Applying extracellular vesicles based therapeutics in clinical trials - an ISEV position paper

Author

Lener, Thomas

Gimona, Mario

Aigner, Ludwig

Börger, Verena

Buzas, Edit

Camussi, Giovanni

Chaput, Nathalie

Court, Felipe A.

del Portillo, Hernando A.

O'Driscoll, Lorraine

Fais, Stefano

Falcon-Perez, Juan M.

Felderhoff-Mueser, Ursula

Fraile Sauce, Lorenzo José

Gho, Yong Song

Görgens, André

Gupta, Ramesh C.

Hendrix, An

Hermann, Dirk

Hill, Andrew F.

Hochberg, Fred

Horn, Peter A.

de kleijn, Dominique

Kordelas, Lambros

Kramer, Boris W.

Krämer-Albers, Eva-Maria

Laner-Plamberger, Sandra

Laitien, Saara

Leonardi, Tommaso

Lorenowicz, Magdalena J.

Lim, Sai Kiang

Lötvall, Jan

Maguire, Casey A.

Marcilla, Antonio

Nazarenko, Irina

Ochiya, Takahiro

Patel, Tushar

Pedersen, Shona

Pocsfalvi, Gabriella

Pluchino, Stefano

Quesenberry, Peter

Reischl, Ilona G.

Rivera, Francisco J.

Sanzenbacher, Ralf

Schallmoser, Katharina

Slaper-Cortenbach, Ineke

Strunk, Dirk

Tonn, Torsten

Vader, Pieter

Van Balkom, Bas W. M.

Wauben, Marca

El Andaloussi, Samir

Théry, Clotilde

Rohde, Eva

Giebel, Bernd

Publication date

2018-09-05T10:04:22Z

2018-09-05T10:04:22Z

2015

2018-09-05T10:04:23Z



Abstract

xtracellular vesicles (EVs), such as exosomes and microvesicles, are released by different cell types and participate in physiological and pathophysiological processes. EVs mediate intercellular communication as cell-derived extracellular signalling organelles that transmit specific information from their cell of origin to their target cells. As a result of these properties, EVs of defined cell types may serve as novel tools for various therapeutic approaches, including (a) anti-tumour therapy, (b) pathogen vaccination, (c) immune-modulatory and regenerative therapies and (d) drug delivery. The translation of EVs into clinical therapies requires the categorization of EV-based therapeutics in compliance with existing regulatory frameworks. As the classification defines subsequent requirements for manufacturing, quality control and clinical investigation, it is of major importance to define whether EVs are considered the active drug components or primarily serve as drug delivery vehicles. For an effective and particularly safe translation of EV-based therapies into clinical practice, a high level of cooperation between researchers, clinicians and competent authorities is essential. In this position statement, basic and clinical scientists, as members of the International Society for Extracellular Vesicles (ISEV) and of the European Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST) program of the European Union, namely European Network on Microvesicles and Exosomes in Health and Disease (ME-HaD), summarize recent developments and the current knowledge of EV-based therapies. Aspects of safety and regulatory requirements that must be considered for pharmaceutical manufacturing and clinical application are highlighted. Production and quality control processes are discussed. Strategies to promote the therapeutic application of EVs in future clinical studies are addressed.


The authors have not received any funding or benefits from industry to conduct this study. The authors acknowledge the european COST action for supporting the European Network on Microvesicles and Exosomes in Health and Disease (ME-HaD, BM1202, www.cost.eu/COST_Actions/BMBS/ Actions/BM1202) who funded publication of this work.

Document Type

Article
publishedVersion

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Immunology; Neurobiology; Haematology; Stem cells

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Open

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.3402/jev.v4.30087

Journal of Extracellular Vesicles, 2015, vol. 4, p. 1-31

Rights

cc-by-nc, (c) Lener et at., 2015

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/legalcode

This item appears in the following Collection(s)