reserved.
4
SUFs have lower utility requirements than SS bioreactors. For example, SUFs use one-tenth the water in the manufacturing process, including WFI and high-purity CIP solutions,significantly reducing daily operating expenses.
Lower utilities costs
It is possible to add more production SUFs per batch to increase or control output per cycle.
Typically, SUF fermentation suites are designed to accommodate expansion of productivity.
Compared to the much larger SS bioreactors used for cell culture, the maximum working volume
of a SUF is currently capped at 1,000 L, due to conditions unique for microbial cell growth.
Microbes like E. coli are capable of rapid, high-density cell growth, but this requires sufficient
agitation and a larger head space in the bioreactor to supply the cells with the oxygen they
need. In fermenters, this is measured as the oxygen transfer rate (OTR). In addition, many
microbes, such as E. coli and P. pastoris, create excess metabolic heat that must be removed
during fermentation.
The ABEC CSR 1,000 L is designed to meet the cooling demands of high-growth microbial
processes and allow an OTR that is similar to what is seen in SS systems of the same volume.
However, at volumes greater than 1,000 L, SS bioreactors are still preferred due to the need to
maintain aeration, OTR, and provide sufficient cooling at these higher volumes.
Despite the many benefits of SUFs, the technology does come with some limitations
worth considering.
Limitations of SUFs
Culture volume is capped
Flexibility of production capacity
Lower risk of cross-contamination
The risk of contamination between batches of one product is significantly reduced, as is the
risk when shifting from one product campaign to a different product campaign. This occurs
because, not only are the fermenters single use, but their associated components are as
well, greatly reducing maintenance-related batch contaminations.
The risk of contamination between batches of
one product is significantly reduced.
© Copyright BIOVECTRA 2022. All Rights Reserved.
SS fermenters are deliberately over-pressurized to increase the solubility of oxygen in theculture medium. In addition,
P. pastoris
may require methanol in its feed stream, adding thefurther complexity of using a flammable nutrient during fermentation. SS bioreactors havecontainment protection against overpressure events and fire, while SUFs do not.
Microbial fermentation, usually in
E. coli
, is an efficient way to make large amounts ofplasmid DNA, even in a small facility. This DNA is used to transfect cells during theproduction of viral vectors (e.g., adenovirus, retroviruses, and all nine serotypes of adeno-associated virus (AAV)), for autonomous cell therapy, for in vitro transcription to makemRNA for vaccines, and is being developed for direct application in transfection vaccines.
A 1 L fermenter makes enough plasmid for a 200 L cell culture transfection, sufficient fordevelopment purposes or for the production of a drug substance meant to treat ultra-raredisease indications. For commercial launch of biologics, such as an mRNA vaccine, theamount of plasmid needed requires scaling up to 1,000 L SUF. The ABEC CSR 1,000 Lfermenter can operate with working volumes of 200–1,000 L, making it flexible for differentbatch sizes. For viral vector manufacturing, operators run a separate batch for each of theplasmids used to transfect the mammalian cells—there can be multiple needed for eachtransfection. This means that, even for an indication like Crohn’s disease that afflicts millionsworldwide, it would only take as few as two batches per plasmid each year in a 1,000 L SUFto produce enough plasmid for the drug substance.
Microbial fermentation at available SUF scales can be used to make small amounts ofrecombinant protein products in the one-kg range, such as enzyme reagents, highly potentprotoxins, or similar high-value, small-volume products.
Current SUF scales are also ideally suited for rapid and flexible production for clinical trials,with the intention to switch to larger-volume SS fermenters later to produce the amountsrequired for commercial scale. This would require process modelling to validate that theprocess performs the same at both scales in the two fermenter types.
The production of plasmid DNA and RNA
The production of recombinant proteintherapeutics and reagents
Lack of containment against high pressure and flammables
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6
With faster changeovers, no need for validated cleaning, lower utilities costs, and reduced risk ofcross-contamination, single-use fermenters are a good fit for taking a promising DNA or high-potency recombinant protein candidate from the lab bench all the way to commercialization.
For those looking to support their next biologics fermentation project, it is important to find a partnerthat offers the seamless integration of SUF with existing SS systems to expand the scale ofproduction from small-scale clinical amounts all the way to large-scale commercial production.
Additionally, a CDMO partner with a range of microbial fermentation options, combined with processscience, solid engineering, cGMP manufacturing, analytical capabilities, and regulatory compliance,all under one company roof, ensures fast delivery, speed to market, and cost efficiency.
Eliminating the need for chemicals and purified water used for CIP as well as the energy requiredfor the extensive SIP of SS vessels shrinks the environmental footprint of single-use fermentation.The microbial culture and other biological waste from the process is treated to kill any organisms,at which point it is no longer hazardous and is safe for discard. The single-use components canbe part of a recycling program for the secondary use of plastics once neutralized.
Environmental sustainability
What to look for in a CDMO for microbialfermentation
BIOVECTRA has a track record of collaborating
with our clients to solve the scale-up issues that
come from difficult processes. This has resulted
in robust, reproducible drug processes that have
been filed and approved by the FDA and other
regulatory agencies worldwide.
WHITE PAPER
To learn more, visit us online at:
www.BIOVECTRA.com
BIOVECTRA is a global biotech and pharmaceutical CDMO (contract
development and manufacturing organization) that specializes in clinicalto-
commercial scale production capabilities for: biologics, bioreagents,
fermented small molecules, synthetic small molecules, and active
pharmaceutical ingredients.
Flexibility, creativity, process optimization and compliance are at the
heart of our method. With over 550 employees and cGMP facilities in
Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia, Canada we assure our
programs advance on time and with the highest quality outcomes.
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