About
The Clinical BioManufacturing Facility is the University of Oxford’s GMP (Good Manufacturing Practice) manufacturing facility.
The Clinical BioManufacturing Facility has over 20 years experience producing biological Investigational Medicinal Products (IMPs) according to the principles of GMP for early phase clinical trials. We hold a Manufacturer’s Authorisation for Investigational Medicinal Products (MIA (IMPs)) from the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), which allows us to manufacture a variety of products including viral vector and recombinant protein vaccines and advanced therapy medicinal products (ATMPs) such as cell and gene therapy products. All IMPs are manufactured and released in accordance with the European Clinical Trials Directive (2004). The facility can also import IMPs from outside the EU for use in clinical trials within the European Union.
We aim to provide the link between academic research and clinical drug development, to allow all our collaborators to make rapid progress into clinical trials.
Our GMP manufacturing facility enables us to meet the special demands for phase I/II clinical trials of novel biotech products within the academic and commercial sectors and to deliver effective short term treatments to the clinic providing long term benefits to the patient.
News
Oxford hosts Belgian vaccine experts
28 March 2024
Researchers from Oxford Vaccine Group and the Pandemic Sciences Institute welcomed a delegation of vaccine researchers from Belgium to further UK-Belgian collaboration on vaccine development and manufacture.
Speaker line-up announced for the International Pandemic Sciences Conference 2024
27 March 2024
Meet the presenters, panellists and chairs for the International Pandemic Sciences Conference 2024, set to take place on 1–2 July 2024 in Oxford and online.
New Pandemic PACT research programme launched
21 March 2024
The Pandemic Sciences Institute, in collaboration with the global coalition of health research funders GloPID-R and UKCDR, has launched a new research programme including an interactive platform to track and analyse over $7 billion in global pandemic research funding.