Scale Decisions for MSC Manufacturing: Build In-house or Partner with a CDMO
The decision to build in-house or partner with a CDMO is less philosophical than it appears. At its core, it is a question of where manufacturing risk will live over the next 24 to 48 months. Most teams believe they are choosing a manufacturing location. In reality, they are choosing how much operational, regulatory, and execution risk their organization can absorb while advancing the clinical program.
When Building In-house Is Rational
In-house manufacturing can make sense when:
- The MSC process is already stable and well-characterized
- There is a clear commercial strategy that justifies capital investment
- GMP operators, quality leadership, and technical staff can be recruited and retained
- The organization can absorb the cost of future process changes and comparability work
The limiting factor is rarely scientific talent. It is the presence of a functioning quality system, validated aseptic behaviors, and sustained operational discipline.
When Partnering Is Rational
Partnering often wins when:
- Speed to clinic outweighs facility ownership
- The process is still evolving and requires experienced process development support
- Access to closed or semi-closed platforms is needed without long lead times
- Integrated QC testing and stability programs are required from the start
- An inspection-ready GMP facility is needed immediately
- The need for flexible capacity and ability to rapidly scale from clinical to commercial manufacturing
The Hybrid Option Many Teams Overlook
A third option exists: hybrid client-in-plant models that preserve internal oversight while leveraging an established GMP environment.
For many programs, this approach provides a practical bridge between early outsourcing and long-term internal manufacturing without assuming full facility risk upfront.
A Decision Framework Holds Under Pressure
- Patient delivery risk
If reliable product delivery is at risk, process optimization becomes mandatory regardless of who manufactures. - Comparability exposure
Early, phase-appropriate optimization reduces future regulatory and comparability burden. - Capability fit
Ensure alignment between process needs and available platforms, particularly for harvest, wash, formulation, and fill & finish. - Operating model realism
Assess whether the team can truly operate GMP manufacturing while advancing clinical research and fundraising. Many early-stage organizations cannot, and that constraint is structural, not a failure of ambition.
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