Yearly Archives: 2021


Global Stem Cells Market Regulations and Competitive Landscape Outlook, 2020 to 2025 The Courier – The Courier

Global Stem Cells Market 2020 by Company, Regions, Type and Application, Forecast to 2025 recently published by MarketQuest.biz, contains important market data that is collected from two or three sources, and the models. A loyal team of experienced forecasters, well-versed analysts, and knowledgeable researchers have worked painstakingly. The report involves six major parameters namely market analysis, market definition, market segmentation, key developments in the market, competitive analysis, and research methodology. Different markets, marketing strategies, future products, and emerging opportunities are taken into account while studying the global Stem Cells market and preparing this report.

The report presents a great understanding of the current market situation with the historic and upcoming market size based on technological growth, value and volume, projecting cost-effective and leading fundamentals in the market. The research report gives essential statistics on the market status of producers as well as offers beneficial advice and direction for businesses and individuals interested in the global Stem Cells industry.

NOTE: Our report highlights the major issues and hazards that companies might come across due to the unprecedented outbreak of COVID-19.

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Market Scope And Segments:

It provides market size (value and volume), market share, growth rate by types, applications, and combines both qualitative and quantitative methods to make micro and macro forecasts in different regions or countries. The global Stem Cells market is segmented on the basis of product, application, and leading regions. The report brings together granular experiences with enormous demand drivers, headway opportunities, pay prospects, and massive challenges and dangers that have a significant effect on the expansion of the company space.

The top players listed in the market report are:

CCBC, Beikebiotech, Vcanbio, Boyalife

Based on type, the report split into:

Umbilical Cord Blood Stem Cell, Embryonic Stem Cell, Adult Stem Cell, Other

Based on application market is segmented into:

Diseases Therapy, Healthcare

According to the regional segmentation, the market provides the information covers the following regions:

North America (United States, Canada and Mexico), Europe (Germany, France, UK, Russia and Italy), Asia-Pacific (China, Japan, Korea, India and Southeast Asia), South America (Brazil, Argentina, etc.), Middle East & Africa (Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Nigeria and South Africa)

This report aims to give emerging as well as established industry players a strategic edge by allowing them to better grasp industry events and gather insights on past and current industry happenings that are expected to affect the global Stem Cells markets growth in the coming years. The study provides an up-to-date overview of the emerging global business situation, as well as the most recent developments and factors, as well as the overall market climate. This report makes it easy to know about the market strategies that are being adopted by the competitors and leading organizations.

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The market study report can help to understand the market and strategize for business expansion. In the strategy analysis, the report throws light on insights from marketing channel and market positioning to potential growth strategies, providing in-depth analysis for new entrants or exists competitors in the global Stem Cells industry.

The Market Research/analysis Report Contains Answers To Your Following Questions:

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Global Stem Cells Market Regulations and Competitive Landscape Outlook, 2020 to 2025 The Courier - The Courier

Global cell isolation market was valued at USD7013.71 million in 2020 and is anticipated to reach USD15529.45 million by 2026 – Yahoo Finance

by registering a CAGR of 15. 25% until 2026. Cell isolation is a technique of isolating cells for diagnosis and analysis of a particular type of cell. The market growth can be attributed to the rising demand for drugs, vaccines and other related products, as they are manufactured with the assistance of cell isolation technique.

New York, June 03, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "Global Cell Isolation Market - Competition Forecast & Opportunities, 2026" - https://www.reportlinker.com/p06089447/?utm_source=GNW Increasing popularity of precision medicines is also working in the favor of the market growth.

Global cell isolation market has been segmented into product, cell type, source, technique, application, end-user, company and region.Based on technique, the market is further fragmented into centrifugation-based cell isolation, surface-marker based cell isolation and filtration-based cell isolation, amongst which, centrifugation-based cell isolation segment occupied the largest market share in 2020 as it finds extensive applications in various end user sectors such as academic institutes, research laboratories, etc.

Based on application, the market is further divided into biomolecule isolation, cancer research, stem cell research, in vitro diagnostics and others.Among these, cancer research and stem cell research are projected to be the lucrative segments of the market in the forecast period.

Increase in the research activities by biopharma companies and laboratory is the key factor for the growth of the segments.

Based on regional analysis, Asia-Pacific is expected to grow at the highest CAGR during the forecast period.The high CAGR of the region can be attributed to the relaxation in the stringent rules and regulations laid down by the government for drug development.

Another factor that can be held responsible for the fastest growth of the region is the availability of competent researchers and personnel who can carry out cell isolation techniques along with a wide genome pool.

Major players operating in the global cell isolation market include GE Healthcare Inc., Stemcell Technologies Inc., Danaher Corporation (Beckman Coulter Inc.), Becton, Dickinson and Company, Merck KGaA, Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., Bio-Rad Laboratories Inc., Terumo Corporation, Sartorius AG, Cell Biolabs Inc., Miltenyi Biotec GmbH, F. Hoffmann-La Roche AG, Corning Inc, Akadeum Life Sciences, Inc., Invent Biotechnologies, Inc. and others. The market players are focusing on research and development activities in order to enhance their product portfolios and strengthen their position across the global market. For instance, the major pharmaceutical companies worldwide are making substantial investments in R&D to introduce new drugs in the market. Such investments are expected to increase the demand for cell isolation products over the coming years. In addition to this, new product developments help vendors to expand their product portfolio and gain maximum share in the sector. For example, Thermo Scientifics Medifuge is a benchtop centrifuge which is having a unique hybrid rotor as well as an interchangeable swing-out buckets and fixed-angle rotors to facilitate rapid & convenient applications on a single platform. Moreover, collaborations, mergers & acquisitions and regional expansions are some of the other strategic initiatives taken by major companies for serving the unmet needs of their customers.

Years considered for this report:

Historical Years: 2016-2019 Base Year: 2020 Estimated Year: 2021 Forecast Period: 2022-2026

Objective of the Study:

To analyze the historical growth in the market size of global cell isolation market from 2016 to 2020. To estimate and forecast the market size of global cell isolation market from 2021 to 2026 and growth rate until 2026. To classify and forecast global cell isolation market based on product, cell type, source, technique, application, end-user, company and region. To identify dominant region or segment in the global cell isolation market. To identify drivers and challenges for global cell isolation market. To examine competitive developments such as expansions, new product launches, mergers & acquisitions, etc., in global cell isolation market. To conduct pricing analysis for global cell isolation market. To identify and analyze the profile of leading players operating in global cell isolation market. To identify key sustainable strategies adopted by market players in global cell isolation market. The analyst performed both primary as well as exhaustive secondary research for this study.Initially, the analyst sourced a list of companies and laboratories using cell isolation techniques across the globe.

Subsequently, the analyst conducted primary research surveys with the identified companies.While interviewing, the respondents were also enquired about their competitors.

Through this technique, the analyst could include the companies and laboratories using cell isolation techniques which could not be identified due to the limitations of secondary research. The analyst examined the companies and laboratories using cell isolation techniques and presence of all major players across the globe. The analyst calculated the market size of global cell isolation market using a bottom-up approach, wherein data for various end-user segments was recorded and forecast for the future years. The analyst sourced these values from the industry experts and company representatives and externally validated through analyzing historical data of these product types and applications for getting an appropriate, overall market size.

Various secondary sources such as company websites, news articles, press releases, company annual reports, investor presentations and financial reports were also studied by the analyst.

Key Target Audience:

Companies and laboratories using cell isolation techniques, research labs, end users and other stakeholders Government bodies such as regulating authorities and policy makers Organizations, forums and alliances related to cell isolation Market research and consulting firms The study is useful in providing answers to several critical questions that are important for the industry stakeholders such as research labs, end users, etc., besides allowing them in strategizing investments and capitalizing on market opportunities.

Report Scope:

In this report, global cell isolation market has been segmented into the following categories, in addition to the industry trends which have also been detailed below: Global Cell Isolation Market, By Product: o Consumables o Instruments Global Cell Isolation Market, By Cell Type: o Human Cells o Animal Cells Global Cell Isolation Market, By Source: o Bone Marrow o Cord Blood/Embryonic Stem Cells o Adipose Tissue Global Cell Isolation Market, By Technique: o Centrifugation-Based Cell Isolation o Surface Marker-Based Cell Isolation o Filtration-Based Cell Isolation Global Cell Isolation Market, By Application: o Biomolecule Isolation o Cancer Research o Stem Cell Research o In Vitro Diagnostics o Others Global Cell Isolation Market, By End-User: o Biotechnology and Biopharmaceutical Companies o Research Laboratories and Institutes o Hospitals and Diagnostic Laboratories o Cell Banks Global Cell Isolation Market, By Region: o North America United States Mexico Canada o Europe Germany United Kingdom France Italy Spain o Asia-Pacific China Japan India South Korea Australia o South America Brazil Argentina Colombia o Middle East and Africa South Africa Saudi Arabia UAE

Competitive Landscape

Company Profiles: Detailed analysis of the major companies present in global cell isolation market.

Available Customizations:

With the given market data, we offers customizations according to a companys specific needs. The following customization options are available for the report:

Company Information

Detailed analysis and profiling of additional market players (up to five). Read the full report: https://www.reportlinker.com/p06089447/?utm_source=GNW

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Global cell isolation market was valued at USD7013.71 million in 2020 and is anticipated to reach USD15529.45 million by 2026 - Yahoo Finance

Innovative Regenerative Medicine Therapies Safety Comes First – FDA.gov

Caption

By: Peter Marks, M.D., Director, Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration continues to facilitate the development and availability of innovative medical products, such as regenerative medicine therapies, that have the potential to treat or even cure diseases or conditions for which few effective treatment options exist. For example, the agency has recently licensed (approved) its first product that received Regenerative Medicine Advanced Therapy (RMAT) designation, underscoring our ongoing commitment to work with sponsors and manufacturers to bring these products to market.

Unapproved products marketed as regenerative medicine therapies may cause serious harm to patients. Cellular therapies, including stem-cell products, are often marketed by clinics as being safe and effective for the treatment of a wide range of diseases or conditions, even though they havent been adequately or appropriately studied in clinical trials.

In 2017, the FDA issued guidance on the regulatory framework for regenerative medicine therapies and announced its intent to exercise enforcement discretion with respect to the FDAs investigational new drug (IND) and premarket approval requirements for certain regenerative medicine products. This policy gave manufacturers three-and-a-half-years to determine the appropriate regulatory pathway for their products, and if an application is needed, ample time to prepare and submit the appropriate application to the FDA.

Now that we have reached the end of the compliance and enforcement discretion policy period, we are once again reminding manufacturers, clinics, and health care practitioners and providers that the compliance and enforcement discretion policy for certain human cells, tissues, and cellular and tissue-based products (HCT/Ps), including regenerative medicine therapies, ended on May 31, 2021. If manufacturers continue to illegally market unapproved HCT/Ps, they do so at their own risk and may be subject to an enforcement action.

The FDA continues to receive consumer complaints and has warned consumers about unapproved regenerative medicine products and the unfounded claims made in advertisements and direct-to-patient marketing. Despite the FDAs warnings that an IND may be required for these products, many entities still ignore such warnings and offer these unapproved and unproven products, with some consumers subsequently experiencing serious adverse effects.

The compliance and enforcement discretion policy was never intended to excuse the violations of manufacturers or health care providers who are offering unapproved regenerative medicine products that have the potential to put patients at significant risk. The policy did not apply to products that have been associated with reported safety concerns or have the potential to cause significant safety concerns to patients.

Indeed, while the policy was in place, the FDA took swift and aggressive action in the face of serious violations of the law, including some involving patient harm. Since November 2017, the FDA has pursued two enforcement actions for injunction against manufacturers of such violative HCT/Ps.

The FDA prevailed in one of those cases, United States v. US Stem Cell Inc. et al., in June 2019, before the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida. Earlier this week, the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit affirmed the lower courts judgment. The US Stem Cell decision is a victory for public health and an endorsement of the FDAs work to stop stem cell clinics that place patients at risk by marketing products that violate the law.

The other case for injunction, United States v. Cell Surgical Network et al., is currently being litigated in the United States District Court for the Central District of California. A third enforcement action pursued by the FDA was resolved in March 2018. That case involved the seizure of vials of Vaccinia Virus Vaccine, Live, used to create an unapproved and dangerous stem cell product (a combination of excess amounts of live virus and stromal vascular fraction a stem cell mixture derived from body fat).

The FDA also has taken numerous actions since the compliance and enforcement policy was announced. During this period, the agency issued 14 Warning Letters and 24 Untitled Letters involving violative HCT/Ps regulated under Section 351 of the Public Health Service Act and the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and applicable FDA regulations. Additionally, since December 2018, the FDA has issued 400 letters to manufacturers and health care providers who may be offering violative stem cell or related products since December 2018.

The FDA reminds all stakeholders that the agencys acceptance of an establishment registration and HCT/P listing does not constitute a determination that an establishment is in compliance with applicable rules and regulations or that the HCT/P is licensed or approved by the FDA. It is inappropriate and misleading to advertise establishment registration and product listing in any manner that may imply product approval or compliance with the law.

If manufacturers, clinics, and health care providers offering regenerative medicine products to patients did not contact the FDA about the need for an IND during the period the Tissue Reference Group Rapid Inquiry Program was offered, there remain three options that have been available for many years and these options continue to be available. We want to remind stakeholders that a product that requires but lacks premarket approval may not be lawfully marketed or offered for sale, including when a sponsor has an IND or is pursuing an IND or BLA for its HCT/P.

The FDA is committed to helping advance the development of clinical trials for regenerative medicine products with the shared goal of safe and effective products for patients. We look forward to working with those who share this goal.

For more information: Important Patient and Consumer Information About Regenerative Medicine Therapies

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Innovative Regenerative Medicine Therapies Safety Comes First - FDA.gov

The stem cell market was valued at USD 14.7 billion in 2020, and it is expected – GlobeNewswire

New York, June 01, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "Stem Cell Market - Growth, Trends, COVID-19 Impact, and Forecasts (2021 - 2026)" - https://www.reportlinker.com/p06079777/?utm_source=GNW According to a 2020 research article published in the scientific journal Aging and Disease (2020), mesenchymal stem cells are a safe and effective approach to the treatment of COVID-19. At least 10 projects have been registered in the official international registry for clinical trials, implicating the use of mesenchymal stem cells to patients with coronavirus pneumonia. However, it is still at an initial stage of study in relation to the market studied.

Stem cells are majorly used in regenerative medicine, especially in the field of dermatology. However, oncology is expected to grow at the highest rate due to a large number of pipeline products present for the treatment of tumors or cancers. With the increase in the number of regenerative medicine centers, the stem cell market is also expected to increase in the future.

One of the richest sources of stem cells is the umbilical cord, which possesses unique qualities and has greater advantages over embryonic stem cells or adult stem cells. There are an increasing number of stem cell banks, which collaborate with hospitals and increase awareness about the storage of cord blood units in families, particularly in the emerging markets. The support is increasing with the rising number of medical communities and government initiatives active in promoting the use of stem cells for the treatment of more than 100 diseases. Currently, there is an increase in the number of clinical trials for testing future treatment possibilities of cord blood. Over 200 National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded clinical trials with cord blood are currently being conducted in the United States alone.

Key Market Trends The Oncology Disorders Segment is Expected to Exhibit the Fastest Growth Rate Over the Forecast Period

The global cancer burden has been increasing, and thus, cancer therapies must be modified according to regional and national priorities. According to the World Cancer Research Fund, in 2018, there were an estimated 18 million cancer cases around the world. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), cancer is the second-leading cause of death across the world, with an estimated number of 9.6 million deaths in 2018, accounting for nearly one in six deaths.

Bone marrow transplant or stem cell transplant is a treatment for some types of cancer, like leukemia, multiple myeloma, neuroblastoma, or some types of lymphoma. For cancer treatments, both autologous and allogeneic stem cell transplants are done. Autologous transplants are preferred in the case of leukemias, lymphomas, multiple myeloma, testicular cancer, and neuroblastoma.

The major disadvantage associated with autologous stem cell transplants in cancer therapy is that cancer cells sometimes also get collected, along with stem cells, which may further put it back into the body during the therapy.

In case of allogeneic stem cell transplants, the donor can often be asked to donate more stem cells or even white blood cells, as per the requirement, and stem cells from healthy donors are free of cancer cells. However, the transplanted donor stem cells could die or be destroyed by the patients body before settling in the bone marrow.

Moreover, due to the growing focus of stem cell-based research and the rising demand for novel treatments, several companies, such as Stemline Therapeutics, have been focusing on developing technologies and treatments to attack cancer cells, which may help the market grow. However, owing to the COVID-19 pandemic, the detection and treatment of new cancer cases are impended, which may slightly impact the segment growth in the year.

North America Captured The Largest Market Share and is Expected to Retain its Dominance

North America dominated the overall stem cell market, with the United States contributing to the largest share in the market. The United States and Canada have developed and well-structured healthcare systems. These systems also encourage research and development. The increasing number of cancer cases is providing opportunities for market players. The major market players are focusing on R&D activities to introduce new stem cell therapies in the market.

For instance, the National Cancer Institute (NCI) had stated that the national expenditure on cancer care was expected to reach USD 156 billion by 2020. This factor is expected to boost the growth of the market in the future. In December 2019, the researchers at the National Eye Institute (NEI) launched a clinical trial to test the safety of a novel patient-specific stem cell-based therapy to treat geographic atrophy, the advanced dry form of age-related macular degeneration (AMD), a leading cause of vision loss among people aged 65 years and above.

In addition, the current situation of COVID-19 is another factor driving the growth of the market in the country, as research activities are undergoing for the treatment of COVID-19. Stem cell therapy can also be a promising approach for the treatment of COVID-19 in the future. For instance, on May 6, 2020, Lineage Cell Therapeutics received a grant of USD 5 million from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM) to support the use of VAC, Lineages allogeneic dendritic cell therapy for the development of a potential vaccine against SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.

Competitive Landscape The stem cell market is highly competitive and consists of several major players. In terms of market share, few of the major players currently dominate the market. The presence of major market players, such as Thermo Fisher Scientific (Qiagen NV), Sigma Aldrich (a subsidiary of Merck KGaA), Becton, Dickinson and Company, and Stem Cell Technologies, is in turn, increasing the overall competitive rivalry in the market. The product advancements and improvement in stem cell technology by the major players are also increasing the competitive rivalry.

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The stem cell market was valued at USD 14.7 billion in 2020, and it is expected - GlobeNewswire

Part 3: Moving Forward and Keeping Stem Cell Treatments Safe – MedShadow

Times up, said the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). A three-and-a-half-year grace period during which companies manufacturing and providing regenerative medicine procedures were instructed to get their operations in line with new, clarified rules announced in 2017, ended May 31, 2021. Those procedures had previously fallen into a gray area of regulation because they rely on harvesting live stem cells or related products rather than traditionally manufactured drugs to repair damaged tissues and organs. Starting June 1, the agency expects all such companies to be in compliance or risk a variety of enforcement actions from warning letters to pursuing criminal prosecution.

For many years, the regenerative medicine industry operated with limited FDA oversight. The field exploded in the 2010s, with nearly a thousand clinics popping up throughout the US. In 2017, the FDA announced stricter, clearer regulations for those treatments. Knowing that a multibillion-dollar industry already existed and wanting to support research and innovation in what most researchers believe is a promising field of medicine, the agency didnt penalize all clinics that werent following the rules. Instead, the FDA offered a grace period, during which companies could file regulatory paperwork and design trials in line with the agencys requirements.

Traditional clinical trials can take years and sometimes even decades to complete, so the FDA has offered several types of expedited approval pathways for therapies expected to provide valuable treatment to patients who have few options. In 2016, it created the Regenerative Medicine Advance Therapy Designation (RMAT) as a part of the 21st Century Cures Act. If the FDA grants the designation to a treatment, the researchers conducting its trials get special support from the agency that can streamline the approval process. The company may be permitted to submit real world data and patient registries in lieu of data from a standard clinical trial, in which some patients are randomized to receive a placebo, to be considered for approval.

But in June 2019, Ned Sharpless, the acting FDA commissioner, announced that the agency had received far fewer approval requests RMAT or otherwise than it had anticipated during the grace period. Were more than halfway through the enforcement discretion period, and the pace of progress of those offering these human cells, tissues and cellular and tissue-based products, including stem cell treatments, to come into compliance with the requirements has been slower than expected. Its possible some stakeholders have questions about the requirements or the length of the process, he said in a statement announcing the Tissue Reference Groups Rapid Inquiry Program (TRIP). Essentially, companies that were unsure which level of regulation their products required could have submitted a request to the Tissue Regerence Group, which would answer within three days, outlining the steps needed to meet the FDAs requirements for compliance. That program ended on March 31, 2021.

While the FDA offered to help companies willing to seek regulatory approval, the agency continued to penalize those companies it believes are conducting the riskiest procedures and making the boldest claims, which had fallen outside of even the previous, cloudier regulations.

For instance, Vibrant Health Care received a warning letter from the FDA in November 2020, after marketing umbilical-cord-derived stem cell treatments designed to boost the immune system and protect patients against COVID-19.

A banner on the companys homepage now reads: Vibrant Health Care does not offer any products or treatments that can mitigate, prevent, treat, diagnose or cure COVID-19. If you are experiencing COVID 19 symptoms, please contact your primary care physician or local hospital.

The letter also cited patient testimonials on the website that claimed that Vibrants treatments had cured their asthma overnight, for example, or led to other dramatic improvements. The testimonials page no longer includes references to specific treatments other than Botox. Instead, patients make broad statements like, Dr. Farrell has been keeping me functional for many years. She always finds some way to alleviate my pain.

An FDA spokesperson told MedShadow in an email, Clinics currently offering products outside of FDAs review process are taking advantage of patients and flouting federal statutes and FDA regulations. This ultimately puts at risk the very patients that these clinics claim to want to help, by either delaying treatment with legitimate and scientifically sound treatment options, or worse, posing harm to patients.

While some providers are working to get their products in line with FDA recommendations, others continue to claim that their products should not be subject to FDA review. Some companies may be toeing a fine line, registering clinical trials as a way to offer treatments to patients, but not designing those trials in ways that are likely to bring the therapies to market.

A search for stem cell and COVID on clinicaltrials.gov, a government website that lists clinical trial information, yields over 100 results. It could be a sign that researchers are working on new therapies and developing them through traditional clinical trial pathways sanctioned by the FDA. But, trials listed here are not always what they seem and the listings are subject to limited oversight. Thousands of trials registered on clinicaltrials.gov are not completed and the results never published. Its possible that some companies dont intend to send their results to the FDA for review and instead have set up sham trials for the appearance of legitimacy.

Leigh Turner, PhD, a bioethicist at the University of Minnesota published an analysis in 2017 that found 18 US-based clinical trials testing stem cells listed on clinicaltrials.gov required the patients to pay for their own treatments. In most clinical trials, patients are responsible for little to none of the cost of treatment or are paid a stipend and compensated for some travel costs to and from the medical facility. Moreover, Wired reported that patients paid $5,000 to $15,000 per treatment, a fact that was not disclosed in any of the clinicaltrials.gov listings themselves. None of the 18 studies were randomized or blinded, conditions usually required in studies intended for FDA review, because they minimize bias in results.

In 2019, Google banned advertisements for treatments that have no established biomedical or scientific basis. The companys announcement also stated, The new policy also includes treatments that are rooted in basic scientific findings and preliminary clinical experience, but currently have insufficient formal clinical testing to justify widespread clinical use. Some companies, Turner suggests in his article, may be using clinicaltrials.gov as an advertising tool to recruit patients willing to pay for the treatments, without conducting scientifically sound trials.

[Disclosure: The MedShadow Foundation advocated against the Right to Try Act.]

Even if you might benefit from an experimental drug, you might not be eligible for a trial. Maybe youre not the right age, youve been prescribed drugs in the past or have a comorbidity that interferes with the treatment being tested. Those conditions could cloud the data for scientists, even if the treatment is still helpful to you. For these situations, the FDA created the Expanded Access Pathway.

The expanded access pathway has been around for a long time. It tries to acknowledge that there may be circumstances where its justifiable to provide access to investigational new drugs outside of a clinical trial context, says Turner. But with the expanded access route, there is a fair degree of oversight.

The FDA evaluates each application for a patient who has exhausted other options to receive a drug through the expanded access pathway. According to a 2017 study, initiating the process requires paperwork that takes about 45 minutes to fill out. On average, the FDA issues a decision within four days. In emergency situations, it usually responds in less than 24 hours. The overwhelming majority of requests are approved, though about 11% require adjustments like a change in dosing or an informed consent form before approval.

The Right to Try Act allows patients, physicians and sponsors to bypass this FDA review. It really means that decision-making devolves onto patients, their physicians and a sponsor, says Turner. If everyone is being careful and cautious and doing everything they can to be compliant, it may be an approach that works in an acceptable fashion.

When Congress passed the Right to Try act in 2018, Matthew Feshbach, who had previously run a company that provided stem cell treatments in the Bahamas, saw an opportunity to return to the US and open Ambrose Cell Therapy, which now offers stem cell treatments for patients with a wide range of diseases who have exhausted conventional therapeutic options.

On the companys website, the tagline under the Ambrose Cell Therapy logo reads your right to try, and the site has a page dedicated to explaining the legislation. The company uses a system made by another company, Cytori Therapeutics, to process cells collected from a patients fat and reintroduce them into the patients body. The system has been tested for safety in nine Phase I and Phase II trials, but Ambrose is not currently pursuing any clinical trials of the treatment to bring it to market for specific diseases under FDA approval. Rather, the company is offering the stem cell treatment exclusively on a Right to Try basis. Feshbach says, There are very few large-scale clinical trials that have been done with adult stem cells. They usually dont make it past Phase II, primarily because of funding. Additionally, he says, he is not a big believer in randomized controlled trials, because in the real world, [treatments] dont work out the way they did in a trial.

He explains that there is a growing body of peer-reviewed literature to support the cells that Ambrose uses (and encourages patients to ask for such literature when searching for stem cell treatment options). The company is collecting data on patients and plans to publish a series of case reports.

Turner worries that the offering treatment in this context is never going to bring a safe and efficacious stem cell product to market. Its a way of sitting out there for years, [technically] complying with regulations.

Prices for different products and procedures arent readily available, and Feshbach declined to discuss the cost of care at Ambrose. A 2017 study showed that the average price quoted to a patient seeking stem cell injections for osteoarthritis in the knee is about $5,000. Its important to review all costs you can expect before beginning treatment, especially considering that, in most cases, insurance wont cover it.

During our conversation, Turner also mentions that there is a line in the Right to Try act that seemed to suggest that companies, like Ambrose Cell Therapy, couldnt profit solely from offering treatments on a Right to Try basis. He admitted that while it had caught his eye, he wasnt yet positive if he was interpreting the law accurately.

The Right to Try states that eligible investigational drugs must be in compliance with 312.6, 312.7 and 312.8 d (1). Of Title 21 Code of Federal Regulations. 312.8d states that, A sponsor may recover only the direct costs of making its investigational drug available.

To investigate, I reached out to a retired biotech executive who was involved with several expanded access requests, which are also required to conform to 312.8d, prior to the approval of the Right to Try act. She explains that her companies were only allowed to charge patients what it cost the company to make and send the treatments to a patients doctors, and that her companies never charged patients for anything.

I also emailed the FDA spokesperson, who responded, FDA does not review or approve requests for use under the Right to Try Act. FDAs role is limited to receipt and posting of certain information submitted under the Right to Try Act. Section 561B (C)(b) of the Right to Try Act (Public Law 115-176), Investigational Drugs For Use By Eligible Patients, describes the requirement to be in compliance with the applicable regulations set forth in section 312.8(d)(1) of the CFR [Code of Federal Regulations].

At this point, it seems clear to me that a company cant profit from selling its unapproved treatments to patients outside of clinical trials, but that its unlikely the rule would be enforced because as Turner put it, The FDA is not actively involved in scrutinizing any of this. The Right to Try law stops the agency from overseeing requests.

When I present this information to Feshbach, however, he explains that I am missing a key detail. The price of the treatment itself cannot exceed the companys cost of providing access to it, but the law does not address additional costs like having a doctor administer the treatment on-site.

While the cost of knee injections average $5,000, some stem cell treatments cost tens of thousands of dollars. In 2018, one company said it may even charge several hundreds of thousands to patients who requested their Right to Try a treatment that had demonstrated little efficacy even in the companys own trials. The company later announced it would offer the treatment to only a limited number of patients through expanded access, and that it would do so for free. One for-profit cancer treatment company currently offers Right to Try treatments alongside other options.

Some types of minimally manipulated regenerative medicine are still exempt from much FDA oversight, requiring only that their facilities keep up manufacturing standards that limit contamination. Even in these instances, there is a movement among some researchers to collect better data on patient outcomes, in hopes of better understanding who benefits from the treatments and when.

At the Center for Regenerative Orthopedic Medicine at the Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research, where Daniel Grande, PhD is the scientific director, he and others provide, for a fee, platelet-rich plasma and stem cell injections derived from a patients own bone marrow or fat, with techniques that fall under the FDAs lowest-risk tier and are thus not subject to the clinical trial process.

But he laments the lack of consistent data reporting in the field. He says you can do a literature search and find thousands of papers on a particular procedure only to realize theyre mostly individual case studies or lack a control group. We want to bring a standardization to the clinic, he says. For example, when Grande gives a patient a platelet-rich plasma treatment, he takes a sample of the blood and conducts a complete blood count, which analyzes the concentration of different cells and biomarkers in your blood to evaluate overall health and diagnose certain diseases. Next, he takes a sample of just the plasma. Both are stored in freezers for continued analysis. Then [I] follow these patients from zero to one year to see how they actually do, he adds.

Grande is not alone. His group has teamed up with several other institutions, including the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Northwell Health, Hospital for Special Surgery, Cleveland Clinic, Mayo Institute, Stanford University and the University of Colorado Denver, to form the Biological Alliance of Regenerative Medicine and Biorepository. He says its members have committed to measuring the same variables through treatment and sharing data in hopes of answering questions about who the treatments are most likely to help and how many stem cells are actually needed for best results. In the first year, their goal is to enroll 1,400 patients. Grande also hopes the effort may lead to insurance companies eventually reimbursing for the procedures.

Theres a movement underway nationally to better characterize these regenerative therapies in a way that everybody can either figure out whats going on [with them], Grande adds. Theres a call to action for trying to better characterize these things and to provide information to not only clinicians, but also [to] the public about what works and what doesnt, so that people can be informed.

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Part 3: Moving Forward and Keeping Stem Cell Treatments Safe - MedShadow

Early Promise of AntiCLL-1 CAR T-Cell Therapy Reported in Pediatric AML – Cancer Network

Feasibility of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy targeting C-type lectin-like molecule-1 (CLL-1) for pediatric patients with relapsed/refractory (R/R) acute myeloid leukemia (AML) was validated in a small patient cohort in a phase 1/2 trial (ChiCTR1900027684), results of which were presented at the 2021 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting.1

At an interim analysis, 10 of 11 patients completely responded to anti-CLL1based CAR-T cell therapy, with CLL-1positive AML blasts eliminated within 1 month. Six patients achieved complete remission with minimal residual disease (MRD) negativity, added lead investigator Hui Zhang, MD, PhD, an assistant professor at Shanghai Childrens Medical Center and director of Guangzhou Women and Childrens Medical Center at Chinas Guangzhou Medical University.

From all the research shown, we can say that anti-CLL1 based CAR T-cells is a safe therapeutic candidate with manageable CAR T-cellassociated toxicity for children with R/R AML, he said. It is highly effective in targeting CLL1-positive AML cells with superior overall response rate (ORR) relative to conventional/novel targeting compounds.

In this study, 11 pediatric R/R AML patients aged 2 to 16 years were infused between October 2019 and January 2021 with a second-generation CLL1 CAR-T created in Zhangs laboratory. Investigators administered a single dose of CLL1 or CLL1-CD33 dual CAR-T cells (target dose: 0.3-1 x 106/kg) following lymphodepleting conditioning with a cyclophosphamide/fludarabine combination.

Zhang said all 11 patients experienced CAR T-cell expansion in vivo during the first month. Five patients demonstrated persistence of T-cell expansion.

All patients experienced grade 1 to 3 cytokine release syndrome (CRS) but there were no lethal events, Zhang said. All patients experienced myelosuppression, which he said might be due to chemotherapy. Three patients experienced a grade 1/2 hepatic event. No patient experienced cardiac, renal, or gastrointestinal adverse events.

Investigators have suggested that CLL-1 is a promising target because it not expressed on normal hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), but is expressed on 85% to 92% of AML blasts cells and leukemia stem cells.2 In a humanized mouse model, investigators demonstrated that CAR T-cell therapy specific for CLL-1 exhibit potent cytokine production and cytotoxicity against CLL-1-expressing AML cell lines without disrupting normal HSCs.

Investigators theorized that developing an anti-CLL1 CAR T therapy would help patients avoid the need for HSC transplant.

In 2020, Zhang published a case study of a 10-year-old girl who presented with an elevated peripheral blood blast percentage while undergoing maintenance treatment for a B-cell ALL relapse. Investigators developed a CAR containing a CLL1-specific single-chain variable fragment.3

The patient received lymphodepleting chemotherapy for 4 days before CAR T-cell transfer to enhance in vivo expansion of CAR T-cells. This was followed by a single dose anti-CLL1 CAR-T cells infusion. She experienced Grade 1 to CRS.

After completing CAR T-cell therapy, the patient achieved a complete response and was negative for MRD (<0.1%) on day 29. But the CLL1+ cells were not completely eliminated until 6 months after CAR T-cell therapy. The patient achieved a 10-month response using 1 dose of anti-CLL1 CAR-T monotherapy.

References

1. Zhang H, Bu C, Pen Z, et al. The efficacy and safety of anti-CLL1 based CAR-T cells in children with relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia: A multicenter interim analysis. J Clin Oncol. 2021;39(suppl 15):10000. doi:10.1200/JCO.2021.39.15_suppl.10000

2. Tashiro H, Sauer T, Shum T, et al. Treatment of acute myeloid leukemia with T cells expressing chimeric antigen receptors directed to C-type lectin-like molecule 1. Mol Ther. 2017;25(9):2202-2213. doi:10.1016/j.ymthe.2017.05.024

3. Zhang H, Gan WT, Hao, WG, et al. Successful ant-CLL1 CAR T-cell therapy in secondary acute myeloid leukemia. Front Oncol. 2020;10:685. Doi:10.3389/fonc.2020.00685

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Early Promise of AntiCLL-1 CAR T-Cell Therapy Reported in Pediatric AML - Cancer Network

Innovative research refines the treatment of patients with advanced cancers and the use of immunotherapy – Network News, Press Releases – Hackensack…

June 4, 2021

John Theurer Cancer Center investigators report new findings at American Society of Clinical Oncology 2021 Annual Meeting

Researchers from Hackensack University Medical Centers John Theurer Cancer Center, a part of Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, are presenting data from 25 studies at the Annual Meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, the largest gathering of cancer professionals in the country. This years meeting is being held virtually June 4-8, 2021. Abstracts of the studies can be viewed at abstracts.asco.org.

At John Theurer Cancer Center patients have access to the latest cancer treatments and technologies, including those being evaluated in clinical trials. People with all types and stages of cancer are treated by world-renown experts. The cancer center is especially well-known for its research that drives treatment guidelines, and expertise in the management of hematologic cancers, having pioneered more effective therapies for leukemia, lymphoma, and multiple myeloma. John Theurer Cancer Center was the first center in New Jersey to offer CAR T-cell therapy, a revolutionary immunotherapy for patients with select leukemias and lymphomas. The center is home to one of the nations largest bone marrow transplant programs, with more than 7,500 completed.

Many of the studies being presented at ASCO report on novel treatments for patients with recurrent or persistent multiple myeloma or non-Hodgkin lymphomas (including mantle cell lymphoma, an especially challenging type), as well as acute myeloid leukemia and chronic lymphocytic leukemia. John Theurer Cancer Center investigators are also leaders in the development of immunotherapy regimens, and several of the studies being presented at ASCO evaluated its effectiveness and side effects, including real-world data in unique patient populations. Other studies report provocative findings on targeted therapies and other treatments for kidney and bladder cancers, brain cancer, and other solid tumors. Data from the following studies by John Theurer Cancer Center researchers are being presented at ASCOs 2021 virtual meeting:

Blood Cancers and Stem Cell Transplantation

Developmental Therapeutics and Immunotherapy

Targeted Therapies and Tumor Biology

Central Nervous System Tumors

The COVID-19 pandemic challenged health care in ways we have never been challenged before. Despite the obstacles it presented, however, investigators at John Theurer Cancer Center continued to expand our understanding of cancer, refine its treatment, and develop innovative approaches to improve patient outcomes," asserted Andre Goy, M.D., M.S., chairman and executive director of John Theurer Cancer Center.

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Innovative research refines the treatment of patients with advanced cancers and the use of immunotherapy - Network News, Press Releases - Hackensack...

In Some Heavily Pretreated Patients with R/R MM Ide-Cel Continues to Show Deep and Durable Responses – Targeted Oncology

Long-term follow-up data from the KarMMa trial found that treatment with the chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy, idecabtagene vicleucel (ide-cel; formerly bb2121; Abecma), continues to demonstrate improved survival among heavily pretreated patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma, according to a presentation presented at the 2021 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting.1

The favorable benefit risk profile of ide-cel, regardless of the number of prior lines of therapy, supports its role as a treatment option for heavily pretreated relapse refractory multiple myeloma, Larry D. Anderson, MD, PhD, associate professor, UT Southwestern Medical Center, said during a presentation of the poster.

At the December 21, 2020, data cutoff, the median follow-up was 24.8 months (range, 1.7-33.6).

Overall response rate (ORR) was 73% in the overall population, including a 33% complete response rate (CRR; complete response [CR] or stringent complete response [sCR]), 20% with a very good partial response (VGPR), and 20% who had a partial response (PR). ORR rates were 50%, 69%, and 81%, respectively, across the 150, 300, and 450 million CAR T cell-dose arms, including CR/sCR rates of 25%, 29%, and 39%.

Of note, ORR did not vary by the number of prior lines of therapy received. For those who received 3 prior lines of therapy (n = 15), the ORR was 73%, including a CRR of 53% and VGPR of 20%, compared with an ORR of 73% in those who received 4 (n = 112) lines of therapy, including a CRR of 30%, VGPR of 23%, and PR of 20%.

Median duration of response (DOR) was 10.9 months (95% CI, 9.0-11.4), including 9.9 months for the 300 million CAR T cells-dose arm and 11.3 months for the 450 million CAR T cells-dose arm -dose arm. Median DOR was 21.5 months in patients who experienced a CR or sCR. Median DOR by response were 21.5 months (95% CI, 12.5 to not estimable [NE]) among those who experienced a CR, 10.4 months (95% CI, 5.1-12.2) for those with VGPR, and 4.5 months (95% CI, 2.9-6.7) in those with PRs.

Moreover, the rate of event-free 24-month DOR appeared to be similar in patients who received 3 or 4 or more lines of therapy. For those who received 3 lines of prior therapy, median DOR was 8.0 months (95% CI, 3.3-11.4), compared with 10.9 months (95% CI, 9.2-13.5) in those who received 4 or more lines of therapy.

Median progression-free survival (PFS) was 8.6 months (95% CI, 5.6-11.6) across all target doses, including 5.8 months for the 300 million CAR T cells-dose arm and 12.2 months for the 450 million CAR T cells-dose arm -dose arm. Similarly, median PFS was similar among those who previously received 3 lines of therapy, compared with 4 or more prior lines of therapy (8.6 months (95% CI, 2.9-12.1) vs 8.9 months (95% CI, 5.4-11.6)]

The median time to first response was 1 month (range, 0.5-8.8), with a median time to CR of 2.8 months (range, 1.0-15.8).

Median overall survival (OS) was 24.8 months (95% CI, 19.9-31.2), including a median OS of 22.0 months (95% CI, 10.-NE) in those who received 3 lines of prior therapy and 25.2 months (95% CI, 19.9-NE) in those who received 4 or more lines of prior therapy. Moreover, OS was 20 months or longer across several key high-risk subgroups, including those aged 65 or older (21.7 months; 95% CI, 17.1-31.2), those with extramedullary disease (20.2 months; 95% CI, 15.5-28.3), and those with triple refractory disease (21.7 months; 95% CI, 18.2-NE).

In regards to safety, cytokine release syndrome (CRS) and neurotoxicity were similar, regardless of prior lines of therapy received, and were mostly low grade. In total, 85% and 18% of the overall population experienced at least 1 CRS or neurotoxicity event, respectively.

The safety profile of ide-cel was consistent with long-term follow-up, with similar rates of infections and secondary primary malignancies, and no unexpected gene therapy related toxicities were observed. The most common grade 3 to 4 adverse events (AEs) in the overall population were neutropenia (89%), anemia (61%), thrombocytopenia (52%), leukopenia (39%), lymphopenia (27%), and infections (27%).

Long-term results from the KarMMA trial continue to demonstrate frequent, deep, and durable responses in heavily pretreated patients with [relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma], the study authors write in the poster. ORR, CRR, DOR, and PFS were consistent with previous reports and patients received similar benefit regardless of the number of prior lines of therapy.

In his presentation, Anderson presented data on long-term efficacy and safety following treatment with ide-cel in the pivotal phase 2 KarMMa trial (NCT03361748)-including overall data and by prior line of therapy that patients had received (3 vs 4), since the FDA label is requiring at least 4 prior lines, and this study only required 3, he added.

In total, 140 patients who had received at least 3 prior lines of therapy for multiple myeloma including an IMiD, a PI, and an anti-CD38 antibody and were refractory to their last treatment regimen, were enrolled in the study. However, only 128 patients received infusion with ide-cel.

Patients were treated with ide-cel across the target dose range of 150 (n = 4), 300 (n = 70), and 450 (n = 54) million CAR T cells.

ORR served as the primary end point of the study. Secondary end points included CRR, safety, DOR, PFS, OS, pharmacokinetics, minimal residual disease, quality of life, and health economics and outcomes research.

At baseline, the median patient age was 61 years (range, 33-78) and patients had a median of 6 years (range, 1-18) since their diagnosis. A majority of the patients were male (59%), had high tumor burden (51%), B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA) expression 50% at screening (85%), ECOG performance status of 1 (53%), and Revised International Staging System disease stage of II (70%). Thirty-five percent of patients had high-risk features.2

The median number of prior therapies was 6 (range, 3-16) and 94% had previously undergone at least 1 autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant (94%). Eighty-eight percent of patients required bridging therapy. Eighty-nine percent of patients had double-refractory disease, 84% were triple-refractory, and 26% were penta-refractory.

Patients who had received 3 prior lines of therapy had similar baseline characteristics, compared with those who received 4 prior lines, including differences in extramedullary disease, high-risk cytogenetics, prior refractoriness, and time since the initial diagnosis to screening.

Patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma previously exposed to immunomodulatory agents, protease inhibitors, and anti-CD38 antibodies have poor outcomes with subsequent therapy using previously approved regimens, with expected response rates in the 26% to 31% range, PFS in the 2- to 4-month range, and overall survival less than 9 months, Anderson explained.

However, the BCMA-directed CAR T-cell therapy previously demonstrated favorable tolerability with deep, durable responses in patients who were heavily pretreated with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma.2 As a result, the FDA approved the agent for the treatment of adult patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma after 4 or more prior therapies, including an immunomodulatory drug, a proteasome inhibitor, and an anti-CD38 antibody, representing the first BCMAdirected CAR T-cell therapy approved.3

The study authors noted that ide-cel is being explored in ongoing clinical trials, including the following:

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In Some Heavily Pretreated Patients with R/R MM Ide-Cel Continues to Show Deep and Durable Responses - Targeted Oncology

Mustang Bio to Host Key Opinion Leader Webinar on MB-106 CD20-Targeted CAR T for the Treatment of High-Risk B-Cell Non-Hodgkin Lymphomas and Chronic…

Webinar to be held Tuesday, June 15, 2021, at 1:00 p.m. ET

WORCESTER, Mass., June 07, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Mustang Bio, Inc. (Mustang) (NASDAQ: MBIO), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on translating todays medical breakthroughs in cell and gene therapies into potential cures for hematologic cancers, solid tumors and rare genetic diseases, today announced that it will host a key opinion leader (KOL) webinar on MB-106 CD20-targeted CAR T cell therapy, which is being developed for high-risk B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas (B-NHL) and chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), on Tuesday, June 15, 2021, at 1:00 p.m. Eastern Time.

The webinar will feature a presentation by Mazyar Shadman, M.D., M.P.H., Associate Professor at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center (Fred Hutch), who will discuss interim results from the ongoing Phase 1/2 clinical trial investigating the safety and efficacy of MB-106 CD20-targeted CAR T for B-NHL and CLL. These data have been selected for an e-poster presentation at the European Hematology Association 2021 Virtual Congress (EHA2021), which is being held June 9-17. Dr. Shadman, along with colleague Brian Till, M.D., also an Associate Professor at Fred Hutch, will be available to answer questions following the formal presentations.

Mustangs management team will also provide more details on the planned MB-106 Phase 1/2 clinical trial to be conducted under Mustangs Investigational New Drug (IND) application. The Company recently announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) accepted its IND to initiate a multicenter Phase 1/2 clinical trial investigating the safety, tolerability and efficacy of MB-106 for relapsed or refractory B-NHL and CLL.

To participate in the webinar, please register here.

About Dr. Shadman Mazyar Shadman, M.D., M.P.H., is an Associate Professor at the University of Washington (UW) and Fred Hutch. He is a hematologic malignancies expert who specializes in treating patients with lymphoma and CLL.

Dr. Shadman is involved in clinical trials using novel therapeutic agents, immunotherapy (CAR T cells), and stem cell transplant for treatment of lymphoid malignancies with a focus on CLL. He also studies the clinical outcomes of patients using institutional and collaborative retrospective cohort studies.

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Dr. Shadman received his M.D. from Tehran University in Iran. He finished an internal medicine internship and residency training at the Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio. He completed his fellowship training in hematology and medical oncology at UW and Fred Hutch. Dr. Shadman also earned an M.P.H. degree from UW and was a fellow for the National Cancer Institutes cancer research training program at Fred Hutch, where he studied cancer epidemiology.

About Dr. Till Brian Till, M.D., is an Associate Professor in the Clinical Research Division of Fred Hutch and Department of Medicine at UW. His laboratory focuses on developing chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-based immunotherapies for non-Hodgkin lymphoma and understanding why CAR T cell therapies work for some patients but not for others. He led the first published clinical trial testing CAR T cells as a treatment for lymphoma patients. Dr. Till also has a clinical practice treating patients with lymphoma and attends on the stem cell transplantation and immunotherapy services at the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance.

About Mustang Bio Mustang Bio, Inc. is a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on translating todays medical breakthroughs in cell and gene therapies into potential cures for hematologic cancers, solid tumors and rare genetic diseases. Mustang aims to acquire rights to these technologies by licensing or otherwise acquiring an ownership interest, to fund research and development, and to outlicense or bring the technologies to market. Mustang has partnered with top medical institutions to advance the development of CAR T therapies across multiple cancers, as well as a lentiviral gene therapy for X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency. Mustang is registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and files periodic reports with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Mustang was founded by Fortress Biotech, Inc. (NASDAQ: FBIO). For more information, visit http://www.mustangbio.com.

ForwardLooking Statements This press release may contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, each as amended. Such statements include, but are not limited to, any statements relating to our growth strategy and product development programs and any other statements that are not historical facts. Forward-looking statements are based on managements current expectations and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could negatively affect our business, operating results, financial condition and stock value. Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those currently anticipated include: risks relating to our growth strategy; our ability to obtain, perform under, and maintain financing and strategic agreements and relationships; risks relating to the results of research and development activities; risks relating to the timing of starting and completing clinical trials; uncertainties relating to preclinical and clinical testing; our dependence on third-party suppliers; our ability to attract, integrate and retain key personnel; the early stage of products under development; our need for substantial additional funds; government regulation; patent and intellectual property matters; competition; as well as other risks described in our SEC filings. We expressly disclaim any obligation or undertaking to release publicly any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statements contained herein to reflect any change in our expectations or any changes in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based, except as required by law, and we claim the protection of the safe harbor for forward-looking statements contained in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.

Company Contacts: Jaclyn Jaffe and Bill Begien Mustang Bio, Inc. (781) 652-4500 ir@mustangbio.com

Investor Relations Contact: Daniel Ferry LifeSci Advisors, LLC (617) 430-7576 daniel@lifesciadvisors.com

Media Relations Contact: Tony Plohoros 6 Degrees (908) 591-2839 tplohoros@6degreespr.com

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Mustang Bio to Host Key Opinion Leader Webinar on MB-106 CD20-Targeted CAR T for the Treatment of High-Risk B-Cell Non-Hodgkin Lymphomas and Chronic...

Karen Hasty Named Among 2021 Super Women In Business by Memphis Business Journal – UTHSC News

Karen Hasty, PhD, a professor, researcher, and director of Basic Research in the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Biomedical Engineering/Campbell Clinic in the College of Medicine at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center, has been named among the 2021 Super Women in Business by the Memphis Business Journal. The annual list honors women business leaders for their career accomplishments and work in the Memphis community.

I am thrilled to receive this honor, said Dr. Hasty, who holds the George Thomas Wilhelm Endowed Professorship in Orthopaedic Surgery. It allows me to have a new platform to bring attention to many philanthropic projects, while continuing to encourage young women to consider medical careers in orthopaedic surgery or in academia.

Dr. Hastys philanthropic efforts include establishing a summer internship for undergraduate women called the Kappa Delta Foundation Orthopaedic Research Internship, which encourages them to consider orthopaedic surgery as a career option. It provides stipends, housing, and research funding for selected participants. She has also served as the medical chair for the West Tennessee Board of the Arthritis Foundation since 2017.

Because of her professional appointment, Dr. Hasty holds a dual position with UTHSC and the Memphis VA Medical Center, where she does basic science research. Studying arthritis for more than four decades, her current studies focus on exploring new therapies to interrupt the disease progression and stimulate repair of joint destruction. Dr. Hastys research efforts have been funded by the VA, the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Defense, and the Arthritis Foundation.

She is currently in a research collaboration with Revotek Co., Ltd., in the Memphis Institute of Regenerative Medicine (MIRM). The project titled, MIRM Project 3: Stem Cell-Enhanced Tissue Regeneration: Engineering of Vascularized Bone/Cartilage Graft from Adipose-Derived Stem Cells, will utilize Revoteks cell encapsulation technology of Biosynspheres and bioprinting for basic and translational research in stem cell regenerative medicine.

Dr. Hasty earned her Bachelor of Science degree in microbiology from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville and received her MS and PhD degrees in anatomy from UTHSC. She began working at the university in 1977, after a stint at Boston Childrens Hospital, where she studied hemoglobin A1c, a marker that determines long-term control of blood glucose in diabetes.

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Karen Hasty Named Among 2021 Super Women In Business by Memphis Business Journal - UTHSC News