Category Archives: Stem Cell Clinic


Single-cell RNA sequencing analysis of human bone-marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells and functional subpopulation identification – DocWire News

This article was originally published here

Exp Mol Med. 2022 Apr 1. doi: 10.1038/s12276-022-00749-5. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are a common kind of multipotent cell in vivo, but their heterogeneity limits their further applications. To identify MSC subpopulations and clarify their relationships, we performed cell mapping of bone-marrow-derived MSCs through single-cell RNA (scRNA) sequencing. In our study, three main subpopulations, namely, the stemness subpopulation, functional subpopulation, and proliferative subpopulation, were identified using marker genes and further bioinformatic analyses. Developmental trajectory analysis showed that the stemness subpopulation was the root and then became either the functional subpopulation or the proliferative subpopulation. The functional subpopulation showed stronger immunoregulatory and osteogenic differentiation abilities but lower proliferation and adipogenic differentiation. MSCs at different passages or isolated from different donors exhibited distinct cell mapping profiles, which accounted for their corresponding different functions. This study provides new insight into the biological features and clinical use of MSCs at the single-cell level, which may contribute to expanding their application in the clinic.

PMID:35365767 | DOI:10.1038/s12276-022-00749-5

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Single-cell RNA sequencing analysis of human bone-marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells and functional subpopulation identification - DocWire News

U.S. STEM CELL, INC. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations (form 10-K) – Marketscreener.com

The following is management's discussion and analysis ("MD&A") of certainsignificant factors that have affected our financial position and operatingresults during the periods included in the accompanying financial statements, aswell as information relating to the plans of our current management. This reportincludes forward-looking statements. Generally, the words "believes,""anticipates," "may," "will," "should," "expect," "intend," "estimate,""continue," and similar expressions or the negative thereof or comparableterminology are intended to identify forward-looking statements. Such statementsare subject to certain risks and uncertainties, including the matters set forthin this report or other reports or documents we file with the Securities andExchange Commission from time to time, which could cause actual results oroutcomes to differ materially from those projected. Undue reliance should not beplaced on these forward-looking statements which speak only as of the datehereof. We undertake no obligation to update these forward-looking statements.

The following discussion and analysis should be read in conjunction with our financial statements and the related notes thereto and other financial information contained elsewhere in this Form 10-K

Our Ability To Continue as a Going Concern

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Index

Biotechnology Product Candidates

GENERAL AMERICAN CAPITAL PARTNERS

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Index

Results of Operations Overview

Comparison of Years Ended December 31, 2021 and December 31, 2020

Cost of sales consists of the costs associated with the production of MyoCath and test kits, product costs, labor for production and training and lab and banking costs consistent with products and services provided.

Cost of sales was $52,030 in the year ended December 31, 2021 compared to $64,117 in the year ended December 31, 2020. The decrease is due to the decrease in revenues.

Research and development expenses were $0 in 2021 remaining the same as $0 in 2020.

Selling, General and Administrative

Gain (loss) on settlement of debt

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In valuing our common stock, our Board of Directors considered a number of factors, including, but not limited to:

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Index

Options outstanding at December 31, 2021 110,643,884 $ 0.0247

Options exercisable at December 31, 2021 93,491,384 $ 0.0256

Available for grant at December 31, 2021 34,168,070

Average Number Weighted Average

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Index

Our primary sources of revenue are from the sale of test kits and equipment, training services, patient treatments, laboratory services and cell banking.

Patient treatments and laboratory services revenue are recognized when those services have been completed or satisfied.

Research and Development Costs

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Depreciation is computed using the straight-line method over the assets' expected useful lives or the term of the lease, for assets under capital leases.

Cash and cash equivalents include cash on hand, deposits in banks with maturities of three months or less, and all highly liquid investments which are unrestricted as to withdrawal or use, and which have original maturities of three months or less.

We allocate the proceeds received from equity financing and the attached options and warrants issued, based on their relative fair values, at the time of issuance. The amount allocated to the options and warrants is recorded as additional paid in capital.

Selling, General and Administrative

Our opinion is that inflation has not had, and is not expected to have, a material effect on our operations.

Liquidity and Capital Resources

In 2021, we continued to finance our operational cash needs with cash generated from financing activities.

Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL)

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Net cash provided by investing activities was $0 for the year ended December 31, 2021.

Existing Capital Resources and Future Capital Requirements

As of December 31, 2021, we had $8,016,314 in outstanding debt, net of debt discount of $273,216.

Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements

Recent Accounting Pronouncements

Refer to Note 1. Organization and Summary of Significant Accounting Policies in the notes to our financial statements for a discussion of recent accounting pronouncements.

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U.S. STEM CELL, INC. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations (form 10-K) - Marketscreener.com

IMAC Holdings Reports Preliminary Fourth Quarter and Year End 2021 Financial Results and … – The Denver Gazette

Revenue increased 26% for quarter and 12% annually

BRENTWOOD, Tenn., March 31, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- IMAC Holdings, Inc.(Nasdaq:IMAC) (IMAC or the Company), a provider of innovative medical advancements and care specializing in regenerative rehabilitation orthopedic treatments without the use of surgery or opioids, today reported its preliminary financial results for the year endedDecember 31, 2021.

Financial Highlights from Q4 2021:

Financial Highlights from FY 2021(all comparisons are withIMACfor the year endedDecember 31, 2020unless otherwise indicated):

Corporate Highlights in Q4 2021 and Year To Date 2022:

The fourth quarter of 2021 was productive. We started the quarter with the acquisition of Louisiana Orthopaedic and Spine Institute which we expect to be our largest clinic by the second half of 2022. And by the end of the quarter, we delivered 26% revenue growth on a 9.7% increase of patients visits compared to Q4 of 2020, said Jeffrey Ervin, IMACs Chief Executive Officer.

During 2021, we worked diligently to reduce the Companys debt, retiring greater than $4.13 million representing over 90% of notes payable. We are well positioned for strategic growth objectives in 2022 that solidify our foundation as we continue to execute on our strategic initiatives. Today, we filed an extension to accommodate the additional time needed for our former and current auditors to complete our 10k filing.

Another significant accomplishment during 2021 included growing our service footprint with the launch of The Back Space retail chiropractic pilot program in select Walmart locations. We opened 10 stores in three markets as part of the pilot and recently completed The Back Company franchise to expand The Back Space presence. The infrastructure incorporates technical advancements with our consumer engagement tools as evidenced with the launch The Back mobile app, the first in the chiropractic industry to provide mobile queue registration. Dr. Ben Lerner recently joined the team as COO with an emphasis on leading The Back Companys growth using his franchise and high-growth experience after a 17-year tenure as founder and CEO of a large chiropractic franchisor and lifestyle company.

Finally, weve already completed the second cohort and initiated the third cohort of our Phase 1 clinical trial. We anticipate completing our third and final cohort during summer, 2022. Each of these milestones are part of IMAC Holdings roadmap to helping consumers develop a personalized, affordable and engaging experience that guides users to better spinal health and physical function. There was demonstrable progress during 2021 to set up a springboard of growth for 2022.

Results of Operations for the Twelve Months EndedDecember 31, 2021Compared to the Twelve Months EndedDecember 31, 2020

Total revenue increased 12% from 12.8 million in 2020 to $14.4 million in 2021. Total revenues increased $1.6 million due to a combination of acquisitions, same-store growth, and the opening of retail chiropractic clinics. The increase in operating expenses from$19.4 million in 2020 to $24.5 million in 2021 was driven by a combination of additional salaries and expenses related to acquisitions and The Back Space launch in 2021 as well as the $0.42 million reduction in expenses from grant funds in 2020, resulting in an increase in operating loss to$10.1 million versus a loss of $6.5 millionin 2020.

For the year endedDecember 31, 2021, the Company reported cash and cash equivalents of$7.1 million, compared with approximately$2.6 millionas ofDecember 31, 2020.

AboutIMAC Holdings, Inc.

IMAC Holdingsowns and manages health and wellness centers that deliver sports medicine, orthopedic, and life science therapies for movement restricting diseases.IMACis comprised of three business segments: outpatient medical centers, The Back Space, and a clinical research division. With treatments to address the aging population,IMAC Holdingsowns or manages more than 15 outpatient medical clinics and has partnered with several active and former professional athletes, includingOzzie Smith,David Price,Mike Ditka, andTony Delkto promote a minimally invasive approach to sports medicine. IMACs The Back Space retail spine health and wellness treatment centers deliver chiropractic care within Walmart locations. IMACs research division is currently conducting a Phase I clinical trial evaluating a mesenchymal stem cell therapy candidate for bradykinesia due to Parkinsons disease. For more information visit http://www.imacholdings.com.

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Safe Harbor Statement

This press release contains forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements, and terms such as anticipate, expect, believe, may, will, should or other comparable terms, are based largely onIMAC'sexpectations and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, certain of which are beyondIMAC'scontrol. Actual results could differ materially from these forward-looking statements as a result of, among other factors, risks and uncertainties associated with its ability to maintain and grow its business, variability of operating results, its ability to maintain and enhance its brand, its development and introduction of new products and services, the successful integration of acquired companies, technologies and assets, marketing and other business development initiatives, competition in the industry, general government regulation, economic conditions, dependence on key personnel, the ability to attract, hire and retain personnel who possess the skills and experience necessary to meet customers requirements, and its ability to protect its intellectual property.IMACencourages you to review other factors that may affect its future results in its registration statement and in its other filings with theSecurities and Exchange Commission. In light of these risks and uncertainties, there can be no assurance that the forward-looking information contained in this press release will in fact occur.

IMAC Press Contact:

Laura Fristoe

lfristoe@imacrc.com

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IMAC Holdings Reports Preliminary Fourth Quarter and Year End 2021 Financial Results and ... - The Denver Gazette

Learning from the single cell: A new technique to unravel gene regulation – EurekAlert

image:zebrafish notochord nuclei at 15-somite stage. Grey: nuclear DNA (DAPI). Color: histone H3K9me3 view more

Credit: Phong Nguyen, Franka Rang & Kim de Luca. Copryight Hubrecht Institute.

How is the activity of genes regulated by the packaging of DNA? To answer this question, a technique to measure both gene expression and DNA packaging at the same time was developed by Franka Rang and Kim de Luca, researchers from the group of Jop Kind (group leader at the Hubrecht Institute and Oncode Investigator). This method, EpiDamID, determines the location of modified proteins around which the DNA is wrapped. It is important to gather information about these modifications, because they influence the accessibility of DNA, thereby affecting the gene activity. EpiDamID is therefore valuable for research into the early development of organisms. The results of the study are published in Molecular Cell on April 1st 2022.

In order to fit DNA into the nucleus of a cell, it is tightly packed around nuclear proteins: histones. Depending on the tightness of this winding, the DNA can be (in)accessible to other proteins. This therefore determines whether the process of gene expression, translation of DNA into RNA and eventually into proteins, can take place.

DNA packaging determine gene activity

The tightness of DNA winding around histones is regulated by the addition of molecular groups, so-called post-translational modifications (PTMs), to the histones. For example, if certain molecules are added to the histones, the DNA winding is loosened. This makes the DNA more accessible for certain proteins and causes the genes in this part of the DNA to become active, or expressed. Furthermore, proteins that are crucial for gene expression can directly recognize and bind the PTMs. This enables transcription: the process of DNA copying.

The regulation of gene expression, for instance through PTMs, is also known as epigenetic regulation. Since all cells in a body have the same DNA, regulation of gene expression is needed to (de)activate specific functions in individual cells. For instance, heart muscle cells have different functions than skin cells, thus require different genes to be expressed.

Analysis of single cells using EpiDamID

To understand how PTMs affect gene expression, first authors Franka Rang and Kim de Luca designed a new method to determine the location of the modifications. Using this approach, called EpiDamID, researchers can analyze single cells, whereas previous methods were only able to measure a large group of cells. Analysis on such a small scale results in knowledge on how DNA winding differs per cell, rather than information on the average DNA winding of many cells.

EpiDamID is based on DamID, a technique which is used to determine the binding location of certain DNA-binding proteins. Using EpiDamID, the binding location of specific PTMs on histone proteins can be detected in single cells. Compared to others, a great advantage of this technique is that researchers need very limited material. Furthermore, EpiDamID can be used in combination with other methods, such as microscopy, to study regulation of gene expression on different levels.

Future prospects

Following the development of this technique, the Kind group will focus on the role of PTMs from the point of view of developmental biology. Because single cells are analyzed using EpiDamID, only a limited amount of material is needed to generate enough data. This allows researchers to study the early development of organisms from its first cell divisions, when the embryo consists of only a few cells.

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Publication

Rang, F. J.*, de Luca, K. L.*, de Vries, S. S., Valdes-Quezada, C., Boele, E., Nguyen, P. D., Guerreiro, I., Sato, Y., Kimura, H., Bakkers, J. & Kind, J. Single-cell profiling of transcriptome and histone modifications with EpiDamID. Molecular Cell, 2022.

*Authors contributed equally

Jop Kind is group leader at the Hubrecht Institute for Developmental Biology and Stem Cell Research and Oncode Investigator.

About the Hubrecht Institute

The Hubrecht Institute is a research institute focused on developmental and stem cell biology. It encompasses 21 research groups that perform fundamental and multidisciplinary research, both in healthy systems and disease models. The Hubrecht Institute is a research institute of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW), situated on Utrecht Science Park. Since 2008, the institute is affiliated with the UMC Utrecht, advancing the translation of research to the clinic. The Hubrecht Institute has a partnership with the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL). For more information, visit http://www.hubrecht.eu.

Experimental study

Cells

Single-cell profiling of transcriptome and histone modifications with EpiDamID

1-Apr-2022

Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.

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Learning from the single cell: A new technique to unravel gene regulation - EurekAlert

Nowakowski Considers CD19 Therapy in Transplant-Ineligible DLBCL – Targeted Oncology

During a Targeted Oncology live event, Grzegorz S. Nowakowski, MD, discussed the case of a patient treated with tafasitamab plus lenalidomide in the second line for diffuse B-cell lymphoma.

Targeted OncologyTM: What are the options for second-line therapy in this patient with DLBCL?

NOWAKOWSKI: The current NCCN [National Comprehensive Cancer Network] guidelines [for patients who are not candidates for transplant] have gemcitabine [Gemzar] plus oxaliplatin [Eloxatin] plus or minus rituximab as a preferred regimen.1

Polatuzumab vedotin [Polivy] plus bendamustine [Treanda] plus rituximab is also included in the NCCN guidelines. Tafasitamab [Monjuvi] plus lenalidomide [Revlimid], which is another option, is FDA approved for second-line therapy and beyond. A lot of us in the field, in patients who are not willing to go for more intensive regimens [such as] transplant or CAR [chimeric antigen receptor] T-cell therapy, are looking more into these chemotherapy combinations, particularly if the patient progresses after chemotherapy. The idea is its going to be a different mode of action. CAR T-cell therapy is [used in the third-line setting] as of now. Again, this may change in the future.

What is the rationale behind the patient receiving this combination?

The FDA granted accelerated approval for the combination of tafasitamab and lenalidomide for relapsed or refractory DLBCL based on [results from] the L-MIND study [NCT02399085].2

Tafasitamab has a cool concept where the antibody cells target CD19, just as in CAR T-cell therapy and loncastuximab tesirine [Zynlonta], which is another recently approved antibody. There were initial developments before studying [CD19] where we felt it could be a good target, but some antibodies didnt work so well. Now there is this renaissance of interest in CD19-targeting agents such as CAR T-cell therapy, tafasitamab, and loncastuximab.

The [tafasitamab] antibody is engineered to have this enhanced Fc function that increases ADCC [antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity], ADCP [antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis], and cell death. It causes direct cell death because CD19 is important in B-cell receptor signaling and not only in the immune system, but it gives some antisignaling properties as well.3

Lenalidomide has the properties of immune activation and microenvironment function and there are dozens of papers postulating many mechanisms of action for lenalidomide. Its very pleiotropic, but it does immune activation, and we know from R2 [lenalidomide plus rituximab] and other antibody combinations that it tends to synergize with the antibodies very well. This preclinical idea led to the development of the combination of this naked antibody and lenalidomide in patients with relapsed or refractory DLBCL.

Which trial data supported the approval of tafasitamab/lenalidomide?

L-MIND was a single-arm, phase 2 study [that enrolled patients who had] 1 to 3 prior regimens and who were either relapsing after transplant or were not eligible for transplant. The primary refractory patients were to be excluded, but because of changing definitions, they accrued, to some degree, to the study, and had pretty good results anyway.4

Tafasitamab is an infusion, just like other antibodies. Its given on days 1, 8, 15, and 22, for 1 to 3 cycles. In cycles 4 to 12, it is given every 2 weeks. Lenalidomide is given at 25 mg daily on days 1 to 25, [just as] in multiple myeloma. This is a different dose [from the R2 regimen], which is 20 mg, but the 25 mg was well tolerated, and this was based on the initial [pilot study]. After 12 cycles of therapy, patients received tafasitamab until disease progression.3,4

Frequently [we are asked] why we would plan on continuing forever. I was involved in the design of the study, and the salvage options for patients were quite limited for those who were not transplant eligible and some of the investigators asked why we would want to stop if it is working. We gave investigators discretion to [decide] whether the patient was benefiting from the treatment and to continue until disease progression. The primary end point of the study was overall response rate [ORR], which has frequently been the most reliable end point for the activity of the combination in this setting because it tends to have less bias in patient selection. The secondary end points were PFS [progression-free survival], duration of response [DOR], overall survival [OS], and so forth.4,5

There were some lenalidomide dose reduction studies where patients were given doses of 25 mg down to 5 mg using step reductions.5

This was a study of the [safety] population, and 81 patients were accrued overall. The median age was 72. The IPI risk score, Ann Arbor stage, and LDH results were typical for refractory DLBCL. Patients with primary refractory disease were supposed to be excluded, but 19 of 81 patients had it and 44 of 81 patients were refractory to prior therapies. Relatively few patients had a prior stem cell transplant and the majority were not eligible for it due to comorbidities, unwillingness to do so, or not responding to salvage therapy. [Not responding] to previous therapies was a major reason [for not getting a transplant].5

How did patients do on the L-MIND trial?

The ORR for this combination was quite high at greater than 60%, which is comparable with what we see in CAR T-cell therapy or intensive chemotherapy. So this was quite significant and impressive at the time the [results were] published. The CR [complete response] rate was even more impressive at 43%. Again, this was in patients who were relapsed or refractory, not transplant eligible, or those relapsing after transplant, so a 43% CR rate is high.5,6

As clinicians, we care about the DOR, too. So if you are a regulator, say at the FDA, you only worry about response rates because its less about patient selection, but clinicians like responses to be durable. The median PFS was 12.1 months.5 The median PFS doesnt fully reflect the activity of this regimen because it plateaus just after the median. CAR T-cell therapy data look very similar, too. For a relatively well-tolerated combination, these were very impressive results at the time of presentation. The median OS was not reached and, as with the PFS results, the OS also plateaued. So these were very impressive results in terms of DOR.

The patients in CR were primarily driving this benefit, but even the patients in PR [partial response] had [an approximately] 30% sustained response.6 The treatment was active in the patients treated both with 1 prior or 2 or more prior lines of therapy. Responses, particularly the CR rates, were somewhat higher in the patients who were on second-line treatment. This would be the patients who were not eligible for transplant.

Do you feel comfortable using this regimen in patients with GCB [germinal center B-celllike] subtypes because they were underrepresented in the study?

There was a whole debate about it. We believe that the combination of the antibodies and lenalidomide works well in GCB subtypes as well. It is a little bit different with single agents because the data showed response rates and activity were better in ABC [activated B-cell] or nonGCB subtypes of DLBCL, but in combination, there appeared to be less of a differential by cell of origin.

But in the [forest plot] analysis, both subtypes benefited. There was a trend toward a little bit of a high response rate in patients with the ABC subtype, but overall, the response rate was high in patients with GCB patients as well. I believe it was approximately 45% to 50% in both subtypes.

What about the R2 regimen? Do you prefer not to use it in GCB subtypes?

Yes, I prefer not to use it in GCB subtypes. [Results of] the ECOG-ACRIN E1412 study [NCT01856192] were recently published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology and I was a PI [principal investigator] in it.7 This study was looking at all-comers, so it was the only randomized frontline phase 2 study, where lenalidomide was added to R-CHOP. This one was cell-of-origin agnostic, so they could have the GCB or ABC subtype. There was [approximately] a 12% difference in PFS in this study and a favorable hazard ratio.

Another study, the ROBUST study [NCT02285062], was focused on patients with the ABC subtype.8 It didnt show a difference using different lenalidomide scheduled doses, though there were other patient selection issues in the study. As a single agent, lenalidomide is more active in the ABC subtype and I use it myself in clinical practice more in ABC or nonGCB subtypes. In combination with the antibodies, or even chemotherapy, this may not be necessarily true. Because most of these patients are already exposed to rituximab, I think based on the R2 study [results], they didnt see much of a differential based on cell of origin, which is a little bit disappointing, because we were hoping we could [use it to] select the high responders, but that didnt pan out. REMARC [NCT01122472] was a study done by a French group that used lenalidomide maintenance after R-CHOP but didnt track the cell of origin.

In fact, the GCB subtype tended to benefit more, and an idea was that maybe some microenvironment influences played a role. In my clinical practice, in nonGCB subtypes, I use a single agent, but for combination of the antibodies, the activity seems to be agnostic to cell of origin.

How does an anti-CD19 antibody downregulate the CD19 receptor?

There is limited information, but they did a study looking at the CD19 expression after tafasitamab exposure in chronic lymphocytic leukemia and [there was no impact] and in DLBCL as well. The CD19 expression is just a part of the story because you worry that a part of the CD19 molecule could be mutated and then the CAR T-cell agents would not bind or that part of the molecule could be missed because of alternative splicing or losing one of the exons because of the evolutionary pressure of the treatment. We did whole exome and RNA sequencing and saw no abnormalities within the CD19 cells. It appears to be expressed after tafasitamab exposure, and there are no point mutations, exon deletions, or other changes that would affect the integrity of CD19, to the best of our knowledge.

Of course, the best data would come from clinical evidence if we note that CAR T-cell therapy is working. In this study, only 1 patient proceeded with CAR T-cell therapy and had good clinical benefit and was in remission last time I saw the data. So it appears that in anecdotal experiences CAR T-cell therapy will still work in those patients.

The opposite is true, too. There is a huge interest now in this combination and [whether] it will be active in post CAR T-cell relapses. Lenalidomide as a single agent is frequently used in this setting. How active will this combination be in postCAR T-cell relapse? We know that lenalidomide is active. A lot of patients with CAR T-cell relapses will still have CD19, so we believe that is also an option, but more data will be needed.

Do patients tolerate the 25-mg lenalidomide dose in combination with tafasitamab, or is the dose modified often?

[Approximately] 30% of patients will have to drop to 20 mg, particularly with subsequent cycles. The nice thing for lenalidomide is that you can use the growth factor support because it is primarily neutropenia that causes some of the dose reductions. Studies are different from real life, so in the real world we always have some patients who are already cytopenic from the previous therapy. I usually support them with a growth factor, and sometimes I start my patients at 20 mg. The dosing intensity of lenalidomide seems to be important, though.

I wouldnt very liberally decrease it because there appears to be some dose relation to the response, at least as a single agent in a refractory setting in DLBCL in contrast to follicular [lymphoma], but somewhere from 15 mg to 20 mg is the golden spot for response.

The 25 mg was used in those studies as a single agent, so, about one-third of patients did require dose reductions. If you use this combination, you follow the lenalidomide package inserts, and if you need to reduce because of creatinine clearance, you reduce the lenalidomide or if you see significant neutropenia despite the growth factor used, then you can reduce on a subsequent cycle to 20 mg, or interrupt and reduce to 20 mg.

Does patient preference weigh into the decision to choose finite therapy vs therapy until progression of disease in the second-line setting?

Yes, it comes down to the patients preference. I dont practice in the community, so I dont have more experience with this. We have this policy at Mayo Clinic that [any clinician] from around the world can call us at any time for advice about their patients. So, routinely, we are getting quite a few phone calls from those who are responsible for patients with lymphoma, or for any other disease type from outside, and practitioners call asking what to do.

I am always surprised by how many patients do not want to proceed with CAR T-cell therapy or stem cells or even clinical trials, which we often have here, because of the preference of being near the local center. Travel is not always possible and some patients want to stay where they are, which is a very reasonable option.

Are there trials comparing this with transplant or something lenalidomide alone?

We did 2 things to differentiate this from lenalidomide alone. A study called RE-MIND [NCT04150328] with close matching of the patients with real-world data showed that the combination was definitely much more active than lenalidomide alone. [We knew this] but wanted to double-check in a very close-matched cohort. A confirmatory study for this is [the frontMIND study (NCT04824092), which is a frontline study that compares] R-CHOP as standard therapy vs R2-CHOP plus tafasitamab.

I am the principal investigator globally for this study, and one of the reasons why we designed it this way was there was some activity already from randomized phase 2 studies using lenalidomide. It was safe and effective and also the doublet was already approved, so it was logical to move it forward.

However, the biggest [issue we had when] presenting this concept to some regulatory authorities was that we were a little bit naive in the past, thinking that adding 1 drug at a time is going to move the bar a whole lot. R-CHOP already has 5 different compounds, so I think the sixth one probably is not going to move the bar a whole lot. There are some studies that failed, I think, 1 drug at a time. So the ambitious plan here is to add a doublet. But the study is designed to capture very high-risk patients, [meaning] IPI 3 and above. Its looking at the highest-risk population and is adding doublet on top of R-CHOP. There are some study centers in the United States that are in the process of either opening or even have it open currently.

Could tafasitamab/lenalidomide be moved to the first-line setting with more targeted agents as chemotherapies are eliminated?

Yes. There is a pilot study led by my colleague Dr [Jason] Westin at [The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center]. He is basically pioneering the so-called smart-start, or smart-stop now, where he is adding exactly this combination to R-CHOP. The question is: Can he strip some of the chemotherapy agents [such as anthracyclines]?

[The patient] tried to shorten and then to remove different cytotoxic drugs with the idea that maybe over time he can develop a chemotherapy-free regimen. [Results of] the initial pilot study have shown this combination plus ibrutinib [Imbruvica] is producing high response rates. He still added chemotherapy later because he was worried that he may miss the possibility of curing the patient, but after initial feasibility, he is slowly stripping chemotherapy. We may get there one day.

What are the similarities and differences of loncastuximab tesirine and tafasitamab?

I think cross-study comparisons are usually difficult. I am very cautious always when comparing different study results because the patient population is not always the same. I happen to be involved with the FDA in different reviews and I do believe that the response rate is what tends to reflect the most activity and is less dependent on patient selection, though not completely.

The ORR of loncastuximab is [approximately] 50% or very close to that. The DOR appears to be a little bit shorter, but this could be due to patient selection, so it looks very encouraging. It has a little bit of a different adverse event [AE] profile. At this point it doesnt have as strong a follow-up as this study, so we dont know if the same very encouraging plateaus in responding patients will be seen with it.

Maybe its going to happen, but it is more of a traditional cytotoxic therapy that is directed like polatuzumab. It works more on the immune microenvironment in immune activation. There is this renaissance of CD19 targeting and for CAR T-cell therapies, all the approved products target CD19, and now loncastuximab and tafasitamab.

I usually tell the industry to not develop any more agents targeting CD19. We have enough. There are some other good targets, too. Some of the CAR T-cell therapies are targeting different molecules on the surface.

How many of these patients on the L-MIND trial stopped therapy early? What is the safety profile of combination lenalidomide and tafasitamab?

The primary reason for stopping therapy early was disease progression because some patients just didnt respond. The toxicities were primarily hematologic, which is consistent with what you would see with lenalidomide. Nonhematologic AEs [included] fatigue and diarrhea, but nothing striking or unusual. Discontinuation of combination [therapy due to] AEs was seen in 12% of the patients [n = 10/81].5

A comparison of the AEs of combination therapy vs monotherapy showed the hematologic and other toxicities were driven by lenalidomide. Tafasitamab alone had [an approximate] 27% ORR and when combined with lenalidomide the response rate doubles, so theres a true synergy between those drugs.

The monotherapies are quite well tolerated. Some patients can develop neutropenia, as was seen in the monotherapy trials, but overall the toxicity is minimal for the antibody alone.

What is the rapidity of the response for this regimen? Who wouldnt be eligible for it?

The first evaluation was done after 2 cycles of therapy, so within 8 weeks the response was right there. The response is quite brisk. If I had any concern about putting [a patient] on lenalidomide, it would be for reasons such as it can cause some rashes as seen previously with lenalidomide combinations, so with previous hypersensitivity, I probably would not [use it].

If patients have very rapidly progressive symptoms, I may stabilize them with radiation or some other treatment first, maybe hydroxysteroids, rituximab, or something such as that just to remove the disease burden before I start this combination. I expected that the responses would be dipping over time, but the responses were brisk and happened after 2 cycles of therapy.

REFERENCES

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Nowakowski Considers CD19 Therapy in Transplant-Ineligible DLBCL - Targeted Oncology

5 questions facing gene therapy in 2022 – BioPharma Dive

Four years ago, a small Philadelphia biotech company won U.S. approval for the first gene therapy to treat an inherited disease, a landmark after decades of research aimed at finding ways to correct errors in DNA.

Since then, most of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies have invested in gene therapy, as well as cell therapies that rely on genetic modification. Dozens of new biotech companies have launched, while scientists have taken forward breakthroughs in gene editing science to open up new treatment possibilities.

But the confidence brought on by such advances has also been tempered by safety setbacks and clinical trial results that fell short of expectations. In 2022, the outlook for the field remains bright, but companies face critical questions that could shape whether, and how soon, new genetic medicines reach patients. Here are five:

Food and Drug Administration approval of Spark Therapeutics' blindness treatment Luxturna a first in the U.S. came in 2017. A year and a half later, Novartis' spinal muscular atrophy therapy Zolgensma won a landmark OK.

But none have reached market since, with treatments from BioMarin Pharmaceutical and Bluebird bio unexpectedly derailed or delayed.

That could change in 2022. Two of Bluebird's treatments, for the blood disease beta thalassemia and a rare brain disorder, are now under review by the FDA, with target decision dates in May and June. BioMarin, after obtaining more data for its hemophilia A gene therapy, plans to soon approach the FDA about resubmitting an application for approval.

Others, such as CSL Behring and PTC Therapeutics, are also currently planning to file their experimental gene therapies with the FDA in 2022.

Approvals, should they come, could provide important validation for their makers and expand the number of patients for whom genetic medicines are an option. In biotech, though, approvals aren't the end of the road, but rather the mark of a sometimes challenging transition from research to commercial operations. With price tags expected to be high, and still outstanding questions around safety and long-term benefit, new gene therapies may prove difficult to sell.

A record $20 billion flowed into gene and cell therapy developers in 2020, significantly eclipsing the previous high-water mark set in 2018.

Last year, the bar was set higher still, with a total of $23 billion invested in the sector, according to figures compiled by the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine. About half of that funding went toward gene therapy developers specifically, with a similar share going to cell-based immunotherapy makers.

Driving the jump was a sharp increase in the amount of venture funding, which rose 73% to total nearly $10 billion, per ARM. Initial public offerings also helped, with sixteen new startups raising at least $50 million on U.S. markets.

Entering 2022, the question facing the field is whether those record numbers will continue. Biotech as a whole slumped into the end of last year, with shares of many companies falling amid a broader investment pullback. Gene therapy developers, a number of which had notable safety concerns crop up over 2021, were hit particularly hard.

Moreover, many startups that jumped to public markets hadn't yet begun clinical trials roughly half of the 29 gene and cell therapy companies that IPO'd over the past two years were preclinical, according to data compiled by BioPharma Dive. That can set high expectations companies will be hard pressed to meet.

Generation Bio, for example, raised $200 million in June 2020 with a pipeline of preclinical gene therapies for rare diseases of the liver and eye. Unexpected findings in animal studies, however, sank company shares by nearly 60% last December.

Still, the pace of progress in gene and cell therapy is fast. The potential is vast, too, which could continue to support high levels of investment.

"I think fundamentally, investment in this sector is driven by scientific advances, and clinical events and milestones," said Janet Lambert, ARM's CEO, in an interview. "And I think we see those in 2022."

The potential of replacing or editing faulty genes has been clear for decades. How to do so safely has been much less certain, and concerns on that front have set back the field several times.

"Safety, safety and safety are the first three top-of-mind risks," said Luca Issi, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets, in an interview.

Researchers have spent years making the technology that underpins gene therapy safer and now have a much better understanding of the tools at their disposal. But as dozens of companies push into clinical trials, a number of them have run into safety problems that raise crucial questions for investigators.

In trials run by Audentes Therapeutics and by Pfizer (in separate diseases), study volunteers have tragically died for reasons that aren't fully understood. UniQure, Bluebird bio and, most recently, Allogene Therapeutics have reported cases of cancer or worrisome genetic abnormalities that triggered study halts and investigations.

While the treatments being tested were later cleared in the three latter cases, the FDA was sufficiently alarmed to convene a panel of outside experts to review potential safety risks last fall. (Bluebird recently disclosed a new hold in a study of its sickle cell gene therapy due to a patient developing chronic anemia.)

The meeting was welcomed by some in the industry, who hope to work with the FDA to better detail known risks and how to avoid them in testing.

"[There's] nothing better than getting people together and talking about your struggles, and having FDA participate in that," said Ken Mills, CEO of gene therapy developer Regenxbio, in an interview. "The biggest benefit probably is for the new and emerging teams and people and companies that are coming into this space."

Safety scares and setbacks are likely to happen again, as more companies launch additional clinical trials. The FDA, as the recent meeting and clinical holds have shown, appears to be carefully weighing the potential risks to patients.

But, notably, there hasn't been a pullback from pursuing further research, as has happened in the past. Different technologies and diseases present different risks, which regulators, companies and the patient community are recognizing.

"We're by definition pushing the scientific envelope, and patients that we seek to treat often have few or no other treatment options," said ARM's Lambert.

Last June, Intellia Therapeutics disclosed early results from a study that offered the first clinical evidence CRISPR gene editing could be done safely and effectively inside the body.

The data were a major milestone for a technology that's dramatically expanded the possibility for editing DNA to treat disease. But the first glimpse left many important questions unanswered, not least of which are how long the reported effects might last and whether they'll drive the kind of dramatic clinical benefit gene editing promises.

Intellia is set to give an update on the study this quarter, which will start to give a better sense of how patients are faring. Later in the year the company is expecting to have preliminary data from an early study of another "in vivo" gene editing treatment.

In vivo gene editing is seen as a simpler approach that could work in more diseases than treatments that rely on stem cells extracted from each patient. But it's also potentially riskier, with the editing of DNA taking place inside the body rather than in a laboratory.

Areas like the eye, which is protected from some of the body's immune responses, have been a common first in vivo target by companies like Editas Medicine. But Intellia and others are targeting other tissues like the liver, muscle and lungs.

Later this year, Verve Therapeutics, a company that uses a more precise form of gene editing called base editing, plans to treat the first patient with an in vivo treatment for heart disease (which targets a gene expressed in the liver.)

"The future of gene editing is in vivo," said RBC's Issi. His view seems to be shared by Pfizer, which on Monday announced a $300 million research deal with Beam Therapeutics to pursue in vivo gene editing targets in the liver, muscle and central nervous system.

With more and more cell and gene therapy companies launching, the pipeline of would-be therapies has grown rapidly, as has the number of clinical trials being launched.

Yet, many companies are exploring similar approaches for the same diseases, resulting in drug pipelines that mirror each other. A September 2021 report from investment bank Piper Sandler found 21 gene therapy programs aimed at hemophilia A, 19 targeting Duchenne muscular dystrophy and 18 going after sickle cell disease.

In gene editing, Intellia, Editas, Beam and CRISPR Therapeutics are all developing treatments for sickle cell disease, with CRISPR the furthest along.

As programs advance and begin to deliver more clinical data, companies may be forced into making hard choices.

"[W]e think investors will place greater scrutiny as programs enter the clinic and certain rare diseases are disproportionately pursued," analysts at Stifel wrote in a recent note to investors, citing Fabry disease and hemophilia in particular.

This January, for example, Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Avrobio stopped work on a treatment for Fabry that was, until that point, the company's lead candidate. The decision was triggered by unexpected findings that looked different than earlier study results, but Avrobio also cited "multiple challenging regulatory and market dynamics."

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5 questions facing gene therapy in 2022 - BioPharma Dive

What it’s like in academic family medicine: Shadowing Dr. Rouhbakhsh – American Medical Association

As a medical student, do you ever wonder what its like to specialize in academic family medicine? Meet AMA member Rambod A. Rouhbakhsh, MD, a featured academic family physician in the AMAsShadow Me Specialty Series, which offers advice directly from physicians about life in their specialties. Check out his insights to help determine whether a career in academic family medicine and preventive medicine might be a good fit for you.

The AMAsSpecialty Guidesimplifies medical students specialty selection process, highlight major specialties, detail training information, and provide access to related association information. It is produced byFREIDA, the AMA Residency & Fellowship Database.

Learn more with the AMA about family medicine and preventive medicine.

Shadowing Dr. Rouhbakhsh

Specialty: Family medicine; occupational and environmental medicine.

Practice setting: Academic family medicine residency; clinical research.

Years in practice:17.

A typical day and week in my practice: My days are split into discreet roles. Mondays are my teaching days. Tuesdays are recruitment and admin days. Wednesdays are program and institutional development days. Thursdays and Fridays are my clinical research days.

My day typically starts with a morning report at 7:30 a.m. and formally ends at 5 p.m. Informally, I find most of my meaningful work is done after hours. Now that I am in a leadership position, I rarely find quiet time to actually create a work product. As such, I tend to be most productive during my boys soccer practice when I can sit in my car and work on the computer.

How the year unfolds in my practice: When I began my career in academic family medicine, I started as clinical faculty, so my work revolved primarily around teaching residents in clinic. Now, as the program director, I spend more time doing administrative work, which translates to meetings, recruiting new residents, and developing faculty.

The year for us begins in July when we welcome our new residents. The interns spend much of July in orientation, during which we help them transition from medical student to resident physician. We organize orientation activities, compose introductory didactics, and help ease our interns into their new jobs. Also in July, we transition our new PGY-2 residents to senior residents who take on teaching and supervisory responsibilities for our new interns.

In August, we start prepping for recruitment season, which officially kicks off when we receive ERAS applications in September. We also tend to do outreach talks to our local medical schools in August and September. From early October through December, we interview prospective students and find matches for our residency program. We receive thousands of applications from medical students, but we only offer interviews to 60 applicants. To arrive at that point, we spend a significant portion of September reading applications.

October through December is dominated by the actual interviews. In pre-COVID times, these were more festive events with dinners and lunches. Now that they are virtual, it is less time-consuming, but also less fun. Throughout the fall and winter, we focus on our graduating PGY-3 residents to make sure they have met their requirements and assist them in finding jobs.

In January, faculty have more time to meet, and this is when we do cumulative evaluations of our residents and engage in program enhancement activities. We typically elect a chief resident for the upcoming year during this time. January through March is also when we spend extra time on research and academic projects.

Then in March we get our Match list. We welcome our incoming residents and start prepping them for orientation in July. Most of our focus in the spring is on our graduating senior residents. We organize wellness activities and plan for graduation. We also do our year-end cumulative evaluations for residents, faculty, and the program itself in late spring.

Interspersed throughout the academic year, we teach in clinic, in hospital, and during didactics. There are also myriad committee meetings and ad-hoc opportunities and issues that arise. For instance, new research collaborations frequently occur since we are literally across the street from the University of Southern Mississippi and across town from William Carey University. These opportunities are exciting, but sometimes they stretch our bandwidth.

The most challenging and rewarding aspects of academic family medicine: Teaching is fantastic, especially teaching residents. These young doctors are on the top tier of the education hierarchy. They are typically the smartest people I know, and I feel privileged to help them attain their post-graduate training. These are intelligent, motivated people who approach education with vigor and enthusiasm.

They are also inquisitive enough to challenge and grow my personal fund of knowledge. If there is something that we dont know collectively, residents will research it and come back to teach the entire group. These are high-powered education machines who can accomplish seemingly anything they put their minds to.

Academic family medicine is exceedingly rewarding, not just because it involves teaching, but because academic family medicine can be situated in community-based hospitals, allowing you greater flexibility to live where you wish. For example, if I had wanted to do academic neurosurgery or cardiology, I would have to be in the one medical school in Mississippi which is in Jackson.

Community-based family medicine residency programs are the bulk of academic family medicine. I am truly grateful for that because it allows me to live in a great place like Hattiesburg and not necessarily in a metropolitan area. Teaching is a remarkable joy, and I would encourage anyone who enjoys that to consider academic family medicine.

How life in academic family medicine has been affected by the global pandemic: Some of the societal effects of the pandemic have actually helped us. Being able to conduct virtual interviews with our program applicants has allowed us to draw more people and has provided us the opportunity to do more interviews in a less time-intensive and less costly way.

For example, we interviewed a woman from Ohio last year, and Im quite certain she wouldnt have flown to Mississippi for the interview. And she ended up being a match for our program, which has been fantastic for us. Also, we are now telemedicine-savvy practitioners, which is here to stay. Lastly, it has forced us to become better epidemiologists, virologists, and occupational hygienists.

How my lifestyle matches, or differs from, what I had envisioned: My life today is very different than my days as a clinical doctor. The hours are about the same, but the pace is different. My work is cognitively more challenging in academics, but it is less intense. When I was in clinic every day, I felt a rush of intensity that for me was requisite to be an efficient clinician. I dont feel that as often now. As a clinic doctor, I felt like a sprinter. Now, I feel a bit more like a marathon runnerespecially during meeting-heavy days.

Additionally, I do clinical research and run clinical trials for three half-days per week. As the principal investigator, I supervise sub-investigators, review charts, and see our trial patients. We have several ongoing trials, including COVID-19 vaccine trials, a meningococcal vaccine trial, a hypertension medication trial, a diabetes medication trial, and a pediatric migraine trial. Keeping all the protocols straight can be challenging, but it is not as intensive as a typical family medicine clinic day.

Books every medical student interested in family medicine should be reading:

The online resource students interested in family medicine should follow: My number one recommendation is UpToDate. It is the most comprehensive reference source I know of. I also suggest students sign up for recurring news that is delivered to their inbox regularly. My favorites are the New England Journal of Medicines Journal Watch, the AMAs Morning Rounds Daily, and the American Academy of Family Physicians Family Medicine Smart Brief.

Quick insights I would give students who are considering family medicine: The gift of family medicineand the curse to a degreeis its flexibility and its breadth. It can be daunting to feel like you havent mastered one aspect of the specialty. However, it is an evergreen challenge and provides enormous opportunities. It led me to preventive and occupational medicine and ultimately to academic family medicine. Family medicine is like a pluripotent stem cellit has limitless potential.

In family medicine, you can become whatever you want to become. It gives you sufficient background to discover your passions, which sometimes may be being a true generalist and having your hand in everything all the time. In that way, this specialty is extremely rewarding because it gives you the most tools to take care of the largest group of people in the most practical way.

When the pandemic broke out, my background in family medicine allowed me to dig deep into studying COVID-19. Again, its this type of training that allows you to go down these pathways with relative ease because you are so broadly trained.

Mantra or song to describe life in family medicine: At the beginning of my career, I would have to say Hustlin, by Rick Ross. Now, in midcareer, I cant think of a song. But I do have a mantra. I try to remind myself of the wisdom of impermanence: Everything changes.

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What it's like in academic family medicine: Shadowing Dr. Rouhbakhsh - American Medical Association

How Abu Dhabi’s ADQ is creating the UAE’s largest healthcare platform – Mobihealth News

Abu Dhabis ADQ has kicked off the new year with one of its biggest healthcare mergers yet.

The asset owner and investor considered one of the GCCs largest holding companies has announced that it has entered into an agreement to consolidate several companies within Pure Health, a UAE-based integrated healthcare solutions provider.

Companies set to become part of Pure Health include Abu Dhabi Health Services Company (SEHA), the National Health Insurance Company PJSC better known as Daman Tamouh Healthcare, Yas Clinic Group, and Abu Dhabi Stem Cell Center.

The merger which is subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals, ADQ confirmed will reportedly result in creating the largest healthcare provider in the UAE.

Pure Health will be instrumental in transforming the provision of healthcare as we consolidate several companies into the platform, said H.E. Mohamed Hassan Alsuwaidi, CEO of ADQ. We are further driving efficiencies to establish the UAEs largest healthcare network, underpinned by clinical excellence, through elevated services, optimised healthcare spend[ing], and improved efficiencies across the value chain.

Combining the strength of clinical powerhouses and the UAEs leading health insurer will develop a scalable healthcare platform for growth.

THE LARGER CONTEXT

Established in 2018, ADQs portfolio includes businesses in healthcare and pharma, energy and utilities, food and agriculture, and mobility and logistics.

Pure Health, meanwhile, offers a diversified services portfolio that comprises healthcare informatics, hospital management, laboratory services including COVID-19 PCR testing and medical supplies.

Following completion of this merger, ADQ will become the largest shareholder in Pure Health. The companys other shareholders are Alpha Dhabi Holding, International Holding Company (IHC), AH Capital and Ataa Financial Investments.

WHY IT MATTERS

Offering the largest integrated healthcare ecosystem means that Pure Health will significantly contribute to the UAEs healthcare landscape and deliver on the countrys mission to elevate the health and wellbeing of citizens and residents, ADQ said in a statement. Patients will benefit from access to greater clinical expertise and healthcare services across the spectrum of care.

In March of last year, ADQ transferred ownership of its healthcare support service entities Rafed and Union71 to Pure Health.

ON THE RECORD

Pure Health remains committed to delivering convenient, accessible, and transparent healthcare as we become the largest integrated healthcare services platform in the UAE, said Farhan Malik, CEO and Managing Director of Pure Health. We believe that healthcare is too important to remain the same.

Our north star is to enable greater longevity of humankind, and we will constantly work towards a healthier and longer life for the people of UAE.

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How Abu Dhabi's ADQ is creating the UAE's largest healthcare platform - Mobihealth News

Exploring the potential of stem cell-based therapy for aesthetic and plastic surgery – Newswise

Abstract:

Over the last decade, stem cell-associated therapies are widely used because of their potential in self-renewable and multipotent differentiation ability. Stem cells have become more attractive for aesthetic uses and plastic surgery, including scar reduction, breast augmentation, facial contouring, hand rejuvenation, and anti-aging. The current preclinical and clinical studies of stem cells on aesthetic uses also showed promising outcomes. Adipose-derived stem cells are commonly used for fat grafting that demonstrated scar improvement, anti-aging, skin rejuvenation properties, etc. While stem cell-based products have yet to receive approval from the FDA for aesthetic medicine and plastic surgery. Moving forward, the review on the efficacy and potential of stem cell-based therapy for aesthetic and plastic surgery is limited. In the present review, we discuss the current status and recent advances of using stem cells for aesthetic and plastic surgery. The potential of cell-free therapy and tissue engineering in this field is also highlighted. The clinical applications, advantages, and limitations are also discussed. This review also provides further works that need to be investigated to widely apply stem cells in the clinic, especially in aesthetic and plastic contexts.

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Exploring the potential of stem cell-based therapy for aesthetic and plastic surgery - Newswise

Avra, Inc. Completes its Merger with Springs Rejuvenation, LLC, a Stem Cell and Anti-Aging Treatment Company – Yahoo Finance

ATLANTA, GA, Dec. 20, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via NewMediaWire -- Avra, Inc. (OTC PINK: AVRN), is pleased to announce that it has closed the merger with Springs Rejuvenation, LLC (https://springsrejuvenation.com). The surviving entity will be Springs Rejuvenation, Inc. (SPRINGS), a Chamblee, Georgia anti-aging and stem cell center focusing on stem cell therapy, facial rejuvenation, hair rejuvenation, non-surgical hair restoration, protein rich plasma (PRP) injections, and anti-aging treatments.

The merger documents have been filed with the State of Nevada. They have also been posted on OTC Markets along with the Consolidated financials in the last quarterly filing. On December 20, 2021, Avra, Inc. filed a Corporate Action with FINRA for a name and ticker change.

SPRINGS was founded and incorporated in the State of Georgia in May of 2019 by Dr. Charles Pereyra. The company currently has one facility located in Chamblee, Georgia. Dr. Pereyra, has assembled a very skilled team of doctors and support staff to expand the business. They include Dr. Juan P. Nieto M.D., Dr. Andrew Bernstein M.D., and Alyssa Stilwell, as executive director.

Dr. Pereyra is a practicing physician with multiple peer-reviewed publications. He earned an undergraduate degree from Cornell University, where his work with stem cells began, a Doctorate of Medicine (M.D.) from St. Georges University, and completed his residency training at New York Presbyterian Hospital Brooklyn.

Stem cell therapy is a form of regenerative medicine, designed to repair damaged cells within the body by reducing inflammation and modulating the immune system. This makes stem cell therapy a viable treatment option for a variety of medical conditions. Stem cell therapies are currently being researched throughout the country with many positive results. Showing profound outcomes in autoimmune, inflammatory, neurological, and orthopedic conditions; including Multiple Sclerosis, Lupus, Crohns disease, COPD, Parkinson's, ALS, Stroke, Congestive Heart Failure and more. Recently the FDA has begun to grant INDs for use of products containing stem cells for several conditions.

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A primary goal of the merger is to allow SPRINGS to duplicate its model of high-quality stem cell treatments throughout the United States. SPRINGS is in the process of opening a facility in Austin, Texas, in conjunction with an existing clinic, and a third location in southeast Florida. The Company plans to open a total of ten new facilities in the next twelve months.

I am excited for SPRINGS Rejuvenation to take the next step with the Avra merger. Ive always been passionate about delivering the highest quality care to my patients and making sure they have the most cutting-edge medical treatments available. For over a decade a community of only a select few has benefited from use of stem cells. With this merger we will not only expand our reach to many communities, but also drive down the cost of stem cells for everyone, making access to these remarkable treatments much easier. Im incredibly excited for the future, said Dr. Charles Pereyra.

Contact:

http://www.avrabiz.com

avrabiz21@gmail.com

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Avra, Inc. Completes its Merger with Springs Rejuvenation, LLC, a Stem Cell and Anti-Aging Treatment Company - Yahoo Finance