Category Archives: Stem Cell Treatment


Colombian Wound Care Market Research Report: By Product, Wound Type, End – User, Distribution Channel – Industry Analysis and Forecast to 2024 -…

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Colombian Wound Care Market Research Report: By Product, Wound Type, End - User, Distribution Channel - Industry Analysis and Forecast to 2024" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

Registering a CAGR of 3.6% during the forecast period (2019-2024), the Colombian wound care market is predicted to reach $93.9 million by 2024, witnessing a substantial increase in its revenue from $76.1 million in 2018.

Taking the geography of the country into consideration, the largest market share in the Colombian wound care market is expected to be held by the state of Cundinamarca. This is mainly ascribed to the increasing research & development activities and rising expenditure on healthcare due to supportive government policies and initiatives. Other states, such as Bolivar, Atlntico, Valle del Cauca, Santander, and Antioquia also hold significant shares in the market on account of the surging incidence of traumatic injuries, burns, and diabetic wounds as well as rising geriatric population.

The Colombian wound care market is witnessing growth due to the rising focus on healthcare services. The wound care facilities in Colombia are witnessing a surge in demand as both the public and private organizations are increasing healthcare coverage. An article published in the Health and Human rights journal in 2016, mentioned that in the country, the healthcare coverage witnessed a remarkable increase during 1991-2016; starting from 25% population in 1992, the health cover facilities were available to 96% population in 2016. This is indicative of the rising focus of the government on providing excellent healthcare facilities and means to the residents of the country.

Stem cell therapy in wound management is becoming the trend in the Colombian wound care market. Extensive research on stem cells has established their remarkable regenerative abilities, which may help in speeding up the wound healing process. A biotechnology company, BioXcellerato LLC, has its treatment center in Colombia by the name of Torre Medica El Tesoro that provides stem cell treatment for various cosmetic and other conditions. Further, it is involved in stem cell therapy and regenerative medicine research for finding prospective treatments for wound and other skin disorders.

Key Topics Covered:

Chapter 1. Research Background

1.1 Research Objectives

1.2 Market Definition

1.3 Research Scope

1.3.1 Market Segmentation by Type

1.3.2 Market Segmentation by Wound Type

1.3.3 Market Segmentation by End User

1.3.4 Market Segmentation by Distribution Channel

1.3.5 Market Segmentation by Geography

1.3.6 Analysis Period

1.3.7 Market Data Reporting Unit

1.3.7.1 Value

1.3.7.2 Volume

1.4 Key Stakeholders

Chapter 2. Research Methodology

2.1 Secondary Research

2.2 Primary Research

2.2.1 Breakdown of Primary Research Respondents

2.2.1.1 By industry participant

2.2.1.2 By company type

2.3 Market Size Estimation

2.4 Data Triangulation

2.5 Assumptions for the Study

Chapter 3. Executive Summary

Chapter 4. Introduction

4.1 Market Definition

4.2 Regulatory Overview

4.3 Market Dynamics

4.3.1 Trends

4.3.2 Drivers

4.3.3 Restraints

4.3.4 Opportunities

4.4 Porter's Five Forces Analysis

Chapter 5. Colombia Wound Care Market

5.1 By Type

5.2 By Wound Type

5.3 By End User

5.4 By Distribution Channel

5.5 By State

5.6 By City

Chapter 6. Competitive Landscape

6.1 Company Benchmarking

6.2 Strategic Developments of Key Players

Chapter 7. Company Profiles

7.1 B. Braun Melsungen AG

7.2 BSN medical GmbH

7.3 Coloplast A/S

7.4 3M Company

7.5 Acelity L.P. Inc.

7.6 Smith & Nephew PLC

7.7 ConvaTec Group PLC

7.8 Paul Hartmann AG

7.9 Mlnlycke Health Care AB

7.10 Hollister Incorporated

7.11 Tecnoquimicas SA

7.12 Beiersdorf AG

7.13 Johnson & Johnson

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/p28fze

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Colombian Wound Care Market Research Report: By Product, Wound Type, End - User, Distribution Channel - Industry Analysis and Forecast to 2024 -...

Biotech companies leading the way with exosome human clinical trials – Born2Invest

Testing a new therapeutic in human subjects for the first time is a major step in the translation of any novel treatment from the laboratory bench to clinical use.

When the therapeutic represents a paradigm shift, reaching this milestone is even more significant.

After years of planning, preparation and hard work to establish a base camp, starting human clinical trials is the first step towards the summit itself: gaining regulatory approval for product sales.

Exosomes tiny packets of proteins and nucleic acids (e.g. mRNA and miRNA) released by cells, that have powerful regenerative properties ranging from promoting wound healing to stimulating brain injury recovery following stroke represent just such a paradigm-shifting potential advance in human medicine.

The first commercial exosome therapeutics conference was held in Boston in September 2019 and over 15 companies participated.

This conference signals the emergence of exosomes as a new class of regenerative medicine products.

So far, just one or two of the companies working in the novel field of exosome-based therapies have reached the pivotal point and transitioned into human clinical trials. In this article we survey the field, starting with the pace-setters.

During the past few years, a handful of universities and research hospitals have carried out small scale, first-in-human Phase I clinical trials using exosomes. In each case where the study results are available, the exosome treatment was found to be safe and well-tolerated.

But the field has hotted up in the past few months, with the first companies reaching the pivotal point of testing exosome-based products in people.

On 28th January 2020, Melbourne-based Exopharm announced the first dosing under its first human clinical trial, becoming the first company to test exosomes potential for healing wounds in people.

The PLEXOVAL Phase I study will test Exopharms Plexaris product, a cell-free formulation of exosomes from platelets, which in preclinical animal studies have shown a regenerative effect, improving wound closure and reducing scarring.

The main readouts of the PLEXOVAL study the results of which are expected to be available sometime after mid-2020 will be safety, wound closure and scarring.

Joining Exopharm at the front of the pack is Maryland-based United Therapeutics.

Founded in 1996, United Therapeutics specialises in lung diseases and has a portfolio of FDA-approved conventional small molecule and biologic drugs on the market for a range of lung conditions.

On 26th June 2019, United Therapeutics announced approval for a Phase I trial (NCT03857841) of an exosome-based therapy against bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BDP), a condition common in preterm infants that receive assisted ventilation and supplemental oxygen.

Recruitment has commenced but dosing has not been announced. The study is due to conclude by December 2021. BDP is characterised by arrested lung growth and development, with health implications that can persist into adulthood.

Human clinical trials of a stem cell therapy for BDP, by Korean stem cell company Medipost, are already underway. However as with many stem cell therapies recent animal studies have shown that is the exosomes released by stem cells that are responsible for the therapeutic effect.

United Therapeutics therapy, UNEX-42, is a preparation of extracellular vesicles that are secreted from human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells. The company has not released any information about how its exosomes are produced or isolated.

A little behind the two leaders, three other companies have announced their aim to initiate their first clinical trials of exosome therapeutics within the next 12 months.

Launched in 2015, Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Codiak has long been considered among the leaders in developing exosome-based therapies.

Rather than exploiting the innate regenerative potential of select exosome populations, Codiak is developing engineered exosomes that feature a defined therapeutic payload. The companys initial focus has been to target immune cells, leveraging the immune system to combat cancer.

The company plans to initiate clinical trials of its lead candidate, exoSTING, in the first half of 2020. The therapeutic is designed to trigger a potent antitumor response from the patients own immune system, mediated by T cells. A second immuno-oncology candidate, exoIL-12, is due to enter clinical trials in the second half of 2020, the company says.

In nearby New Jersey, Avalon Globocare is also developing engineered exosomes. Its lead product, AVA-201, consists of exosomes enriched in the RNA miR-185, which are produced using engineered mesenchymal stem cells.

In animal tests, miR-185 suppressed cancer cell proliferation, invasion and migration in oral cancer. In July 2019, the company announced plans to start its first exosome clinical trial before the close of 2019. As of February 2020, however, no further announcement regarding this clinical trial has been made.

Avalon has also made no further announcement on a second planned clinical trial, also intended to start during the fourth quarter of 2019, of a second exosome candidate, AVA-202.

These angiogenic regenerative exosomes, derived from endothelial cells, can promote wound healing and blood vessel formation, the company says. The planned Phase I trial was to test AVA-202 for vascular diseases and wound healing.

Meanwhile, Miami-based Aegle Therapeutics plans to begin a Phase I/IIa clinical trial of its exosome therapy, AGLE-102, during 2020. AGLE-102 is based on native regenerative exosomes isolated from bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells.

After initially focussing on burns patients, in January 2020 to company announced had raised the funds to commence an FDA-cleared clinical trial of AGLE-102 to treat dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa, a rare paediatric skin blistering disorder. The company says it plans to commence this clinical trial in the first half of 2020.

A number of companies are in the preclinical phase of exosome therapy research.

Some of these companies have been set up specifically to develop exosome-based products. In the UK, Evox co-founded by University of Oxford researcher Matthew Wood in 2016 is developing engineered exosomes to treat rare diseases.

The company has developed or sourced technology that allows it to attach proteins to exosomes surface, or to load proteins or nucleic acids inside the exosome, to deliver a therapeutic cargo to a target organ.

Its lead candidate targets a lysosomal storage disorder called Niemann-Pick Disease type C, using exosomes that carry a protein therapeutic cargo. Evox says it plans to submit the Investigational New Drug (IND) application to the FDA during 2020, paving the way for the first clinical trial. It currently has five other candidates, for various indications, at the preclinical stage of development.

In Korea, Ilias and ExoCoBio are developing exosome therapeutics. Ilias founded by faculty from the Korean Advance Institute of Science and Technology specialises in loading large protein therapeutics into exosomes.

It is currently carrying out preclinical research toward treating sepsis, preterm labour and Gauchers disease. ExoCoBio is focusing on the native regenerative capacity of exosomes derived from mesenchymal stem cells, including to treat atopic dermatitis.

New companies continue to enter the exosome space. In August 2019, Carmine Therapeutics was launched, with the aim to develop gene therapies that utilize exosomes from red blood cells to deliver large nucleic acid cargoes. The company is targeting the areas of haematology, oncology and immunology.

Meanwhile, a wave of companies originally set up to develop live stem cell therapies are diversifying into stem cell derived exosome production and research.

It is now generally acknowledged that stem cell exosomes are the main therapeutically active component of stem cells, and that medical products based on exosomes will be safer to apply, and easier and cheaper to make and transport, than live cell therapies.

Originally established to produce neural stem cells for other research organisations, Aruna Bio has developed proprietary neural exosomes that can cross the blood brain barrier.

The company is now developing an exosome therapy for stroke. In October 2019, the Athens, Georgia-based company said had raised funding to support the research and development to enable its first IND application to the FDA in 2021.

In the UK, ReNeuron has also focussed on stroke, and has several clinical trials underway assessing its CTX stem cells to promote post stroke rehabilitation. The company is also working with third parties to investigate the drug- and gene therapy delivery potential of exosomes derived from CTX stem cells.

Switzerland-based Anjarium is also developing an exosome platform to selectively deliver therapeutics.20 The company is focussing on engineering exosomes loaded with therapeutic RNA cargo and displaying targeting moieties on its surface.

California-based Capricor has commenced clinical trials of a cardiosphere-derived stem cell therapy for the treatment of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD).

At an earlier phase, its regenerative exosome therapy CAP-2003 is in pre-clinical development for a variety of inflammatory disorders including DMD.

A number of other stem cell companies, including TriArm, Creative Medical, AgeX Therapeutics and BrainStorm Cell Therapeutics, are reported to be investigating exosome-based therapies derived from their stem cell lines.

Exopharms position as a frontrunner in bringing exosomes into humans is no lucky accident. The companys operations are based around its unique, proprietary method for manufacturing and isolating exosomes, known as LEAP technology.

As academics and observers of the exosome field have pointed out, reliable and scalable exosome manufacture has threatened to be a major bottleneck that limits the translation of exosome therapeutics into clinical use. The standard laboratory-scale method for collecting the exosomes produced by cultured cells has been to spin the liquid cell culture medium in an ultracentrifuge, or pass it through a fine filter.

The most common technique used so far, the ultracentrifuge, has major scalability limitations. Issues include the high level of skill and manual labour required, the time-intensive nature of the process, and the associated costs of reagents and equipment. It is impossible to imagine collecting enough exosomes for a late stage clinical trial this way.

Another issue is the low purity of the exosomes collected. These techniques sort the contents of cell culture medium by their mass and/or size. Although the exosomes are concentrated, they could be accompanied by other biological components present in the cell culture medium that happen to be a similar size or mass to the exosome.

Importantly, a biotechnology company needs a proprietary step in the process to make a proprietary product over which it has exclusivity. Exopharms LEAP technology is a good example of a proprietary manufacturing step. Ultracentrifuge is not a proprietary process.

So the big players in the emerging exosome field have generally placed a strong emphasis on developing their manufacturing and purification capability.

Exopharm developed a chromatography-based purification method, in which a patent-applied-for inexpensive functionalised polymer a LEAP Ligand is loaded into a chromatography column. The LEAP Ligand sticks to the membrane surface of exosomes passed through the column. Everything else in the cell culture medium mixture is simply washed away. The pure exosome product is then eluted from the column and collected for use. As well as being very scalable, the technique is versatile. LEAP can be used to produce a range of exosome products, by isolating exosomes from different cell sources.

Codiak, similarly, says it has developed scalable, proprietary chromatography-based methods to produced exosomes with comparable identity, purity, and functional properties as exosomes purified using methods such as ultracentrifugation. Chromatography is a flow-based technique for separating mixtures. In an April 2019 SEC filing, the company said it is establishing its own Phase 1/2 clinical manufacturing facility, which it is aiming to have fully-operational by first half 2020.

Avalon GloboCare teamed up with Weill Cornell Medicine to develop a standardised production method for isolating clinical-grade exosomes. Aegle also says it has a proprietary isolation process for producing therapeutic-grade exosomes. And Evox emphasises the GMP compliant, scalable, commercially viable manufacturing platform it has developed.

At Exopharm, the manufacturing technique that has allowed the company to leap ahead of the pack and into human clinical trials is its proprietary LEAP platform. Overcoming the exosome production and isolation bottleneck was exactly the problem the companys scientists set out to solve when Exopharm formed in 2013.

In addition to the Plexaris exosomes, isolated from platelets, currently being tested in human clinical trials, Exopharm is progressing toward human clinical trials of its second product, Cevaris, which are exosomes isolated from stem cells.

Exosomes are now under development by around 20 companies across the world. The leaders in the field are now entering clinical trials with both nave exosome products and engineered exosome products. A number of cell therapy companies are also moving across into the promising exosome product space.

The coming years promise dynamic changes, with partnerships and eventually product commercialization. Exopharm is a clear leader in this emerging field.

(Featured image by Darko Stojanovic from Pixabay)

DISCLAIMER: This article was written by a third party contributor and does not reflect the opinion of Born2Invest, its management, staff or its associates. Please review our disclaimer for more information.

This article may include forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements generally are identified by the words believe, project, estimate, become, plan, will, and similar expressions. These forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks as well as uncertainties, including those discussed in the following cautionary statements and elsewhere in this article and on this site. Although the Company may believe that its expectations are based on reasonable assumptions, the actual results that the Company may achieve may differ materially from any forward-looking statements, which reflect the opinions of the management of the Company only as of the date hereof. Additionally, please make sure to read these important disclosures.

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Biotech companies leading the way with exosome human clinical trials - Born2Invest

Aesthetic treatments can help you maintain your youthful glow – The Business Times

AESTHETICS medicine encompasses non-invasive treatments that do not involve surgery and aim to improve or correct the appearance of patients. Less intensive than cosmetic surgery, aesthetics medicine procedures are carried out by doctors to give natural and reversible results. Depending on your areas of concern, different techniques may be employed in combination to produce the best results - there is no "cookie-cutter" approach to your skincare needs.

Our skin has three layers:

The epidermis, the outermost layer of skin, provides a waterproof barrier to protect our body from germs and harmful UV rays. Its bottom-most layer makes new skin cells, and these skin cells travel up to the top layer and flake off, about a month after they form. It also gives you your skin colour, due to the presence of special cells called melanocytes, which produce the pigment melanin.

The dermis, the middle layer, contains tough connective tissue, blood vessels, hair follicles, and sweat glands.

The hypodermis, the innermost layer, is made of fat and connective tissue.

Ageing happens in every layer of the skin. Changes within the skin's layers show themselves on the surface as signs of ageing.

In the epidermis, a slower cell turnover and reduction in lipid production on the skin's surface means rough and dry skin as we age. Our skin is less efficient at repairing itself from harmful infections and UV rays. This causes pigmentation problems, like sunspots.

In the dermis, from the age of 25, there is a 1 per cent annual decrease in collagen, one of the "building blocks" of the skin. Elastin also decreases as we age. Hence, the structure of the skin is compromised, and wrinkles and saggy skin start to appear.

In the deeper layers, the hypodermis, the changes to the size and number of fat cells leads to deep wrinkles and hollow cheeks.

Skin ageing manifests by:

Fine lines and wrinkles: The first noticeable sign of ageing from 25 onwards are fine lines and wrinkles, especially around your eyes. Your dermis, the second layer of your skin, contains the collagen and elastic fibres that keep young skin plump, taut and wrinkle-free. The amount of collagen and elastic fibres in your dermis dwindles as the years roll on. As a result, your skin becomes less elastic, sags and you start to see the tell-tale signs of wrinkles.

Open pores and sagging skin: Ageing causes your skin to lose its elasticity, which stretches your pores and make them look larger. The accumulation of excess oil, dead skin cells and dirt trapped inside your pores also enhances their appearance. Hormonal changes such as pregnancy, menstruation and puberty can also enlarge your pores.

Dry and dull skin: Your epidermis forms the outer layer of your skin - a physical barrier from the external environment. On average, your body will produce an entirely new epidermis about every 60 days. Cells on the surface of your skin rub and flake off, continuously being replaced with new ones from below.

As you get older, it takes longer for your epidermis to renew itself, hence, more dead skin cells accumulate on the top layer of our skin. This diffuses light away and produces a dull skin tone. In addition, as we age, oil production slows down and this makes our skin dry - we soon lose that "Korean glass-skin effect".

Hyperpigmentation

Melanocytes located in the epidermis produce pigment called melanin. Hyperpigmentation is caused by an overproduction of melanin in patches of the skin.

This overproduction is triggered by a variety of factors, including sun exposure, genetic factors, age, hormonal influences, and skin injuries or inflammation.

Common types of hyperpigmentation encountered in our population are:

Melasma: Melasma is a common skin problem among Asians. Women are far more likely than men to get melasma, especially during pregnancy. They present as brown to gray-brown patches, usually on the face. Most people get it on their cheeks, nose bridge, forehead, chin, and above their upper lip. It also can appear on other parts of the body that are exposed to sunlight, such as the forearms and neck.

Solar lentigo: Solar lentigo, also known as age spots, are non-cancerous lesions that occur on the sun-exposed areas of the body. These flat lesions usually have well-defined borders, are dark in colour, and have an irregular shape. The backs of hands and face are common areas.

The lesions tend to increase in number with age, making them common among the middle age and older population. Age spots occur in 50 per cent of women and 20 per cent of men over the age of 50, due to stimulation from UV rays.

Post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (PIH): It is temporary pigmentation that follows injury, for example, a cut to the skin, or inflammation of the skin, for example, acne or eczema. PIH can occur in anyone, but is more common in darker-skinned individuals, in whom the colour tends to be more intense and persist for a longer period than in lighter skin.

Freckles: Freckles are common, especially among fairer-skinned individuals. They start early on in life, even in childhood, and are due to your genetic makeup and sun exposure.

Dull skin, enlarged pores, pigmentation - How can they be corrected?

Avoid sun exposure: Sun exposure is the main cause of ageing. Choose a sunscreen with "broad spectrum" protection, meaning that it protects against both UVA and UVB rays. UVA rays also contribute to skin cancer and premature aging, UVB rays are the main cause of sunburn and skin cancers.

Ensure your sunscreen has a SPF30 or higher. Physical sunscreen, those that contain zinc oxide or titanium dioxide, provide better sun protection compared to chemical sunscreens, and are less likely to clog pores and cause pimples.

Protect your eyes with sunglasses and cover up with a wide-brimmed hat or an umbrella. Limit your direct exposure to the sun, especially between 10am and 4pm, when UV rays are strongest. Avoid tanning beds, which can cause serious long-term skin damage and contribute to skin cancer.

Lightening creams: Abnormal accumulation of melanin results in hyperpigmentation. Lightening creams contain ingredients to reduce the production of melanin. Powerful lightening creams are available through a prescription from a doctor, while milder ingredients do not require a prescription.

Hydroquinone is a major ingredient in lightening creams. However, frequent adverse reactions experienced by patients, such as skin irritation and inflammation, have prompted research into other agents. Several alternatives such as tranexamic acid, and 4-n-butyl resorcinol, arbutin and kojic acid have been developed.

Lasers: There are many different lasers in the market, for many different types of indications. The property of the laser, which determines what it is used for, is the specific wavelength it emits. Different structures in the skin will absorb light energy at different wavelengths. Therefore, in pigmentation treatments, we can deliver light energy at the correct wavelength to heat up the pigmentation, while sparing the other nearby structures that absorb different wavelengths.

The pigmentation absorbs the light energy and is broken up into small fragments and eventually is cleared from the skin.

My personal favourite protocol is to use two very effective lasers for pigmentation treatment, via a Rejuvenation Laser protocol.

The Nd:YAG laser emits wavelengths of 1064nm and 532nm. It is a gentle cleansing machine that helps to remove surface dirt and oil, cleanse your skin, dry up pimples, build collagen and is very effective to break up pigmentation into small fragments.

The yellow laser, made in Germany, emits a wavelength of 577nm. It helps with improving radiance, giving you radiant skin, reducing redness and effectively vaporising pigmentation.

The Rejuvenation Laser is non-ablative, gentle and has no downtime.

Combined with a potent post-procedure serum, it synergistically enhances the anti-ageing effect of the laser protocol. The serum employs proteins secreted by umbilical cord-lining stem cells to produce collagen, restore healthy skin function and treat symptoms of ageing.

This series is produced in collaboration with The Aesthetics Medical Clinic

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Aesthetic treatments can help you maintain your youthful glow - The Business Times

SASpine to offer Stem Cell Therapy – PRNewswire

Dr. Steven Cyr has been treating patients using growth factors and stem cells contained in amniotic tissue and bone marrow aspirate to provide a potential for improved success with fusion procedures, when treating herniated discs, and for arthritic or damaged joints, with remarkable success. "The goal of any medical intervention is to yield improved outcomes with the ideal result of returning a patient to normal function, when possible," states Dr Cyr. He went on to elaborate that there are times when only a structural solution can solve problems related to spinal disorders, but even in that scenario, the use of stem cells or growth factors derived from stem cell products can possibly improve the success of surgical procedures. "I have patients previously unable to jog or run return to normal function and athletic ability after injections of growth factors and stem cell products into the knee joints, hip joints, and shoulder joints," he said. "This includes high-level athletes, professional dancers, and the average weekend warrior."

There may be promise in treating patients with spinal cord injury as well. SASpine CEO, LeAnn Cyr, states, "There are reports of patients gaining significant neurological improvement after being treated with stem cells." Dr Cyr continues, "Most patients with spinal cord injuries resulting from trauma also have mechanical pressure on the nerves that result either from bone fragments or disc material compressing the spinal cord that needs to be removed along with surgical stabilization of the spinal bones. There's significant potential that stem cells bring to the equation when treating these types of patients, and I am excited about the potential that these products offer to the host of treatments to address spinal conditions and arthritic joints."

For more information about SASpine's Stem Cell Treatment Program, visit http://www.saspine.com or call (210) 487-7463 in San Antonio or (832) 919-7990 in Houston.

Related Linkswww.facebook.com/saspinewww.instagram.com/surgical.associates.in.spine

SOURCE SASpine

SASpine

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SASpine to offer Stem Cell Therapy - PRNewswire

Stem Cell Treatments Market to Exhibit Impressive Growth of CAGR during the per – News by aeresearch

Latest Research Report on Stem Cell Treatments Market size | Industry Segment by Applications (Nerve Diseases, Immunological Diseases, Musculoskeletal Disorders, Cardiovascular Diseases, Gastrointestinal Diseases and Other), by Type (Adipose Tissue-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells, Bone Marrow-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells, Cord Blood/Embryonic Stem Cells and Other Cell Sources), Regional Outlook, Market Demand, Latest Trends, Stem Cell Treatments Industry Growth, Share & Revenue by Manufacturers, Company Profiles, Forecasts 2025.Analyzes current market size and upcoming 5 years growth of this industry.

New research report to its expanding repository. The research report, titled Stem Cell Treatments Market, mainly includes a detailed segmentation of this sector, which is expected to generate massive returns by the end of the forecast period, thus showing an appreciable rate of growth over the coming years on an annual basis. The research study also looks specifically at the need for Stem Cell Treatments Market.

Our Report Offerings Include:

Request Sample Copy of this Report @ https://www.aeresearch.net/request-sample/72554

Report Scope:

The study includes the profiles of key players in the Stem Cell Treatments market with a significant global and/or regional presence. The Stem Cell Treatments market competition by Top Manufacturers Covers:

By Product:

By Application:

Points Covered in The Report:

Recent Industry Trend:

The report contains the profiles of various prominent players in the Global Stem Cell Treatments Market. Different strategies implemented by these vendors have been analyzed and studied to gain a competitive edge, create unique product portfolios and increase their market share. The study also sheds light on major global industry vendors. Such essential vendors consist of both new and well-known players. Besides, the business report contains important data relating to the launch of new products on the market, specific licenses, domestic scenarios and the strategies of the organization implemented on the market.

MAJOR TOC OF THE REPORT:

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Stem Cell Treatments Market to Exhibit Impressive Growth of CAGR during the per - News by aeresearch

‘I just wish I could watch her grow up’: Stem cell match needed to save toddler’s life – CTV News London

LONDON, ONT. -- Nineteen-month old Savannah Hill was diagnosed with a rare form of childhood leukemia three months ago.

It broke my heart because she stopped walking and she stopped eating and she stopped playing, says Jessica Hill, Savannahs mom. It was even hard for her sister because she didnt know what was going on.

The family has been at Childrens Hospital in London for the past several months.

Savannah is currently undergoing a number of treatments, including chemotherapy, but what she ultimately needs to save her life is a stem-cell transplant.

Without transplant, we are looking at an even worse prognosis, so right now we are looking at this as the best results, and best prognosis getting a stem cell transplant, says Savannahs dad Lawrence Hill.

However, whats needed for a successful transplant is a stem cell match with Savannah and thats not something that is easy to come by.

We need to make sure to find a suitable match for her and its very hard because its basically like youre looking for your genetic twin, Jessica explains.

Since its crucial for Savannah to find a match, the family is holding a stem cell drive this Saturday at White Oaks Mall.

There is also a GoFundMe set up for the family to help cover costs of transportation, nutrition, hospital residence, parking, rent, and more.

There will also be a drive the same day in Windsor at Canadian Blood Services.

I just wish I could watch her grow up and see the beautiful woman that she would become and how she can help others with her story and show shes a fighter, says Jessica.

The family hopes their story will encourage people to take 10 minutes out of their day to come to the drive.

Lawrence says those 10 minutes could potentially save Savannahs life.

We are going to move forward day by day one step at a time and we will pray for that match.

Stem cell drive dates and locations:

Anyone who cannot attend the drives and wants to donate can contact Canadian Blood Services in their area to ask how they can be tested to help Savannah Hill.

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'I just wish I could watch her grow up': Stem cell match needed to save toddler's life - CTV News London

Reviewing National Research (NASDAQ:NRC) and US Stem Cell (NASDAQ:USRM) – Slater Sentinel

National Research (NASDAQ:NRC) and US Stem Cell (OTCMKTS:USRM) are both small-cap business services companies, but which is the better investment? We will compare the two businesses based on the strength of their earnings, dividends, valuation, profitability, institutional ownership, risk and analyst recommendations.

Analyst Recommendations

This is a breakdown of current ratings and target prices for National Research and US Stem Cell, as reported by MarketBeat.

Valuation & Earnings

This table compares National Research and US Stem Cells revenue, earnings per share (EPS) and valuation.

National Research has higher revenue and earnings than US Stem Cell.

Institutional & Insider Ownership

39.6% of National Research shares are owned by institutional investors. 4.5% of National Research shares are owned by company insiders. Comparatively, 16.7% of US Stem Cell shares are owned by company insiders. Strong institutional ownership is an indication that large money managers, hedge funds and endowments believe a company is poised for long-term growth.

Profitability

This table compares National Research and US Stem Cells net margins, return on equity and return on assets.

Risk & Volatility

National Research has a beta of 0.77, indicating that its stock price is 23% less volatile than the S&P 500. Comparatively, US Stem Cell has a beta of 5.08, indicating that its stock price is 408% more volatile than the S&P 500.

Summary

National Research beats US Stem Cell on 7 of the 9 factors compared between the two stocks.

National Research Company Profile

National Research Corporation (NRC) is a provider of analytics and insights that facilitate revenue growth, patient, employee and customer retention and patient engagement for healthcare providers, payers and other healthcare organizations. The Companys portfolio of subscription-based solutions provides information and analysis to healthcare organizations and payers across a range of mission-critical, constituent-related elements, including patient experience and satisfaction, community population health risks, workforce engagement, community perceptions, and physician engagement. The Companys clients range from acute care hospitals and post-acute providers, such as home health, long term care and hospice, to numerous payer organizations. The Company derives its revenue from its annually renewable services, which include performance measurement and improvement services, healthcare analytics and governance education services.

US Stem Cell Company Profile

U.S. Stem Cell, Inc., a biotechnology company, focuses on the discovery, development, and commercialization of autologous cellular therapies for the treatment of chronic and acute heart damage, and vascular and autoimmune diseases in the United States and internationally. Its lead product candidates include MyoCell, a clinical therapy designed to populate regions of scar tissue within a patient's heart with autologous muscle cells or cells from a patient's body for enhancing cardiac function in chronic heart failure patients; and AdipoCell, a patient-derived cell therapy for the treatment of acute myocardial infarction, chronic heart ischemia, and lower limb ischemia. The company's product development pipeline includes MyoCell SDF-1, an autologous muscle-derived cellular therapy for improving cardiac function in chronic heart failure patients. It is also developing MyoCath, a deflecting tip needle injection catheter that is used to inject cells into cardiac tissue in therapeutic procedures to treat chronic heart ischemia and congestive heart failure. In addition, the company provides physician and patient based regenerative medicine/cell therapy training, cell collection, and cell storage services; and cell collection and treatment kits for humans and animals, as well operates a cell therapy clinic. The company was formerly known as Bioheart, Inc. and changed its name to U.S. Stem Cell, Inc. in October 2015. U.S. Stem Cell, Inc. was founded in 1999 and is headquartered in Sunrise, Florida.

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Reviewing National Research (NASDAQ:NRC) and US Stem Cell (NASDAQ:USRM) - Slater Sentinel

New Immunotherapy Had Positive Results In Cancer Patients After Other Treatments Failed – Forbes

Natural Killer cells have been engineered to attack blood cancers with excellent provisional results ... [+] from a small clinical trial.

A new cell-based immunotherapy for some types of blood cancer has posted promising initial results in a small clinical trial on patients who had exhausted all other treatment options.

The new study, led by researchers from MD Anderson Cancer Center was published yesterday in the New England Journal of Medicine and used a type of immune cell, called a Natural Killer (NK) cell. The NK cells were engineered to target a protein called CD19 found on B-lymphoblasts and which can become cancerous and cause several types of blood cancer. The study tested the treatment on 11 patients with either chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) or non-Hodgkins lymphoma (NHL), finding a 73% response rate. Of the 8 people who responded, 7 maintained a complete response over a year after the initial treatment.

All our patients had failed conventional therapies and therefore there was no alternative treatment available for them, said said Katy Rezvani, M.D., Ph.D.,lead author of the paper and professor of Stem Cell Transplantation & Cellular Therapy at MD Anderson. We are encouraged by the results of the clinical trial, which will launch further clinical studies to investigate allogeneic cord blood-derived CAR NK cells as a potential treatment option for patients in need, she added.

Most cell based therapies use a different type of modified immune cell; CAR T-cells. These therapies have shown initial promise in some types of blood cancer, but there have been several setbacks with side-effects in patients and the scaleability and cost of the technology. Importantly, the NK cells used on the patients in the new study were made from donated umbilical cord blood, whereas most CAR T-cell therapies currently rely on a long and expensive process of extracting T-cells from the patient themselves, genetically modifying them and expanding the cells before the therapy is ready for use.

This means the new NK cell therapy can theoretically be produced in bulk and doesn't rely on extracting T-cells from the patient, which can be incredibly difficult, especially if the patient has received a lot of previous therapies which can affect T-cell numbers.

Strictly speaking, the manufacturing and engineering steps for CAR T and CAR NK cells are very similar. The main difference is that unlike commercial CAR T-cells, where one product is used to treat one patient (an autologous product),CAR NK cells are not patient specific, allowing for multiple doses to be manufactured from one donor that can then be used to treat multiple patients, said Rezvani.

CAR T-cell therapies, although posting some wonderful results, particularly in children with hard-to-treat, relapsed leukemias, do come with a lot of side effects, particularly neurotoxicity and cytokine release syndrome, which is life-threatening if not quickly treated. These toxicities were not seen in this initial, small trial, giving the researchers hope that perhaps this therapy may have fewer serious side-effects than other similar approaches.

As well as CAR T-cells, there is also another therapy already available which targets CD19, a drug called blinatumomab (Blincyto). What potential advantages does the new NK cell therapy have over this approach?

These are living cells that persist after infusion and will potentially continue to protect the patient from their cancer over time unlike blinatumomab that needs to be given as a continuous infusion and in multiple cycles, said Revzani. In addition, with the caveat of the small number of patients that we have treated so far and the relatively short follow up time, our approach appears to be less toxic, she added.

MD Anderson have licenced the development of this therapy and other similar B-cell targeting therapies to company Takeda Pharmaceuticals.

Our vision is to improve upon existing treatments by developing armored CAR NKs that could be administered off-the-shelf in an outpatient settingenabling more patients to be treated effectively, quickly and with minimal toxicities, said Rezvani, adding that the team also plans to expand the trial to encompass other CD19-expressing malignancies such as B-cell leukemias.

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New Immunotherapy Had Positive Results In Cancer Patients After Other Treatments Failed - Forbes

Viewpoints: Where’s The Praise About Good News On Declining Opioid Deaths?; Shutting Down Air, Trade Over Coronavirus Will Be More Harmful In Long Run…

Opinion writers weigh in on these health care issues and others.

The Wall Street Journal:Opioid Inflection Point?A report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last week that drug overdose deaths have declined for the first time in nearly three decades drew little attention until President Trump flogged it in his State of the Union address. Heres hoping the opioid scourge that has taken hundreds of thousands of lives is finally abating. Drug overdose deaths fell 4.1% in 2018 thanks to fewer fatalities from prescription opioids, according to the CDC. Overdoses from natural and semisynthetic opioids such as oxycodone and hydrocodone fell by 13.4%, and 3.2% from heroin, though these declines were partially offset by a 10% increase from synthetic opioids like fentanyl. (2/5)

The Washington Post:In Combating Coronavirus, Slamming The Door To China Will Hurt More Than HelpViruses are tiny parasites. They have a singular mission: to invade a host cell and use its machinery to replicate themselves complete with their own genetic material and then go on to infect other host cells. The new coronavirus, which has a comparatively large genome, is racing through part of China and beginning to spread around the world, transmitted from person to person. The family of coronavirus is so named because of a crownlike appearance of spikes some say it looks like the sun during an eclipse, with a halo. But there is nothing sunny about its emergence as a respiratory disease that can harm and kill human beings. (2/5)

Stat:The Novel Coronavirus Exposes A Flaw In The Nagoya ProtocolThe speed with which the sequence of 2019-nCoV has been shared is a potent reminder of how we should avoid tying up the research community in red tape when we are in a race to find a new vaccine or treatment for a new virus or other pathogen.Coronavirus Coverage: Read the rest of STATs up-to-the-minute reporting on the coronavirus outbreak. But that is precisely what a legally binding international agreement, the Nagoya Protocol on Access and Benefit Sharing, has inadvertently ended up doing. This supplementary international agreement to the Convention on Biological Diversity could make it extraordinarily difficult to conduct disease surveillance or forge research collaborations around the world. (Thomas B. Cueni, 2/5)

The Washington Post:The Coronavirus Reawakens Old Racist Tropes Against Chinese PeopleAt a middle school a few blocks from my house, a rumor circulated among the children that all Asian kids have the coronavirus and should be quarantined. Misinformation has also reached higher education: In college campuses across the United States, some non-Asian students have acknowledged avoiding Asian classmates for no other reason than, well, the coronavirus came from Asia. The disease apparently emerged in December from a live-food market in Wuhan, China. There have been over 20,000 confirmed cases in China, and the World Health Organization reported 146 confirmed cases in 23 other countries. There are serious concerns of a global pandemic, but the coronavirus has also reawakened centuries-old prejudices against Chinese people. (John Pomfret, 2/5)

The New York Times:How Abortion Warps Our PoliticsWhere will abortion opponents stand in 2020? President Trump recently made his bid for their votes, becoming the first president to speak in person at the annual March for Life in Washington, an event held since 1974. Two days later, a Democratic presidential hopeful, Pete Buttigieg, told a woman who called herself a proud pro-life Democrat that he would not support more moderate abortion language in the Democratic National Committee platform basically suggesting that, on this issue, she will not find affirmation or support from her party. (Gracy Olmstead, 2/5)

Stat:Stem Cell Clinics, Especially Rogue Ones, Need To Be Better RegulatedRogue stem cell clinics continue to victimize hopeful patients seeking cures for cancer, Parkinsons disease, autism, chronic pain, and more. Most of these treatments are unproven and unsupported by evidence, wasting precious time and health care dollars for desperate patients and often doing more harm than good to patients health and survival.Yet public demand for stem cell treatments is outpacing our ability to regulate them. Government agencies like the Food and Drug Administration and the Federal Trade Commission should be stepping up to the plate to do this, but it isnt likely that the money will be found soon to do that. (David A. Pearce, 2/6)

Stat:Taxpayer-Funded Research Should Be Open ScienceIn the three years since Donald Trump was inaugurated as president, I have rarely supported anything he proposed. And for nearly 50 years as an academic researcher, I have almost always sided with the professional research establishment. Yet on one issue I now find myself siding with the president and opposing the scientific establishment. In December, E&E News reported that the president was considering an executive action requiring that all federally funded research become available to the public immediately upon publication. After all, taxpayers paid for much of this research, which could enhance their health or quality of life, and it should become open science. (Robert M. Kaplan, 2/6)

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Viewpoints: Where's The Praise About Good News On Declining Opioid Deaths?; Shutting Down Air, Trade Over Coronavirus Will Be More Harmful In Long Run...

Abnormal Bone Formation After Trauma Explained and Reversed in Mice – Michigan Medicine

Hip replacements, severe burns, spinal cord injuries, blast injuries, traumatic brain injuriesthese seemingly disparate traumas can each lead to a painful complication during the healing process called heterotopic ossification. Heterotopic ossification is abnormal bone formation within muscle and soft tissues, an unfortunately common phenomenon that typically occurs weeks after an injury or surgery. Patients with heterotopic ossification experience decreased range of motion, swelling and pain.

Currently, theres no way to prevent it and once its formed, theres no way to reverse it, says Benjamin Levi, M.D., Director of the Burn/Wound/Regeneration Medicine Laboratory and Center for Basic and Translational Research in Michigan Medicines Department of Surgery. And while experts suspected that heterotopic ossification was somehow linked to inflammation, new U-M research explains how this happens on a cellular scaleand suggests a way it can be stopped.

To help explain how the healing process goes awry in heterotopic ossification, the research team, led by Levi, Michael Sorkin, M.D. and Amanda Huber, Ph.D., of the Department of Surgerys section of plastic surgery, took a closer look at the inflammation process in mice. Using tissue from injury sites in mouse models of heterotopic ossification, they used single cell RNA sequencing to characterize the types of cells present. They confirmed that macrophages were among the first responders and might be behind aberrant healing.

Macrophages are white blood cells whose normal job is to find and destroy pathogens. Upon closer examination, the Michigan team found that macrophages are more complex than previously thoughtand dont always do what they are supposed to do.

Macrophages are a heterogenous population, some that are helpful with healing and some that are not, explains Levi. People think of macrophages as binary (M1 vs. M2). Yet weve shown that there are many different macrophage phenotypes or states that are present during abnormal wound healing.

Specifically, during heterotopic ossification formation, the increased presence of macrophages that express TGF-beta leads to an errant signal being sent to bone forming stem cells.

For now, the only way to treat heterotopic ossification is to wait for it to stop growing and cut it out which never completely restores joint function. This new research suggests that there may be a way to treat it at the cellular level. Working with the lab led by Stephen Kunkel, Ph.D. of the Department of Pathology, the team demonstrated that an activating peptide to CD47, p7N3 could alter TGF-beta expressing macrophages, reducing their ability to send signals to bone-forming stem cells that lead to heterotopic ossification.

During abnormal wound healing, we think there is some signal that continues to be present at an injury site even after the injury should have resolved, says Levi. Beyond heterotopic ossification, Levi says the studys findings can likely be translated to other types of abnormal wound healing like muscle fibrosis.

The team hopes to eventually develop translational therapies that target this pathway and further characterize not just the inflammatory cells but the stem cells responsible for the abnormal bone formation.

The paper is published in the journal Nature Communications. Other U-M authors include: Charles Hwang, William Carson IV, Rajarsee Menon, John Li, Kaetlin Vasquez, Chase Pagani, Nicole Patel, Shuli Li, Noelle D. Visser, Yashar Niknafs, Shawn Loder, Melissa Scola, Dylan Nycz, Katherine Gallagher, Laurie K. McCauley, Shailesh Agarwal, and Yuji Mishina.

Paper Cited: Regulation of heterotopic ossification by monocytes in a mouse model of aberrant wound healing, Nature Communications, DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-14172-4

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Abnormal Bone Formation After Trauma Explained and Reversed in Mice - Michigan Medicine