Suzanne Farid

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Suzanne Farid
OccupationEngineer
Engineering career
DisciplineBiochemical Engineering
InstitutionsUniversity College London

Suzanne Farid FREng FIChemE is an engineer who specialises in Biochemical and Systems Engineering. She is currently professor of bioprocess systems engineering and head of the department of biochemical engineering at University College London.

Career[edit]

Farid's career has focused on researching and developing monoclonal antibodies to cell and gene therapies. She was appointed a lecturer at UCL in 2001 after completing her PhD there.[1] In 2007 Farid's paper discussing the cost-effective manufacture of antibodies was published in the Journal of Chromatography .[2]

She featured in Biotechnology and Bioengineering in 2012, with Farid evaluating current and future potential of batch and continuous cell culture technologies. The paper followed a case study into the commercial manufacture of monoclonal antibodies.[3]

In 2020 Farid and lead-author Maria Papathanasiou published a paper in Nature on how T cells could be used as a cancer therapy in the future.[4][5] Her expertise in the field led her to be part of the government task force during the COVID-19 pandemic as a member of the 100 Days Mission roundtable. Farid was also interviewed numerous times in relation to the development of a vaccine and also became Director of the UCL-AstraZeneca Bioprocessing Centre of Excellence.[6]

In 2022 she was elected a fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering. [7][8] She is also co-director of the Future Targeted Healthcare Manufacturing Hub, which is funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council.[9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Suzanne Farid profile". Retrieved 12 May 2024.
  2. ^ Sandoval, Carla. "Process economics of industrial monoclonal antibody manufacture". Journal of Chromatography.
  3. ^ Pollock, James; Ho, Sa V.; Farid, Suzanne S. (2013). "Fed-batch and perfusion culture processes: Economic, environmental, and operational feasibility under uncertainty". Biotechnology and Bioengineering. 110: 206–219. doi:10.1002/bit.24608. PMID 22806692.
  4. ^ Papathanasiou, Maria M.; Stamatis, Christos; Lakelin, Matthew; Farid, Suzanne; Titchener-Hooker, Nigel; Shah, Nilay (2020). "Autologous CAR T-cell therapies supply chain: challenges and opportunities?". Cancer Gene Therapy. 27 (10–11). Nature: 799–809. doi:10.1038/s41417-019-0157-z. PMID 31932694.
  5. ^ West, Sara (February 17, 2020). "Engineering solutions to improve access to autologous CAR-T cell therapy". Imperial College London.
  6. ^ Furlong, Ashleigh (July 18, 2020). "Europe's challenge of a lifetime: Manufacturing enough coronavirus vaccines". Politico.
  7. ^ "New Fellows 2022: Professor Suzanne Farid". Retrieved 12 May 2024.
  8. ^ Hebden, Kerry. "New RAEng Fellows includes three IChemE members". The Chemical Engineer.
  9. ^ "Future Targeted Healthcare Manufacturing Hub". University College London. 20 September 2018.

External links[edit]