Category Archives: Stem Cell Treatment


Stem Cell Therapy Market: Beating Growth Expectations- MEDIPOST, BIOTIME, BrainStorm Cell Therapeutics, Caladrius, JCR Pharmaceuticals, AlloSource -…

The Stem Cell Therapy market, study now available at Ample Market Research, is a detailed sketch of the business sphere in terms of current and future trends driving the profit matrix. The report also indicates a point-wise outline of market share, market size, industry partakers, and regional landscape along with statistics, diagrams, & charts elucidating various noteworthy parameters of the industry landscape.

The Stem Cell Therapy Market research report presents a comprehensive assessment of the market and contains thoughtful insights, facts, historical data and statistically-supported and industry-validated market data and projections with a suitable set of assumptions and methodology. It provides analysis and information by categories such as market segments, regions, and product types and distribution channels.

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Top Key Players Present in Global Auger Drilling Market Are: MEDIPOST, BIOTIME, BrainStorm Cell Therapeutics, Caladrius, JCR Pharmaceuticals, AlloSource, NuVasive, Holostem Terapie Avanzate, RTI Surgical, Advanced Cell Technology, Pharmicell, Osiris Therapeutics, Anterogen

Different leading key players have been profiled in this research report to get a clear idea of successful strategies carried out by top-level companies. On the basis of geographical segmentation, the global Stem Cell Therapy Market has been fragmented across several regions such as North America (Covered in Chapter 7 and 14), United States, Canada, Mexico, Europe (Covered in Chapter 8 and 14), Germany, UK, France, Italy, Spain, Russia. This Market research report highlights those leading players who are planning to expand opportunities in the global market.

Stem Cell Therapy Market is presented to the readers as a holistic snapshot of the competitive landscape within the given forecast period. It presents a comparative detailed analysis of all regional and player segments, offering readers a better knowledge of where areas in which they can place their existing resources and gauging the priority of a particular region in order to boost their standing in the global market.

The Stem Cell Therapy Market is gaining pace and businesses have started understanding the benefits of analytics in the present day highly dynamic business environment. The market has witnessed several important developments over the past few years, with mounting volumes of business data and the shift from traditional data analysis platforms to self-service business analytics being some of the most prominent ones.

For the future period, sound forecasts on market value and volume are offered for each type and application. In the same period, the report also provides a detailed analysis of market value and consumption for each region. These insights are helpful in devising strategies for the future and take necessary steps. New project investment feasibility analysis and SWOT analysis are offered along with insights on industry barriers. Research findings and conclusions are mentioned at the end.

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Reasons for Buying Stem Cell Therapy Market Report:

-Fully updated for 2020 including the impact of the Covid 19/ Novel Coronavirus.

-It Provides A Forward-Looking Perspective on Different Factors Driving or Restraining Market Growth.

-It Provides A Five-Year Forecast Assessed on The Basis of How the Stem Cell Therapy Market Is Predicted to Grow

-It Helps in Understanding the Key Product Segments and Their Future.

-It Provides Pin Point Analysis of Changing Competition Dynamics and Keeps You Ahead of Competitors.

-It Helps in Making Informed Business Decisions by Having Complete Insights of Stem Cell Therapy Market and By Making an In-Depth Analysis of Market Segments.

The report presents the market competitive landscape and consistent in-depth analysis of the major vendor/key players in the market along with the impact of economic slowdown due to COVID.

Table of Content:

Chapter 1 Market Overview

Chapter 2 Industry Chain

Chapter 3 Environmental Analysis

Chapter 4 Market Segmentation by Type

Chapter 5 Market Segmentation by Application

Chapter 6 Market Segmentation by Region

Chapter 7 Market Competitive

Chapter 8 Major Vendors

Chapter 9 Conclusion

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Stem Cell Therapy Market: Beating Growth Expectations- MEDIPOST, BIOTIME, BrainStorm Cell Therapeutics, Caladrius, JCR Pharmaceuticals, AlloSource -...

Eimear’s Wish Gin helping Belfast family pay tribute to daughter and raise awareness for Stem Cell Donation – Belfast Live

When Eimear Smyth passed away, her family promised her that they'd raise awareness for stem cell donation in the most fun way possible.

The West Belfast woman was 22 when she was diagnosed with Hodgkins Lymphoma and died just three years later after complications from a Donor Stem Cell transplant.

Today, Eimear's family and friends continue to raise awareness for stem cell donation, organ donation and blood cancer as part of Eimear's Wish.

From fundraisers to pink glazed donuts, everything the Smyth's have done in memory of Eimear has been fun, so they decided to take things up a notch and create a Gin brand named after the woman who taught them so much in life and death.

Speaking to Belfast Live, Eimear's dad Sean said the Gin has proved popular from across Ireland and beyond.

"Eimear's Wish Gin has taken a life of its own, people are really interested. We are getting requests from all over, and then when people try it they're asking for me. And the Wolf and Whistle in West Belfast are actually going to run a cocktail for us too.

"Our Eimear loved lemon and strawberry sherbet so they have agreed to run a pink lemon sherbet cocktail in memory of Eimear, and it launched on September 4 so we are looking forward to that.

"Everything we want to do, and have done in the past has been fun. See standing and shaking a bucket saying 'give me your money,' we don't want to do that. And we don't want to make it sad, because there is enough sadness in the world.

Eimear just loved dancing, and her social life. She loved coffee and donuts and now and again would take a wee Gin. She wasn't a big drinker but she would love having a Gin named after her.

"And the idea is to create a legacy for Eimear and to get people talking about stem cell donation, blood cancer and organ donation."

Eimear's Wish are asking for a 30 charitable donation which will be divided equally between Action Cancer, Cancer Fund for Children and Anthony Nolan Stem Cell - and in turn you'll get a bottle of Eimear's Gin.

All three charitable groups have helped Eimear and the Smyth family throughout their darkest days.

"Action Cancer was very, very good to us. Cancer Fund for Children looked out for Eimear and Anthony Nolan are helping to raise that awareness," said Sean.

"There are not enough people in Northern Ireland on the stem cell list, especially from the BAME community. If you are a white European, there's a 70% chance that you will find a match, but if you are from the Black, Asian, Minority Ethnic community that chance is 20% because your tissue is more difficult to match. So we need more people from those backgrounds to join.

"Before Eimear, I didn't know much about stem cell donation, I didn't know that stem cell and bone marrow was the same thing. I always thought it was two separate things.

"Our problem was that Eimear was only 22. She had just graduated and was taking the year out to get the money to go on to do a PGCE to become a teacher. She didn't smoke and rarely drank, she had a good healthy lifestyle. No cancer in my side of the family or Eimear's mummy's side. If that can happen to Eimear, it can happen to anyone, and that was really frightening.

"Awareness if one part of it, but the other part is to get better facilities, more age appropriate facilities for our young people who are going through this."

Throughout her illness, Eimear was treated in the City Hospital.

Hailing the medical care his daughter received, Sean says he would like to see more "age appropriate settings" for young adults for treatment.

"Eimear couldn't open the window to feel air on her skin when she was there. The TVs don't work. There's nowhere for relatives to sleep and there is one small fridge for 24 people. The facilities are from 1986. It is a horrible place to die.

"People have got to understand that we do not have age appropriate care for teenagers and young adults. They're sitting beside a 70-year-old man who is also ill, it's not fair on either patient to be in that situation.

"Eimear lived in Leeds and was treated in St James' Hospital and the unit she was in was brilliant. It was for patients aged 17-24. You walk in and there's a fully stocked kitchen for parents. The wards are a four people maximum. The far end of the ward is a youth club, it has snooker tables, jukeboxes, all the games consoles.

"The outpatients come for their chemo and their friends come with them for company. It is brilliant but we have nothing here. If we hadn't been in England we wouldn't have known the difference, we would have just thought it was the norm.

"The environment isn't nice at all. These are our kids. They're told those three words 'you've got cancer' and that is heartbreaking. The only thing I want is for the young people to be able to look at something other than beige colour walls. They deserve better.

"Nothing will ever bring my daughter back, but if we can make it a bit easy for another family or child, then we'll do that - it was Eimear's Wish."

For more information on how to donate, how to order a bottle or Eimear's Wish Gin or to stock it in your premises CLICK HERE.

You can register as a stem cell donor with the Anthony Nolan Trust or DKMS.

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Eimear's Wish Gin helping Belfast family pay tribute to daughter and raise awareness for Stem Cell Donation - Belfast Live

From stem cells to islets hope for treatment of type 1 diabetes – News – The University of Sydney

According to Professor Liddle, this study used stem cells derived from human umbilical vein and human fat that were re-programmed to generate human islet-like organoids (HILOs).

Pancreatic islets are regions in the pancreas responsible for the production of hormones and insulin.

Pancreatic islets contain multiple cell types, not just insulin-producing beta cells. The research team created three-dimensional HILOs that not only include beta-like cells (the cells that produce, store and release insulin in the islets of the pancreas), but also other supporting cell types found in normal islets, said Professor Liddle.

Under the microscope, and using gene sequencing analysis, we are able to show that the three-dimensional HILOs are very similar to human islets. When the HILOs are transplanted into diabetic mice, they secrete insulin when blood glucose levels are high, just as normal islets would.

While human pancreatic islet transplantation has been a major advancement in treating severe cases of type 1 diabetes, the availability, quality and limited cellular longevity of this approach limits its application.

Pancreatic islet transplantation currently involves implanting insulin-producing islet cells from a deceased human donor into the liver of a person with type 1 diabetes. When successful, the procedure can control blood glucose levels, reduce the frequency and severity of hypoglycaemic episodes and potentially eliminate the need for regular insulin injections. A number of transplants are usually needed, and immunosuppressant drugs to prevent the immune system from attacking the transplanted cells are also required.

While the procedure is now funded by the Australian Government, pancreatic islet transplantation is currently limited to people with severely unstable type 1 diabetes, particularly those for whom insulin therapy alone is not effective and who experience recurrent and severe hypoglycaemic episodes.

Professor Philip OConnell is Executive Director at The Westmead Institute for Medical Research and pioneered pancreatic islet transplantation in Australia. Almost 20-years ago, he led Australias first pancreatic islet transplantation trials at Westmead Hospital and The Westmead Institute for Medical Research. Today, he continues his research, aiming to improve this procedure and develop islet transplantation as a mainstream treatment for type 1 diabetes.

Professor OConnell, who was not involved in this research study, said, Pancreatic islet transplantation has saved hundreds of lives around the globe however, it has its limitations. For example, pancreatic islets are taken from deceased donors, and the wait for donor islets can be lengthy. Once donor islets are obtained, not all are suitable for transplantation.

This research indicates the potential to alleviate some of these issues. Stem cells derived from readily available human tissues can be expanded then re-programmed into potentially unlimited numbers of islets that are suitable for transplantation.

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From stem cells to islets hope for treatment of type 1 diabetes - News - The University of Sydney

Auxolytic’s Nutrient-Based Shut-Off Switch Boosts Cell Therapy Safety Without Transgenes – BioSpace

Auxolytic has developed a nutrient-based safety-switch for cell therapies that doesnt rely on introducing transgenes. The process, auxotrophy, uses the engineered inability of an organism to synthesize a compound required for its survival to allow physicians to turn off a gene therapy if serious side effects develop.

The work currently is in preclinical phases, in humanized cells in mice, and appears promising. When it advances to clinical applications, patients receiving cell therapies (such as CAR T, stem cell, and TCR therapies) containing this safety switch would be given supplements of a particular nutrient uridine, in this case. If the cell therapy went awry, patients could simply stop taking the uridine supplement and the cellular therapy would cease to function.

A paper published in Nature Biotechnology describes how the off switch could be engineered into cell therapies. Basically, it says, the approach knocks out the gene that disrupt(s) uridine monophosphate synthetase (UMPS) in the pyrimidine de novo synthesis pathway in cell lines, pluripotent cells, and primary human T cells.

This knockout makes proliferation of the cell therapy dependent on the external supply of uridine. Therefore, researchers can control cell growth by modulating the uridine supply in vitro and, importantly, in vivo after transplantation.

In the movie Jurassic Park, the dinosaurs were engineered to need lysine. If they escaped, there was no lysine to keep them alive. This therapy is very similar, founder and CEO James Patterson, M.D., Ph.D., told BioSpace.

Rather than lysine, Auxolytic uses uridine as the controlling nutrient. Uridine is important in carbohydrate metabolism and is found in yeast, tomatoes, broccoli, sugarcane and other foods, and also can be produced by the body when inadequate amounts are consumed in the diet.

The quantities available through the diet or produced by the body, however, arent high enough to sustain the engineered cells, Patterson said. Evidence comes from a rare genetic disease, orotic aciduria. Patients with that condition have a mutation in the UMPS gene that causes them to produce insufficient levels of the enzyme that breaks down orotic acid. They often die at very young ages if not supplied with quantities of pure uridine. This shows that a normal diet wont compensate.

Patients of cell therapies that incorporate Auxolytics nutrient-based safety switch likely would be able to eat their usual foods, but with nuridine added as a supplement. The approach Dr. Patterson developed hasnt been tested in patients yet.

This is the same nutrient I worked with in yeast, but now in human cells, Patterson said. Early work shows that only the engineered cell therapy would be affected by uridine modulation. Within one week of withdrawing the uridine, the engineered cells were inactive and unable to proliferate. Normal cells continued to function as usual.

At age 27, Patterson already has worked with many of the thought leaders in medicine and biomedical research while pursuing his M.D. and Ph.D. degrees at the University of Cambridge and the Francis Crick Institute. Beginning early during his university days, he performed research placements at the University of Zurich, The Gurdon Institute, The Whitehead Institute and The Cambridge Stem Cell Initiative.

This nutrient-based approach to controlling cell therapy is the direct result of that body of experience.

During my M.D./Ph.D. training, I became interested in cell therapy and its potential for curing patients, but there were safety risks. My Ph.D. work focused on yeast biology, studying how cells control their size. There, the idea of nutrient-based cell control was commonplace, but no one was working on this in human cells, he said. I became interested in science when I was very young, so during my undergraduate work I made sure I was thinking about the science being done in the labs in addition to what I was learning in lectures. Theres a difference.

Lectures lay the scientific foundation, but lab work is cutting-edge and forward-thinking.

I started working in labs when I was 19 in Zurich. I spent all my summers working in labs, asking a range of questions and working in lots of different systems, Patterson said.

Such broad exposure proved foundational for Auxolytic.

As you can see, this is a yeast technology. Thats not where you usually go to look for cell therapy ideas, he added.

He advises students early on to get into exciting labs that are doing interesting, fundamental science. Ask basic questions of how cells work, for example. You never know what youll find that could be applicable to the clinic. Jumping to clinical research (too early) causes you to lose the blue sky thinking.

Auxotyic, based in Cambridge, UK, is, for now, a virtual company of onebut with ample advisors.

Theyve helped along the way in the academic sector and also in the management of business, Patterson said. Those mentors include seasoned industry veterans who know what it takes to take a drug from bench to bedside, and who understand patenting and licensing.

The next step for Auxolytic, scientifically, is to identify potential applications around selecting for differentiated cells from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). Much of the scientific work is being done in collaboration with the Matthew H. Porteus lab at Stanford University.

On the business side, he continued, Were excited to get this into the hands of big cell therapy companies that currently are making cell therapies without a safety switch. Were looking to partner with them to get this to patients.

Auxolytic is talking with several interested companies. People recognize the need for a safety switch and are very excited, Patterson said. Discussions are going well.

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Auxolytic's Nutrient-Based Shut-Off Switch Boosts Cell Therapy Safety Without Transgenes - BioSpace

Adipose Tissue-derived Stem Cell Therapy Market Share Analysis, Application, Strategies of Key Players & Forecast to 2025 – Scientect

The Global Adipose Tissue-derived Stem Cell Therapy Market report offers users the detailed study of the market and its main aspects. The study on Global Adipose Tissue-derived Stem Cell Therapy Market, offers profound understandings about the Adipose Tissue-derived Stem Cell Therapy Market covering all the essential aspects of the market. The report provides competitive pipeline landscape of the Global Factors like production, market share, revenue rate, regions and key players define a market study start to end. This report gives an overview of market valued in the year 2019 and its growth in the coming years till 2025.

This study covers following key players: The report also presents the market competition landscape and a corresponding detailed analysis of the major vendor/manufacturers in the market. The key manufacturers covered in this report: Breakdown data in in Chapter 3. AlloCure Tissue Genesis Antria Cellleris Corestem Celgene Corporation Mesoblast Cytori Therapeutics Pluristem Therapeutics Intrexon Lonza BioRestorative Therapies Pluristem Therapeutics iXCells Biotechnologies Cyagen Celltex Therapeutics Corporation

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The study is done with the help of analysis such as SWOT analysis and PESTEL analysis. It consists of the detailed study of current market trends along with the past statistics. The past years are considered as reference to get the predicted data for the forecast period. The report covers complete analysis of the Adipose Tissue-derived Stem Cell Therapy Market on the basis of regional and Global level. Various important factors such as market trends, revenue growth patterns market shares and demand and supply are included in almost all the market research report for every industry.

There are different marketing strategies that every marketer looks up to in order to ace the competition in the Global market. Some of the primary marketing strategies that is needed for every business to be successful are Passion, Focus, Watching the Data, Communicating the value To Your Customers, Your Understanding of Your Target Market. There is a target set in market that every marketing strategy has to reach. In addition, it also covers political and social factors which is likely to affect the growth of the market. It also covers and analysis several segments which are present in the market. A significant development has been recorded by the market of Adipose Tissue-derived Stem Cell Therapy, in past few years. It is also for it to grow further. Various important factors such as market trends, revenue growth patterns market shares and demand and supply are included in almost all the market research report for every industry.

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Market segment by Type, the product can be split into Segmentation by type: breakdown data from 2015 to 2020 in Section 2.3; and forecast to 2025 in section 10.7. Autologous Stem Cells Allogeneic Stem Cells

Segmentation by application: breakdown data from 2015 to 2020, in Section 2.4; and forecast to 2025 in section 10.8. Therapeutic Application Research Application

This report also splits the market by region: Breakdown data in Chapter 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8. Americas United States Canada Mexico Brazil APAC China Japan Korea Southeast Asia India Australia Europe Germany France UK Italy Russia Middle East & Africa Egypt South Africa Israel Turkey GCC Countries

The report also presents the market competition landscape and a corresponding detailed analysis of the major vendor/manufacturers in the market. The key manufacturers covered in this report: Breakdown data in in Chapter 3. AlloCure Tissue Genesis Antria Cellleris Corestem Celgene Corporation Mesoblast Cytori Therapeutics Pluristem Therapeutics Intrexon Lonza BioRestorative Therapies Pluristem Therapeutics iXCells Biotechnologies Cyagen Celltex Therapeutics Corporation

Market segment by Application, split into Segmentation by application: breakdown data from 2015 to 2020, in Section 2.4; and forecast to 2025 in section 10.8. Therapeutic Application Research Application

One of the ways for the estimation for the growth of the market is estimation of the market share by the regions which is likely to contribute to the growth of the market in the estimated forecast period. In this, the growth and fall of each region is covered which is likely to boost the growth of the Adipose Tissue-derived Stem Cell Therapy Market. In addition, to determine and use precise methods, research methodology such as the qualitative and quantitative data is used for the estimation and determination of the Global Adipose Tissue-derived Stem Cell Therapy Market.

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Adipose Tissue-derived Stem Cell Therapy Market Share Analysis, Application, Strategies of Key Players & Forecast to 2025 - Scientect

Stem Cell Marketing: Hundreds OF Businesses Pitch Unproven Stem Cell Products To Treat Different Conditions – Technology Times Pakistan

Nature abhors a vacuum, and in the absence of evidence-based therapies to treat or prevent COVID-19, stem cell clinics with a menu of unsubstantiated direct-to-consumer therapies are more than willing to fill the gap.

Ambitious claims are not out of place in the realm of stem cell marketing, in which hundreds of U.S. businesses aggressively pitch unproven stem cell products to treat a variety of conditions, ranging from autism to Parkinsons disease to macular degeneration. It is a gray area of regenerative medicine that rheumatologists and orthopedic providers are typically familiar with, as the promise of stem cell injections to relieve joint pain or bypass invasive surgeries often resonates among patients with osteoarthritis.

Although much of the attention surrounding unproven regenerative medicine has focused on the significantly flashier claims, it is the relatively lowkey promises related to arthritis and other orthopedic conditions that remain the industrys main source of revenue.

A lot of the times when people talk about this market, they are interested in the really far out claims, such as that they treat ALS or spinal cord injuries or Alzheimers Disease, Leigh Turner, PhD, of the University of Minnesota Center for Bioethics and School of Public Health, told Healio Rheumatology. While that is important and the misrepresentations are extreme, individuals with arthritis and similar conditions are really the bread and butter of this marketplace. It is a lot more common.

In the United States, more than 27 million people are affected by OA, with an estimated 9.9 million adults exhibiting OA of the knee. It is to this population that regenerative medicine companies, through hundreds of sports medicine and pain management clinics across the country, direct their most enticing promises that all patients have to do is take cells from bone marrow or blood, process it, and inject them back into the body, and it will have a variety of anti-inflammatory therapeutic effects.

These are widespread advertising claims, Turner said. Its almost so widespread that their existence has kind of been normalized and routinized. When you think about regulatory activity with the FDA and the Federal Trade Commission, much of it has not been in the orthopedic or pain management space; the focus instead has been on the companies making the especially egregious claims.

In 2015, platelet injections for arthritis alone generated more than $93 million in revenue in the United States, according to a 2018 article in The Journal of Knee Surgery. Globally, the regenerative medicine market, including direct-to-consumer stem cell therapy, is expected to reach $5.6 billion by 2025, according to a 2019 report from the market research firm ReportLink.

Many businesses [involved in direct-to-consumer stem cell therapies] appear to be violating federal law and generating a lot of money by doing it but are not really drawing the attention of investigators, regulators or journalists, and remain such a fundamental part of the marketplace, Turner said. It deserves to have a light shown on it.

But now, many of the same regenerative medicine companies offering unproven treatments are adding a new promise to their advertising copy: the prevention and/or treatment of COVID-19.

In a statement published this year in JAMA, Peter Marks, MD, PhD, director of the FDAs Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, warned physicians of this new development, and asked for their help in cracking down on these clinics.

Proven vs. Unproven Products When it comes to evidence-based, FDA-approved stem-cell therapies, the list of indications is short. According to Turner, these include stem-cell transplants for blood-related cancers and sickle cell maladies.

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Outside the stem-cell arena, the FDA in 2018 approved the regenerative medicine advanced therapy designation to MiMedx Groups AmnioFix Injectable an allogeneic micronized dehydrated human amnion/chorion membrane for use in the treatment of OA of the knee.

Beyond that, there are credible clinical trials taking place, where you have individuals with relevant training and legitimate credentials doing the kind of research genuinely intended to get at these questions for stem cell use in orthopedic diseases and injuries, Turner said. I would say that some of these preliminary studies are certainly encouraging enough to suggest the merits of further research.

In addition, according to Shane A. Shapiro, MD, medical directors for the Regenerative Medicine Therapeutics Program at the Mayo Clinic, the science of cell-based, or cell-derived, therapies for musculoskeletal disorders has made promising progress over the last decade.

We have given this subset of treatments the moniker orthobiologics to help separate these types of treatments from pure mesenchymal stem cell treatments, which are still in various phases of research, and quite far from ready to market or FDA approval, Shapiro told Healio Rheumatology. Additionally, we need to draw the distinction between orthobiologics and biologic agents used as treatments in inflammatory arthritic diseases, which modulate the immune system and have been approved for use in several arthritis and systemic inflammatory diseases.

Among these orthobiologic agents being translated into occasional practice include blood-based therapies, such as platelet rich plasma (PRP), as well as a similar product concentrated from bone marrow product called BMAC, and some fat-based therapies. All of these have begun testing in clinical trials, with some early use in clinical practice to treat arthritis, or to help augment surgical procedures, Shapiro said.

We have the most experience about 15 years with PRP for osteoarthritis and the literature, via several randomized controlled trials at this point, is quite supportive of PRP as a treatment for arthritic pain, he said. However, it is not a cure. PRP has been successful as a cure in a few, but certainly not all, chronic tendinopathies. The other cell-based therapies are further behind in our understanding of how they work and need more research. Still, we try very hard not to call any of these stem cell treatments, because it leads to greater patient confusion.

Moreover, most of this work has been focused in orthopedic and sports medicine, with very little known about their application in rheumatic diseases.

Given that OA and rheumatoid arthritis are different diseases with differing etiology, it would be hard to recommend any of these treatments in routine rheumatologic practice outside of a clinical trial, Shapiro said. Only a few stem-cell therapies have been approved worldwide and the few U.S. approvals treat hematologic malignancies. No other cell therapy product stem cell treatment has been adequately studied for use in rheumatology practice.

Baseless Claims In stark contrast to the work of the Mayo Clinic and other institutions focusing on evidence-based research, treatment claims commonly seen in the direct-to-consumer marketplace have gone well beyond the confines of credibly-designed clinical trials or generating meaningful data, according to Turner.

The businesses that I am concerned the most about are the ones that are about just hanging out a shingle on the internet and making advertising claims about having stem cell therapies for arthritis and a litany of other diseases and injuries, he said. Sure, there are credible studies taking place, but these are businesses that have leaped beyond that. Instead, these businesses are making claims to prospective clients that what they are advertising is safe, and that it will help them with pain relief or pain mitigation or even stronger claims.

A 2016 study co-authored by Turner and published in Cell Stem Cell found 351 U.S. businesses engaged in direct-to-consumer marketing of stem cell interventions offered at 570 American-based clinics.

These businesses, according to Turner, persuade people to spend thousands, or even tens of thousands, of dollars based on amorphous claims often relating to the mechanics of medicinal signaling cells that they are safe, robust and reliable.

interesting reading: Science Has A Racism Problem, Top Science Journal Say Systemic Racism Is Keeping Black People From Entering STEM

What I would say is that it is not a hypothesis that should be dismissed out of hand, but we also shouldnt walk around as though this is all established fact, Turner said. And to their credit, the FDA and the FTC have gradually over the past decade, especially in the last few years, stepped up their enforcement activities against these claims and the businesses that make them.

Typically, such enforcement actions from the FDA come in the form of a warning letter or, more recently, untitled letters used for violations that may not meet the threshold of regulatory significance for a warning letter requesting that a company correct their behavior.

According to Turner, recent warning and untitled letters from the FDA have resulted in some companies scaling back their claims regarding stem-cell therapies. However, as not all of these letters have been made public, it is difficult to know the extent of their use and which companies have received them.

Federal authorities have also sought and obtained permanent injunctions against companies and clinics for making unsubstantiated stem cell claims. The FDA and the U.S. Department of Justice in June 2019 successfully obtained a permanent injunction in a Florida federal court that stopped U.S. Stem Cell Clinic LLC and U.S. Stem Cell Inc., as well as their chief scientific officer, from manufacturing or distributing any and all stromal vascular fraction products, which are fat-tissue derived stem cell products.

However, Turner cautioned, such victories come with an important caveat.

The interesting thing there is that it was a specific stem cell product that the FDA wanted to get a permanent injunction on, Turner said. I think some people assume that if a company gets a warning letter, then its the end of the line, but my understanding with U.S. Stem Cell is that it resulted in a rebranding of the business. They still market stem cell treatments, but they have moved away from fat-derived products. So, its kind of a success for the FDA and the Department of Justice, but also maybe not such a dramatic success if the company can keep on marketing supposed stem cell therapies.

Cracking Down in the Age of COVID In his statement in JAMA, Marks wrote that some of the same clinics that have been advertising unproven regenerative therapies are now offering similarly unproven products for the treatment of complications of COVID-19, and are making claims that are simply not supported by compelling clinical data.

Turner, from his perspective, said the vast majority of these clinics have been largely unaffected by the emergence of COVID-19, with most boasting the same claims as before the pandemic.

However, there are those who have pivoted to take advantage of the spreading coronavirus, he added.

There is an interesting development in the marketplace, having to do with the companies that have seen the pandemic as a marketing opportunity, and are now advertising their stem cell products as treatments or preventive measures for COVID-19, Turner said. Now, I am not seeing that across hundreds of businesses, but it is an activity that is out there in the marketplace. Some of it is being picked up by the FDA and the FTC, and some of it continues to happen, but it hasnt appeared to have attracted the attention of regulators yet.

That may be changing, though. According to Turner, recent unproven claims regarding COVID-19 could give regulators a renewed focus and provide a clear target for corrective actions.

There is a kind of crispness, or a clarity to it, when companies make claims on their website, Facebook page or YouTube video that they have stem cells that are immune-system boosters, or that they will prevent individuals from getting COVID-19, he said. The FDA, the FTC and the Department of Justice have all indicated that they are going to be very aggressive in terms of pursuing businesses that are engaging in misrepresentations about treatment and preventive measures about COVID-19.

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Not in every case, because you can still find some of these businesses, but I would say that they have been as active as I have ever seen them, not just in terms of responding, but responding speed as well, to these misleading claims, he added.

In addition, Marks called on clinicians and patients alike to help federal authorities catch these clinics and companies, by coming forward and reporting any unproven claims or advertisements that they see.

However, that kind of work would require substantial communication between patient and physician regarding the large amount of medical and scientific material surrounding cell therapies circulating around the internet, in clinical practice and elsewhere.

And that, according to Shapiro, is exactly what the Mayo Clinics Regenerative Medicine Therapeutics Program, and its consulting service, have set out to do.

Harnessing Expertise Speaking as director of the program, Shapiro said the Mayo Clinics Regenerative Medicine Therapeutics Program, and its consult service, can help patients understand the available treatment options and provide answers about unmet clinical needs.

In most cases, that means having a conversation about the patients diagnosis, reviewing the standard of care treatment for their diagnosis, and then discussing available regenerative treatment options if there are any or alternatively, helping the patient find a clinical trial they might be a candidate for, Shapiro said.

Important, for patients with arthritis, is to clear up any misconceptions about what the cell therapies can and cannot do in current medical practice, he added. We also help patients understand the drug approval process and why stem cell therapies for arthritis might still need further research before they can be used to treat inflammatory conditions.

According to Shapiro, rheumatologists can help patients avoid unproven therapies by taking the time to explain all legitimate treatment options.

Rheumatologists are the experts in inflammatory arthritis conditions, he said. Patients look to their expertise for guidance. Rheumatologists should be providing patients with all legitimate treatment options, partnering with patients to decide on the best treatment option for their diagnosis, offering reassurance that patients are being presented with all scientifically-validated options, and engaging in a respectful but evidenced-based conversation about the current state of practice when it comes to regenerative therapeutics for inflammatory arthritis.

We can also provide them hope that legitimate scientific research is making great strides when it comes to regenerative treatments for such conditions, he added. There are legitimate scientific reports of bone-marrow stem-cell transplants for severe rheumatoid arthritis offering cures in small studies.

Turner agreed, adding that clinicians and rheumatologists should also help their patients who have been taken in by false claims to report such activities, as well as any adverse events they experience as a result. This, he said, would provide regulators with a better sense of the illicit direct-to-consumer marketplace, and how people are being taken advantage of.

I suspect there is substantial underreporting because the businesses themselves dont really report these kinds of problems, and when patients go to these clinics, they can feel embarrassed that they lost money or were harmed by it, so there can be some hesitancy in coming forward, Turner said.

I think part of it is the difficult work of trying to help patients understand where the current state of research is, and what kinds of treatment exist and which ones should we really be talking about as established, evidence-based therapies, he added. Those kinds of sober, cautious conversations help people sort out credible, evidence-base claims from what we might think of as scams or outright fraud.

the article is originally published at healio.

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Stem Cell Marketing: Hundreds OF Businesses Pitch Unproven Stem Cell Products To Treat Different Conditions - Technology Times Pakistan

Lucrative Opportunities in North America to Propel the Growth of the Stem Cell Therapy Market2020 – Owned

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Lucrative Opportunities in North America to Propel the Growth of the Stem Cell Therapy Market2020 - Owned

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VETSTEM BIOPHARMA MediVet Biologic J-ARM Celavet Magellan Stem Cells U.S. Stem Cell Cells Power Japan ANIMAL CELL THERAPIES Animal Care Stem Cell Therapy Sciences VetCell Therapeutics Animacel Aratana Therapeutics

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Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market 2020 | Present Status, Share, Future Growth, Past Performance and Forecast Changing Dynamics & Plans ...

Grandad and grandson both diagnosed with rare forms of blood cancer – Metro.co.uk

Ted Peel and grandson Romain have both been diagnosed with rare blood cancers (Pictures: MDS UK)

A grandfather and his grandson are set to receive stem cell transplants within weeks of each other after they were both diagnosed with rare forms of blood cancer.

Ted Peel, 71, and his grandson Romain, 18, have faced agonising waits to access the treatment but are now being admitted into hospital at almost the same time for the life-changing procedure.

Retired policeman Ted, whose own grandfather also suffered from a form of the disease, was diagnosed with Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS) in 2015 after feeling extremely tired and coughing up blood.

Hes been hospitalised three times with sepsis and at one point his body temperature plummeted to 32C,five degrees lower than average.

Romain, who lives near his grandad in Dover, Kent, began suffering from migraines and fatigue while studying for his A Levels and was prescribed pain medication because doctors thought it was exam stress.

But his condition deteriorated and he received a diagnosis of Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia (ALL) in September 2019.

Ted, who is the chairman of MDS UK, a charity set up to support those with blood cancer, told Metro.co.uk: Its been a very difficult time for the family but this is the only type of cure available to both of us and we know we are in the best hands.

When I look at the doctors and nurses in the hospital, I know I am very lucky to be surrounded by such dedicated people and it is the same for Romain.

Ted believes he is one of the oldest people to go in for a stem cell transplant in the UK and his treatment was originally scheduled for the spring but this was postponed due to the coronavirus pandemic.

He was told in July that he was going to be admitted to Kings College Hospital imminently as cases of Covid 19 in London have decreased.

Science-fan Romain is already in hospital just down the road at the Royal Marsden for his treatment. Hes previously had six months of chemotherapy but doctors discovered he had a Philadelphia (Ph+) malignancy which makes this form of treatment much less effective.

He said: Although my specific mutation complicates my treatment, I was really interested in the genetics behind it. Ive learnt a lot going through my diagnosis and treatment.

It was a scary situation, but I was mentally prepared for it. Im aware that most Ph+ cases result in a transplant to prevent relapse scenarios.

Romains 16-year-old sister Sidonie, who today received her GCSE results, was a 12/12 match and donated some of her stem cells to be transfused to her brother.

Ted said: At the moment he is very up and down, Im sure I will be the same. We talk a lot and he tells me what he wants to do when he gets out of hospital. He wants to study science at university and become a doctor.

Hes a very logical person. he knows exactly what his condition is and what is happening. We are keeping everything crossed for him.

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Researchers have identified genes that cause a predisposition to developing forms of blood cancer and believe that, in rare cases, these can be inherited.

The pair are using their experiences to try to encourage others to become stem cell donors and raise money for MDS UK and the Teenage Cancer Trust.

Ted is having to rely on a donor from America because of the shortage of people willing to donate in the UK.

He says his experience with the charity has shown him the tragic consequences of this lack of donors, and has lost several close friends.

He said: We urge more people to become stem cell donors, especially those from ethnic minority communities. We would like to see a future where every blood cancer patient has a donor available and where cost is not an inhibiting factor.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

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Grandad and grandson both diagnosed with rare forms of blood cancer - Metro.co.uk

A bright future for genomics and gene therapy in the UK – Health Service Journal

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So-called scientific breakthroughs are often in the headlines, but in reality, ground-breaking medical innovations adhere to a slow process characterised by cautious clinical experimentation and gradual but continuous improvement before reaching patients. After years of effort, gene therapy looks set to become a routine medical approach to address serious unmet medical need.

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There are two types of gene therapy approved for commercial use today. The first, in vivo, uses a modified virus, administered directly into the body to correct the target cells original genetic defect. The second, ex vivo, takes the patients own cells away from their body for genetic modification with a virus and then puts them back into the patient. Ex vivo gene therapy is dominated by two cell types; CD34+ haematopoietic stem cells (bone marrow stem cells) that can be modified to correct certain genetic disorders, and cytotoxic T-cells that can be altered and trained to kill cancerous cells.

The cell and gene therapy industry in the UK is supported by the formation and growth of many companies with promising assets in clinical development. This thriving biotech community is also supported by a robust and prosperous contingent of specialist manufacturing companies. These companies were key to the recent national covid-19 vaccine manufacturing response because the process for making genetically modified adenovirus such as the SARs-COV-02 vaccine, (as developed at the Oxford University Jenner Institute), is very similar to the process for making viruses for gene therapy.

UK leadership in gene therapy is no accident. As specified in our National Industrial Strategy, the UKs many research councils, in particular the Medicines Research Council, are active in funding the development and translation of treatments. In the UK right now, there are approximately 127 clinical trials testing new cell and gene therapy medicines, which represents 12 per cent of the global total. The government is readying the NHS to support these trials and transition these treatments into more common use through funding of the Advanced Therapy Treatment Centres (ATTC), a multiyear multi-million-pound project coordinated by the Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult and comprising centres of excellence throughout the UK.

In the UK right now, there are approximately 127 clinical trials testing new cell and gene therapy medicines, which represents 12 per cent of the global total. The government is readying the NHS to support these trials

The ATTCs aim to develop and harmonise adoption of the one and done treatment paradigm by developing the appropriate frameworks and systems to support clinical adoption of these novel therapies. The ATTCs and the NHS are also working in partnership to develop novel medicines assessment and reimbursement paradigms which fairly recognise the ultra-long-term medical benefits that can accrue from a one-time gene therapy treatment. Increased adoption of gene therapy, which is proving to be an approach that can reduce the long-term healthcare burden of chronic disease management, has the potential to significantly lighten the NHS resources required for support of several chronic conditions.

As a future example of the UK commitment to gene therapies, we are also leading the practical application of genetic sequencing (genomics). Formation of the National Genomic Test Directory and support for the 100,000 genomes project by Genomics England are critical steps to improve the diagnosis of patients and identification of a new wave of one-off treatments that could be capable of delivering long-term clinical benefit.

Cell and gene therapies are a revolution in medicine and have even been described as the future of the healthcare system. When you consider that 80 per cent of rare diseases have a genetic component, these treatments could transform the prospects of thousands of people living with these conditions, creating a more economically sustainable and brighter future for them and their families.

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A bright future for genomics and gene therapy in the UK - Health Service Journal