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Understanding regulation of autologous human cell and tissue (HCT) products
Guidance on our risk-based approach and criteria for autologous human cell and tissue exemptions, exclusions and regulation.
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Purpose
This guidance is for sponsors of autologous human cells and tissues (HCT) products. It explains
how we apply regulation based on the risk associated with the product and when some
autologous HCTs may be excluded from TGA regulation or exempt from some TGA regulations.
Legislation
What are autologous HCT products?
Human cell and tissue (HCT) products are those that comprise, contain or are derived from
human cells and tissues.
Autologous human cell and tissue (HCT) products are those that are removed from, and applied to, the same person, i.e. the donor and the recipient are the same. One group of autologous HCT products is those commonly referred to as 'stem cell treatments'.
Examples of autologous HCT products
Some examples of human cell and tissue products that can be autologous:
- blood and blood components including red cells, plasma, serum, platelets, platelet-rich plasma (PrP), platelet-rich fibrin (PRF) and conditioned serum
- skin grafts for treatment of burns
- bone grafts
- genetically-altered lymphocytes to target cancers
- adipose-derived cell extracts including stromal vascular fraction (SVF).
External regulatory oversight of autologous HCTs
This document specifies only TGA regulatory requirements. Other regulatory requirements that
may apply to these products include:
- Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA)
- state, territory and national medical and dental boards or councils
- the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC)
- state and territory management and administration of public hospitals
- state and territory licensing of private hospitals.
Three levels of TGA regulation
The level of regulation for autologous HCT products is based on the level of risk to the public.
The level may vary due to the level of external governance and clinical oversight, or depending on the manufacturing processes or intended use of the autologous HCT product.
To determine how your autologous product will be regulated check if it is:
- excluded from TGA regulation
- regulated by TGA with exemptions from some requirements
- fully regulated by TGA (as a medicine or biological).
For autologous HCT products that are not excluded from TGA regulation, the product will be
one of the following:
- a medicine, if it fits the definition of blood, blood component or haematopoietic progenitor
cells (HPCs) - a biological.
Biologicals and excluded autologous HCTs must not be advertised to consumers.
Regulatory pathway | Excluded from TGA regulation | Regulated by TGA with some exemptions (medicine* or biological) | Fully regulated by TGA (medicine* or biological) |
---|---|---|---|
Eligibility criteria |
|
|
|
*Medicine: if meets the definition of blood, blood component or haematopoietic progenitor cells (HPC).
Fully regulated by TGA
If an autologous HCT product is not excluded or not exempt, then it is fully regulated as either a biological or blood component.
If your autologous HCT product is not a blood component, then it will be regulated as a
biological. Please refer to the Australian Regulatory Guidelines for Biologicals (ARGB).
Checking if your product is blood, blood component or HPC
‘Blood’ and ‘blood components’ and haematopoietic progenitor cells (HPC) are defined in the
latest Therapeutic Goods (Manufacturing Principles) determination:
- blood means whole blood collected from a single human donor and processed either for
transfusion or further manufacturing - blood components means the therapeutic components of blood, including red cells, white cells, platelets, plasma, serum, platelet-rich plasma (PRP), platelet-rich fibrin (PRF), conditioned
serum, that can be prepared by centrifugation, filtration and freezing, but not including
haematopoietic progenitor cells - haematopoietic progenitor cells means self-renewing or multi-potent stem cells, or both,
capable of maturation into haematopoietic lineages, lineage-restricted pluripotent
progenitor cells, or committed progenitor cells.
If not excluded or exempt, autologous blood, blood components and haematopoietic progenitor cells (HPC) are regulated as a medicine in the same way as non-autologous blood, blood components and HPCs.
If your product does not fit the appropriate definition, then it will be regulated as a biological.
Page history
Updates to reflect regulatory changes to conditioned serum.
Original publication incorporating new legislative changes and information previously published on the TGA website.
Updates to reflect regulatory changes to conditioned serum.
Original publication incorporating new legislative changes and information previously published on the TGA website.