Research

Research

MIT CBI collaborates with academics, government sponsors, and industry partners to perform cutting-edge research. Our areas of interest include: continuous manufacturing, advanced control systems, process analytical technologies (PAT), viral safety, and advanced therapy medicinal products (ATMPs).

Application of Smart Data Analytics for Biomanufacturing

CBI and MIT faculty are developing new approaches for using data sources and data analytics in biomanufacturing to better inform operational models and regulatory decision-making.

BioACCESS seeks to better understand the growing need for biologics as well as persistent barriers hindering access to safe, effective, and affordable health services in low- and middle-income countries, especially biologic therapies for chronic non-communicable diseases. 

This project will gather information on microbiological contamination events encountered during cell therapy manufacturing from industry, academic, and governmental organizations. The goal of this international collaborative effort is to develop a resource that can be used by practitioners to inform adventitious agent risk mitigation strategies and facilitate the development of rapid adventitious agent detection platforms that will enable the timely delivery of safe cell therapy product to patients. 

CBI is a part of SMART CAMP, an international research effort focused on developing the analytical tools and biological understanding of cell therapy critical quality attributes that will enable the manufacture and delivery of improved cell therapies to patients.

This project is developing technologies to enable continuous production of rAAV from Sf9/baculovirus cell culture systems.

Completed CBI Research Projects

CBI and MIT faculty are addressing vaccine manufacturing challenges by using mechanistic models to collaboratively develop, with Merck & Co., MassBiologics, and Repligen, a continuous production for viral vaccines.

CBI is developing a mechanistic understanding of viral vector production and purification to enable the development of novel manufacturing control strategies and purification approaches.

CBI and MIT faculty are developing continuous manufacturing approaches to meet the growing demand for viral vector gene therapies based on mechanistic modelling and novel analytical technologies.

CBI and MIT faculty are developing an easy-to-use, low-cost platform that will enable manufacturing of small quantities of AAV gene therapy drug product to accelerate the development of treatments for ultra-rare diseases. 

CBI and MIT faculty are developing novel PAT for real-time assessment of protein quality and rapid methods to assess viral contamination in continuous manufacturing of monoclonal antibodies.

Learn more about other areas of MIT CBI