The immense capital investment needed to build global manufacturing and commercial infrastructure makes it nearly impossible for most startup or mid-stage cell therapy companies to scale independently. According to Kite's Cindy Perettie, partnering with a large pharmaceutical company is a practical necessity for reaching global markets.

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Unlike traditional drug development, cell therapy logistics require extremely close, integrated relationships with contract research (CRO) and manufacturing (CDMO) organizations. Due to the direct line from patient to manufacturing and back, these partners function as critical extensions of the core team to ensure timeliness and safety.

Industry partnerships are crucial for more than just funding. Collaborating with pharmaceutical companies provides translation-focused questions that guide the design of advanced cell models, ensuring they are predictive, scalable, and compatible with real-world development workflows.

Through a strategic collaboration with PreGene, Kite Pharma is leveraging China's distinct regulatory landscape. This partnership allows them to test and iterate on new in vivo cell therapy constructs more rapidly than is possible in Western markets, creating a significant competitive R&D advantage in a fast-moving field.

While the CEO of Transgene aspires to launch their product independently in Europe, he acknowledges the immense cost of a Phase 3 trial. A partnership with a large pharmaceutical company is viewed as the most realistic "best case scenario" to accelerate development and de-risk the final, most expensive stage.

The focus in advanced therapies has shifted dramatically. While earlier years were about proving clinical and technological efficacy, the current risk-averse funding climate has forced the sector to prioritize commercial viability, scalability, and the industrialization of manufacturing processes to ensure long-term sustainability.

Observing that allogeneic ('off-the-shelf') cell therapies have not yet achieved their expected impact, Kite Pharma is strategically investing in in vivo approaches. Through acquisitions and partnerships, they are focusing on technologies that edit cells directly within the body, which have shown promising 'autologous-like' results.

A 'healthy tension' exists between research teams, who want to continually iterate on a therapy's design, and manufacturing teams, who need a finalized process to scale production for trials. Knowing precisely when to 'lock down' the design is a critical, yet difficult, decision point for successful commercialization.

When seeking partnerships, biotechs should structure their narrative around three core questions pharma asks: What is the modality? How does the mechanism work? And most importantly, why is this the best differentiated approach to solve a specific clinical challenge and fit into the competitive landscape?

To overcome production bottlenecks, Legend Biotech employs a diversified manufacturing strategy. They operate their own large facilities in the US and Belgium while also contracting with pharmaceutical giant Novartis to produce their CAR T therapy. This enables a rapid scale-up to a planned 10,000 annual doses.

Scaling complex cell therapies follows a similar trajectory to monoclonal antibodies. The strategy involves establishing a global footprint with regional manufacturing facilities (e.g., US West, US East, Europe) to serve distinct geographic areas. This approach ensures manageable logistics and reliable delivery for personalized medicines, leveraging historical lessons.