Recombinant adeno-associated virus (rAAV) has become the most widely used vector in the gene therapy field with hundreds of clinical trials ongoing and already several products on the market. AAV's physicochemical stability, and the various natural and engineered serotypes allow for targeting a broad range of cell types and tissue by diverse routes of administration. Progressing from early clinical studies to eventual market approval, many critical quality attributes have to be defined and reproducibly quantified, such as AAV stability, purity, aggregates, empty/full particles ratio, and rAAV genome titration. Droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) is becoming the tool of choice to perform absolute quantification of rAAV genomes. In the present study, we have identified critical parameters that could impact AAV titration and characterization accuracy, such as Poisson distribution confidence interval, primers/probe position, and potential aggregates. Our work presents how ddPCR can help to better characterize AAV vectors on the single particle level and highlights challenges that we are facing today in terms of AAV titration.
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