Our Facility
In addition to the research and manufacturing capabilities at GC Cell’s headquarters in Korea, we have established full development and manufacturing facilities in San Diego, California. We have built a new 52,000-square-foot corporate headquarters, which includes research and process development laboratories, and have recruited a team of cell therapy experts driving discovery research, preclinical development, translational science, process and analytical development, and cell therapy manufacturing Our headquarters also includes a 9,000 square-foot purpose-built cGMP manufacturing center to support NK and CAR-NK cell production for our pipeline development and clinical trial supply. This new facility capacity is in addition to on-going manufacturing in Korea.
Our scaled manufacturing process established at GC Cell over more than ten years has enabled us to design an efficient layout for our San Diego manufacturing center that is cGMP compliant. Our facility comprises multiple production suites, a MCB / virus suite and a suite devoted to product fill-finish and cryopreservation. Each of the three 50L bioreactor suites dedicated to drug product production have the capacity to run 20 batches per year. Given drug product batches can yield 100 AlloNK vials with one billion NK cells each, our facility has the capacity to generate over 6,000 one billion NK cell vials per year, which assuming treatment regimen of two billion AlloNK cells per dose and three doses for an aggregate of six billion AlloNK cells total per patient with autoimmune disease, could provide sufficient drug product to treat 1,000 patients per year.
Released finished product is stored off site at a third-party logistics vendor, as is currently the case for drug products manufactured for us by GC Cell. We intend to use our facility to enable new pipeline program research, development and manufacturing, to further optimize the AlloNK manufacturing process and produce AlloNK for current and future clinical trials and to supply any potential commercial launch.
Competition
The biopharmaceutical industry in general, and the cell therapy field in particular, is characterized by rapidly advancing and changing technologies, intense competition and a strong emphasis on intellectual property. We face substantial and increasing competition from large and specialty biopharmaceutical companies, as well as public and private medical research institutions and governmental agencies. Competitors may compete with us in hiring scientific and management personnel, establishing clinical study sites, recruiting patients to participate in clinical trials and acquiring technologies complementary to, or necessary for, our programs.
Our known biopharmaceutical competitors in the cell therapy space that are developing allogeneic CAR-NK or CAR-T cell therapies include, but may not be limited to, the following: Adicet Bio, Inc., Autolus Therapeutics plc, Cabaletta Bio, Inc., Caribou Biosciences, Inc., Cartesian Therapeutics, Inc., Century Therapeutics, Inc., Fate Therapeutics, Inc., Galapagos NV, Gracell Biopharmaceuticals, Inc. (acquired by AstraZeneca), ImmPACT Bio USA, Inc., Juno Therapeutics, Inc. (acquired by BMS), Kite Pharma (acquired by Gilead), Kyverna Therapeutics, Inc., Nkarta, Inc., Novartis AG, Sana Biotechnology, Inc., Shoreline Biosciences Inc., Takeda Pharmaceuticals Company Limited and Wugen, Inc.
Many of our current or potential competitors have significantly greater financial, technical and human resources, as well as more expertise in research and development, manufacturing, preclinical testing, conducting clinical studies and trials and commercializing and marketing approved products, than us. Mergers and acquisitions in the biopharmaceutical industry may result in even greater resource concentration among a smaller number of competitors. Smaller or early-stage companies may also prove to be significant competitors, either alone or through collaborative arrangements with large and established companies.
Our commercial opportunity could be reduced or eliminated if our competitors develop and commercialize products that are safer, more effective, have fewer or less severe side effects, are more convenient or are less expensive than any products that we may develop. Our competitors also may obtain FDA or other comparable foreign regulatory authority approval for their products more rapidly than us, which could result in our competitors establishing a strong market position before we are able to enter the market. Key competitive factors affecting the success of all of our programs are likely to be their efficacy, safety, convenience, price and degree of reimbursement.
Certain Competitor Data
There are three currently approved CAR T-cell therapies for the treatment of relapsed or refractory DLBCL:
Axicabtagene ciloleucel (YESCARTA)
In a Phase 2 clinical trial of ZUMA-1, a single-arm, multi-center, registrational trial, YESCARTA was administered to 108 patients with relapsed/refractory large B-cell lymphoma. After 11.6 months of follow-up, the ORR and CR rate
140