Category Archives: Stem Cell Treatment


Diomics Corporation and University of California, Irvine Collaborate to Enable Cell Therapy Clinical Trial for Type 1 Diabetes – GlobeNewswire

SAN DIEGO, CA, Jan. 02, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via NEWMEDIAWIRE --Diomics Corporation, a leader in forensic, diagnostic, and therapeutic science since 2009, and the laboratory of Dr. Jonathan Lakey, Professor of Surgery and BiomedicalResearchand Director of the Clinical Islet Program at the University of California, Irvine (UCI), today announced a Sponsored Research Agreement to ultimately improve islet transplantation for patients living with type 1 diabetes.

The current method for islet transplantation requires invasive, difficult, and time consuming surgeries that create stress and risk for both the patients and the islets. To circumvent these issues, cell encapsulation has been proposed as the next treatment option. Biomaterials can protect the transplanted islets from destruction from the body. Polycaprolactone (PCL) polymer has been used in cell replacement therapy, however, the PCL polymer degrade too slowly and exhibit poor cell adhesion qualities for optimal cell replacement therapy. Diomics technology overcomes these issues for improved cell adhesion.

Leading the Diomics Sponsored Research Agreementresearch at UCI is Dr. Jonathan Lakey, a world-class subject matter expert on cell therapies including pancreatic islets and stem cells. Dr. Lakey has pioneered the development of novel methods for implantation of pancreatic islets for patients with diabetes. I am thrilled for the opportunity to work with Diomics and examine this novel and important proprietary biomaterial, said Dr Lakey. I am most excited about the potential variety of applications for this novel material.

Diomics recently filed provisional patents with claims broadly covering its proprietary polymer technology, Diomat, for applications in cell therapy, transdermal and related drug delivery methods. The Diomics and UCI research will support the development of key data that can be leveraged in clinical trials for improved islet transplantation therapy. Improved islet transplantation can restore natural insulin production for type 1 diabetes patients.

In this sponsored research project, Diomat foams will be used to characterize the Diomics material and examine encapsulated pancreatic islets and stem cells for improved islet transplantation therapy. This data will provide the key results to proceed with clinical trials using Diomat foam-encapsulated products.

Diomics is committed to providing innovative solutions through its materials and technologies that will lead the way to remarkable life science discoveries, said Diomics Chairman of the Board, Kirk Avery. We are honored to collaborate with Dr. Lakey and UCI.

ABOUT DIOMICS CORPORATION

Diomics Corporation creates highly efficient hydrophilic materials, based on patented Diomat technology, that improve the speed, sensitivity, and accuracy in the capture and detection of nucleic acids, proteins, and similar compounds. Our technology has broad applicability in a multitude of nanoscale settings in biomedical engineering, genomics, proteomics, and stem cell research. Diomics has filed a total of 20 patents and has 12 issued patents. For more information, visit:www.Diomics.com

ABOUT DR. LAKEY AT UCI

Dr. Jonathan Lakey is Professor of Surgery and Biomedical Engineering at the University of California, Irvine, and a world-class subject matter expert on cell therapies including pancreatic islets and stem cells. Dr. Lakey has over 395 publications and authored 45 book chapters and has pioneered the development of novel methods for implantation of pancreatic islets for patients with diabetes.

Diomics Contact:

Eric J. Mathur, CEO

Diomics Corporation

cell: 760.889.8929

emathur@Diomics.com

http://www.Diomics.com

Investor Relations Contact:

Jeff Ramson, Founder & CEO

PCG Advisory, Inc.

phone: 646-863-6893

jramson@pcgadvisory.com

http://www.pcgadvisory.com

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Diomics Corporation and University of California, Irvine Collaborate to Enable Cell Therapy Clinical Trial for Type 1 Diabetes - GlobeNewswire

Forty Seven: Early Indications Suggest Magrolimab Could Be A Winner – Seeking Alpha

Investment Thesis

Forty Seven (FTSV) management must be pleased with the progress they made in December '19.

First of all, early results from clinical trials of the company's flagship drug magrolimab were positive. In a trial evaluating magrolimab in combination with azacitidine for the treatment of myelodysplastic syndrome ("MDS") and acute myeloid leukaemia ("AML"), Complete Response ("CR") rates of 50% and Overall Response Rates ("ORR") of 92% were observed in untreated patients with higher risk MDS.

In Patients with Untreated AML who are ineligible for induction chemotherapy CR and ORR rates were 55% and 64% respectively. Furthermore, the combination of magrolimab and azacitidine was well tolerated, meaning the treatment may be safe for fragile, sicker and older patients.

The strong results appeared to take the market by surprise and Forty Seven's share price accelerated immediately. The stock gained 84% on 28x average volume in a single day to reach $39 and continued its ascent to reach an all-time high of over $44 (price at the time of writing is a little lower at just over $38).

Secondly, after releasing the results Forty Seven management wisely decided to issue a public offering of 5.59m shares at $35 per share, successfully raising $195.6m. (Source: Bloomberg). Given that the last fundraising, in July of last year, raised $86m at an offer price of just $8, the latest raise must be a cause of satisfaction. It is also a clear indication that investors are starting to see Forty Seven and magrolimab as the frontrunner amongst a plethora of biotechs focused on CD-47 directed therapies, in my view.

The company reported cash, cash equivalent and short-term investments of $166.7m on its Q319 earnings call which includes proceeds from the July raise and a $15.7m upfront licence payment from a collaboration with Ono Pharmaceuticals (Source: Globenewswire) which will see the Japanese firm develop, market and commercialise magrolimab across Japan and the ASEAN region.

Management stated this funding would be sufficient for Forty Seven to support its operations - which include up to ten clinical trials of magrolimab plus pre-clinical trials of anti-SIRPa antibody FSI 189 and anti-cKIT antibody FSI-174 - through to the first quarter of 2021.

Factor in December's raise and we can see that Forty Seven is now in a strong position to pursue and meet its stated goal of being the first company to release an approved therapy targeting the CD47 checkpoint of the innate immune system.

This being biotech, there are many reasons why Forty Seven's best efforts may fall short of winning approval for commercialisation from the FDA. Magrolimab is still in the early stages of being tested and its good results to date will count for nothing should Phase II or III trials reveal safety concerns or a failure to meet the primary endpoint.

Forty Seven does not have a strong pipeline to fall back on should magrolimab ultimately fail to secure commercialisation, meaning investing at this time comes with a high chance of making a loss.

A rival company could produce a CD47-directed treatment that proves to be more effective in which case Fifty Seven will struggle to sell magrolimab even if it is approved. Clinical tests could go on for longer than expected requiring further funding and there is no guarantee the company will be able to raise enough cash. Or, an alternative therapy, such as gene editing or RNAi could outperform all other treatments, rendering the company's development efforts fruitless.

Despite these concerns, however, if I were to pick a CD47 focused immunology company to back today, it would be Forty Seven. With no current concerns on the funding front and with such impressive early trial results from its lead candidate the near-term future certainly looks bright.

There are further reasons for optimism. The company owns exclusive rights to magrolimab which means should the drug be approved Forty Seven will retain the bulk of the profits from its sale. If results continue to impress Forty Seven represents an attractive acquisition target for a big pharma firm. And perhaps most importantly, besides MDS and AML magrolimab has the potential to be approved for numerous indications. Non Hodgkin's Lymphoma, for example, as well as ovarian cancer, colorectal cancer and bladder cancer.

In other words, magrolimab has blockbuster potential, and therefore, despite the obvious risks - one bad trial result could decimate the current share price - in my view Forty Seven should be carefully considered as an investment due to its upside potential. There has not been a new treatment available for Myelodysplastic syndromes ("MDS") in over a decade. Some investors may feel the rewards on offer for a successful treatment are significant enough to justify the risks.

Forty Seven was founded in 2014 in Menlo Park, California by a group of Stanford scientists, most notably Irv Weissman. Weissman played an instrumental role in identifying and developing CD47 as a potential cancer treatment.

Forty Seven went public in June 2018. The company raised $112m at a price of $16 giving it a valuation just shy of $480m. Today, thanks to the recent share price gain, Forty Seven's market cap stands at over $1.5bn.

Forty Seven's lead drug candidate magrolimab is an anti-CD47 antibody formerly known as 5f9. 5f9 has the ability to "switch off" the "don't eat me" signalling pathway used by cancerous cells to avoid detection by macrophages.

Macrophages are the innate immune system's first line of defence against abnormal cells. CD47 is expressed by healthy cells as a means of sending a "don't eat me" signal to macrophages, thereby exempting themselves from a process known as phagocytosis whereby a macrophage consumes abnormal cells to protect the body.

Nearly all cancerous cells over-express CD47 as a means of disguising themselves against macrophages to avoid being swallowed up and eliminated. The "don't eat me" message is sent when the cancerous cell binds to a receptor on macrophages known as SIRP-alpha.

Weissman's research at Stanford demonstrated three things. That blocking the "don't eat me" signalling pathway leads to elimination of many types of tumours and increases a patient's chances of survival. That boosting "eat me" signals found on cancer cells using therapeutic antibodies can work in conjunction with blocking CD47. And that, besides phagocytosis, macrophages activate tumor specific antigens that can activate T-cells against the cancerous cells, meaning that blocking CD47 can also work in conjunction with T-cell based therapies. (Source: FTSV Fundraising prospectus Dec '19)

FTSV 3-fold strategy. Source: FTSV Website

This has led directly to Forty Seven's three pronged development strategy. Monotherapy, e.g. facilitating phagocytosis, synergizing with other tumor targeting antibodies and T-cell activation, and using pro-phagocytic signals on tumor cells in conjunction with chemotherapy.

5F9 is a humanized IgG4 subclass monoclonal antibody that Forty Seven say is designed to combine with a proprietary dosing regimen to help overcome the toxicity limitations of rival anti-CD47 therapies developed by other companies.

Besides 5F9 / magrolimab, Forty Seven are also advancing FSI-189, an anti-SIRPa antibody, and FSI-174, an anti-cKIT antibody. FSI-189 is expected to enter solid-tumor trials this year, whilst cKIT - an antibody targeting stem cell growth factor inhibitors and issuing an "eat me signal" - may prove effective in treating leukemia, melanoma and gastrointestinal stroma tumors.

Forty Seven has 6 clinical trials of magrolimab ongoing that have progressed beyond the pre-clinical stage.

The trial that has produced the most positive results to date (referred to in the introduction of this article) is evaluating magrolimab both as a monotherapy and in conjunction with azacitidine as a treatment for MDS and AML in patients with haemotological malignancies.

Trial investigator David Sallman, M.D., H Lee Moffit Cancer Center and Research Institute had this to say on the publication of the encouraging early data:

The data that continue to emerge from this clinical trial are incredibly exciting, suggesting that the combination of magrolimab and azacitidine may offer the first new therapeutic regimen in over a decade, with the potential to induce meaningful and lasting responses in patients with higher-risk disease. Importantly, these results also support magrolimabs tolerability profile, further differentiating it as a safe treatment that may be used even in more fragile, sicker, and older patients.

Forty Seven have subsequently entered discussions with the FDA with regard to initiating a registration-enabling program with the goal of securing accelerated approval, and also hope to submit a biologics license application ("BLA") in Q421.

MDS is regarded by Forty Seven management as one of its most important treatment targets given its high incidence in the US (as illustrated in the chart below) and due to the paucity of treatment options available to patients.

Source: FTSV Investor Presentation Dec '19

Research suggests that 75% of MDS patients receive only supportive care with the only other options: chemotherapy drugs Vidaza (the brand name version of azacitidine), revlimid and Dacogen, or allogeneic stem cell therapy, being ineffective.

As we can also see from the above chart, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma ("DLBCL") represents another target for Forty Seven and it is the subject of a second planned clinical trial of magrolimab, this time in conjunction with rituximab, a monoclonal antibody that targets a protein known as CD20.

The trial will enrol 100 patients who have failed at least two prior lines of therapy, and will begin, management say, in Q120 with the earliest interim efficacy data slated to be made available in Q420. On the Q319 earnings call Forty Seven CEO Mark McCamish stated his desire to advance into earlier lines of treatment as early as possible referring to a "substantial unmet need" in treatment of DLBCL.

McCamish also updated investors and analysts concerning the phase 1b solid tumor trials. Results from both magrolimab combined with avelumab to treat patients with brain cancer, and in combination with cetuximab in patients with colo-rectal cancer will be made available in meetings scheduled for Q120 with abstracts of early data having already been submitted.

McCamish also announced a collaboration with gene therapy specialists Bluebird Bio. Forty Seven intend to leverage Bluebird's LentiGlobin platform to evaluate FSI-174 and move forward the cKIT program with a focus on pretransplantation and avoiding the need for chemotherapy or radiation toxicities or secondary malignancies when performing stem cell transplants.

Targeting blood-forming stem cells that express cKIT with FSI-174 releases macrophages to clear the steam cells, and, used in conjunction with magrolimab could, McCamish says:

massively expand the number of patients eligible for transplantation and therefore enable many more people to benefit from the curative potential transplantation.

During Q3 Forty Seven had an R&D spend of $27.1m - up from $18m in Q318, ascribed to the advancement of clinical trials and contract manufacturing costs for the proposed BLA.

In total, the company made a loss of $15.1m, down from $21.7m the previous year. In the first nine months of 2019 losses totalled $61.2m. As mentioned previously, Forty Seven should have more than enough funding to complete its trials and submit the BLA without having to dilute investors further - but it would be wise not to rule anything out. One failed trial could set the whole process back by years. (Source: FTSV 10Q Submission Q319).

There is no doubt that Forty Seven faces stiff competition. Amongst the companies competing in the CD47 antibody space are Surf therapeutics (SURF), Trillium Therapeutics (TRIL), Celgene (CELG), China based biotech Innovent Biologics, and Netherlands Based Aurigene and Synthon. (Source: PM Live)

All are worth studying in more detail and both SURF and TRIL represent a far cheaper investment opportunity, with shares priced at just $1.94 and $1.26 respectively. Neither have experienced a "Forty Seven moment", delivering outstanding results from early stage trials, but the price of Trillium recently spiked as Morgan Stanley reported a 5% holding. (Source: Benzinga)

For my money, however, Forty Seven is the frontrunner, and although it is priced at a premium to some of its rivals, there are good reasons for this, as I have discussed above. Another reason Forty Seven is at a competitive advantage is the 187+ patents it owns protecting magrolimab and FSI-189.

Additionally, although it was painful at the time, in 2018 Forty Seven agreed to make $47m of milestone payments to Synthon to secure non-exclusive rights to several CD-47- and SIRPa- directed antibodies, including rituximab. Other companies will need to make similar agreements if they want to develop their drugs with the same freedom that Forty Seven now has. Further analysis can be found in this informative recent SA article.

The average analyst price target for Forty Seven at time of writing is $39.25 (Source: Nasdaq) with a high of $48 and a low of $35 with the majority of analysts issuing "buy" ratings for the stock.

In my view, provided trial results remain positive, each new development can move the share price higher. Given the size of the addressable market (the global market for MDS treatment alone is set to reach $2.4bn by 2022, at a CAGR of 9.7% according to research from Grand View) and the urgent need for new and better treatments for diseases such as NHL, MDS, AML and DLBCL, the potential upside here is substantial.

If Forty Seven were to perform as well as, for example, gene-silencing treatment developer Arrowhead (ARWR) has done in 2019, buoyed by positive data, the share price could easily double as Arrowhead's has done. That is a big "if", however.

Biotech investing is inherently risky and it is all too easy to get sucked into a "next big thing" such as CD47 antibodies. In Forty Seven's case, however, the exciting premise is backed by years of research and real clinical data. Importantly, the FDA has issued Forty Seven with accelerated approval status both for magrolimab as a treatment for MDS, AML and DLBCL, as well as follicular lymphoma.

The company has treated over 190 relapsed or refractory cancer patients with magrolimab and will shortly enter a pivotal phase III trial, ENHANCE, enrolling 90 new patients to evaluate the combination of azacitidine and magrolimab together, plus it has the BLA scheduled for submission before the end of 2021.

The management team are experienced with big pharma backgrounds including Abbott Laboratories, Amgen, Genentech, Gilead, Janssen Global Services, LLC, PDL Biopharma, Inc. and Sandoz Inc.

Furthermore, Forty Seven has agreed collaborations with big pharma companies Merck and Genentech, a subsidiary of the Roche group to explore opportunities within ovarian and bladder cancer.

On balance, I think there are enough positive signals to make Forty Seven are worthwhile, if speculative investment.

Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

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Forty Seven: Early Indications Suggest Magrolimab Could Be A Winner - Seeking Alpha

Sight loss research needs urgent investment – The Guardian

As leading ophthalmologists and researchers we are joining the eye research charity Fight for Sight to call for urgent action on blindness in 2020 to address the research funding gap.

We know that serious sight loss doesnt discriminate it can affect anyone at any time and it is on the increase. Science can already do so much and with the advent of new gene therapies and stem cell treatments we are so close to outcomes that were not possible a decade ago. Yet so much more needs to be done to develop new universal treatments.

The main barrier is the lack of research funding. It is unacceptable that in 2020 only 1% of UK grant funding goes to eye research, even though more than 20% of people will be affected by serious sight loss in their lifetime. Blindness can have a huge impact on peoples mental health and ability to work, increasing costs on health systems and infrastructure.

In 2019 the WHO and UN general assembly both outlined that globally more investment is needed into sight loss and research. We are calling for the new government and its partners to agree a national plan on sight loss and a research agenda that will help to ensure that eye research gets the funding it badly needs. Please join us at fightforsight.org.uk and let 2020 be the year that we accelerate progress in beating blindness.

Prof Chris Hammond Frost chair of ophthalmology, Kings College London, Prof Alan Stitt Dean of innovation and impact, Queens University Belfast, Prof Alastair Denniston Consultant ophthalmologist, Birmingham University, Prof Alison Hardcastle Professor of molecular genetics, UCL Institute of Ophthalmology, Prof Lynda Erskine Chair in developmental neurobiology, Aberdeen University, Prof Jeremy Guggenheim Director of research, Cardiff University, Prof David Steel Honorary clinical senior lecturer, Newcastle University, Prof Chris Inglehearn Professor of molecular ophthalmology and neuroscience, Leeds University, Prof Timothy Jackson Consultant ophthalmic surgeon, Kings College London, Prof Rachael Pearson Professor of developmental neuroscience, UCL Institute of Ophthalmology, Prof Jessica Teeling Professor of Experimental Neuroimmunology, University of Southampton, Prof Colin Willoughby Professor of ophthalmology, Ulster University

Join the debate email guardian.letters@theguardian.com

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Sight loss research needs urgent investment - The Guardian

What the standard health insurance product offers – Livemint

With a host of health insurance policies available in the market, buyers often get confused and do not know how to compare them. To curb this confusion and to encourage more people to buy health insurance, the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (Irdai) has mandated all general and health insurers to offer a standard individual health insurance product with a maximum sum insured of up to 5 lakh. Find the circular, which was issued last week.

The product will be named Arogya Sanjeevani followed by the insurers name. It will have to be made available starting 1 April 2020. Standardization of a product offering will help customers get a parity-based understanding of product benefits, simplifying the purchase decision. It leaves no room for ambiguity for the customer in terms of product comparison, since they are assured of the fact that other insurers do not offer a different coverage," said Anuj Gulati, managing director and chief executive officer, Religare Health Insurance Co. Ltd.

While a standard product will surely simplify health insurance for you, do keep in mind that this may not be the best product in the market. We give you the features and details of the new standard plan.

Main features

Like a typical health insurance plan, Arogya Sanjeevani will be an annual policy renewable for life and will pay for hospitalization expenses. This means costs incurred on the surgeon, anaesthetist, consultants, specialist fees, operation theatre charges, oxygen, surgical equipment, costs towards diagnostics and so on are covered too. Further, expenses incurred on hospitalization under the Ayush system of medicine will also be covered without any sub-limits. Pre-hospitalization (from 30 days prior to the date of admission) and post-hospitalization expenses (60 days from the date of discharge) will be included too.

The policy will also cover dental treatment and plastic surgery necessitated due to a disease or injury, all day-care treatments and expenses incurred on road ambulance. The ambulance expenses will be capped at 2,000 a day.

Anyone between 18 and 65 years can buy this product, but it cant be customized to your needs.

However, there are some important caveats to consider. The policy will cover room, boarding and nursing expenses but only up to 2% of the sum insured, subject to a maximum of 5,000 a day.

Gurdeep Singh Batra, head, retail underwriting, Bajaj Allianz General Insurance Co. Ltd, said the intention of the policy is to insure the non-insured population of the country, particularly in tier-2 and tier-3 cities, which is why the sum insured is capped at 5 lakh. Room rent makes for a large chunk of the hospitalization expense and not having a cap would push the premiums. Instead of a 1% cap, theyve capped it at 2% or 5,000, which is reasonable because in tier-2 and tier-3 cities, most nursing homes and hospitals offer good rooms within 5,000," said Batra.

The policy also covers expenses on intensive care unit (ICU) and intensive cardiac care unit (ICCU) facilities up to 5% of the sum insured, up to 10,000 a day.

The mandatory covers prescribed by Irdai are inclusive enough for a standard product but this could have been enhanced by increasing some of the limits restricting the coverage such as cap on room rent, pre- and post-hospitalization expenses, and restricting ambulance charges up to 2,000 per hospitalization. Existing products offered by insurers offer flexibility and superior covers with no capping on room rent or a cover for more number of pre- and post-hospitalization days along with higher limits for ambulance," said Biresh Giri, appointed actuary, head of product development and chief risk officer, Acko General Insurance Ltd.

The product will come with a fixed co-pay of 5%, across all age groups. A 5% co-payment clause would mean that you will pay 5% of the claim amount and the insurer will pay the rest.

Theres also a limit on how much the policyholder can claim for cataract surgery. Irdai said, for each eye, expenses incurred on the treatment of cataract will be covered only up to 25% of the sum insured or 40,000, whichever is lower. Irdai has also listed the conditions that insurers shall cover after a prescribed waiting period.

What is positive about this policy is that it takes into account the ever-evolving healthcare ecosystem. The policy will cover modern treatments like stem cell therapy and balloon sinuplasty up to 50% of the sum insured. This (including modern treatments) is a good proposition from an insured viewpoint. Currently, other products are also being re-looked for such extended coverage in line with guidelines issued on standardization of exclusions in health insurance," said Batra.

Premiums and bonus

The regulator has allowed insurers to determine the price of the policy keeping in view the mandatory covers they would need to offer. Insurers, however, will have to comply with Irdai norms while doing so. Pricing for any insurer is a factor of risk assessment, estimated claims, consumer behaviour and long-term sustainability of the product.

The range of pricing should largely be similar for most insurers but its too soon to be sure, said Gulati.

While insurers are not allowed to offer any add-ons or optional covers with this product, they can package it in the form of a family floater plan where the premium is decided based on the age of the oldest member of the family. Giri said the premiums could start from 5,000 for an individual policy with a sum insured of 5 lakh and 15,000 for a family floater plan with a sum insured of 5 lakh.

Note that a cover of 5 lakh may not be sufficient for a whole family but is still better than having no insurance at all. For a floater policy, 5 lakh may not be adequate. Nevertheless, we have a huge untapped market where most people dont have any insurance and are paying out of their own pockets or not getting properly treated," said Prasun Sikdar, MD and CEO, ManipalCigna Health Insurance Co Ltd. Like other health products, policyholders will get the option of paying premiums on a monthly, quarterly, half-yearly and annual basis. The cumulative bonus on this product, according to Irdai, shall increase by 5% in respect of each claim-free year, subject to a maximum of 50% of the sum insured but only if the policy is renewed without a break. If a claim is made in any particular year, the bonus will decrease at the same rate at which it was accrued: 5%. Also, no deductibles are allowed.

Mint take

Sikar said it is difficult to say whether premiums will drive this product or awareness campaigns by Irdai, or the brand name of the insurers. But this will definitely benefit the industry and increase penetration," he added. Batra said this product is specifically targeted towards the lower middle-income group where medical expenses, especially the cost of hospitalization is still lower than metro cities.

Experts also said that this may impact the retail health insurance business in the long run as it will bring more uniformity and standardized policy wordings, making it easier for customers to choose.

However, keep in mind that this policy suffers from two major setbacks: room rent capping and co-payment. While this may make the policy affordable, in case of a claim, you will have to shell out a part of the claim from your pocket. Given the low sum insured, this policy comes with restrictive clauses that also make it more affordable. Before you buy the new standard product, compare the premiums and choose the least restrictive option. If you havent bought a policy due to high premiums, this can be a good entry point. Whether the product will enhance the adoption of health insurance remains to be seen.

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What the standard health insurance product offers - Livemint

Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market- Industry Emerging Trends, Future Growth and Productivity Data Analysis, Reliability, Competitive Analysis and…

Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Research Report 2019 to 2023 segmented by product type, applications and offers complete details including recent trends, Animal Stem Cell Therapy statistics, and growth factors to assist the users in planning the business strategies and prioritize the business which will lead to huge market returns.

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Research Report offers a forecast for the global Animal Stem Cell Therapy market between 2019 and 2023. In terms of value, the Animal Stem Cell Therapy industry is expected to register a steady CAGR during the forecast period. This study demonstrates the Animal Stem Cell Therapy market share dynamics and trends globally across the various regions. This influence the current nature and the future status of the Animal Stem Cell Therapy industry during the forecast period.

This research report provides a thorough global Animal Stem Cell Therapy market study and provides insights about the several factors driving the popularity of Animal Stem Cell Therapy and its features. The report includes an extensive analysis of the key drivers, restraints, structure and Animal Stem Cell Therapy market trends, stakeholder strategies and necessities for succeeding in the business.

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DogsHorsesOthers

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Veterinary HospitalsResearch Organizations

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South America Market (Brazil, Argentina)

The Middle East & Africa Market (South Africa, Saudi Arabia)

Europe Market (Spain, U.K., Italy, Germany, Russia, France)

North America Market (U.S., Mexico, Canada)

Asia-Pacific Market (China, Japan, India, Southeast Asia)

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This study discusses the key trends within countries that contribute to the Animal Stem Cell Therapy market development as well as examines the degrees at which the drivers are influencing the marketplace in each region. The global Animal Stem Cell Therapy industry report assesses the present situation and the development prospects of the Animal Stem Cell Therapy market in various regions worldwide.

Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Report Highlights:,

In the final section of the Animal Stem Cell Therapy market report, we have comprised a competitive landscape to provide clienteles a dashboard view based on the categories of providers in the value chain, their occurrence in the Animal Stem Cell Therapy portfolio and key differentiators in the global Animal Stem Cell Therapy market. This section is primarily intended to provide clients with an objective and detailed comparative valuation of the key providers specific to a market segment in the Animal Stem Cell Therapy supply chain and the major players in the market.

Table of Content:

Chapter One: Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Overview

Chapter Two: Manufacturers Profiles

Chapter Three: Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Competition, by Players

Chapter Four: Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Size by Regions

Chapter Five: North America Animal Stem Cell Therapy Revenue by Countries

Chapter Six: Europe Animal Stem Cell Therapy Revenue by Countries

Chapter Seven: Asia-Pacific Animal Stem Cell Therapy Revenue by Countries

Chapter Eight: South America Animal Stem Cell Therapy Revenue by Countries

Chapter Nine: Middle East and Africa Revenue Animal Stem Cell Therapy by Countries

Chapter Ten: Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Segment by Type, Application

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Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market- Industry Emerging Trends, Future Growth and Productivity Data Analysis, Reliability, Competitive Analysis and...

Super Naturals: the high-tech natural beauty brands changing the face of modern skincare – Evening Standard

The latest lifestyle, fashion and travel trends

A high-end bio-beauty boom is in full bloom thanks to a host of revolutionary brands set on changing the face of modern skincare. These are the five to know...

Hailing from the Napa Valley, where founder April Gargiulo spent two years researching and developing her Holy Grail skincare products using the same meticulous approach her family took to their fine wine business, Vintners Daughter champions just two products that promise dramatic, multi-correctional results using some of the worlds most active organic and foraged botanicals. The original Active Botanical Serum (175) is hailed as the face oils to end all face oils and is built around the brands signature Phyto Radiance Infusion. This process starts with consciously grown whole plants such as calendula and super green alfalfa, known in ancient times as the foods of life, which undergo a methodical three-week long extraction to glean every last drop of their nutritional benefits. Just five drops using the brands 30-second Push/Press Method of application promises to deliver visible radiance, brightness and unparalleled nourishment particularly when used in conjunction with its preparatory Active Treatment Essence (210) (goop.com).

The undisputed Queen of Green, Tata Harper is a pioneer of the farm-to-face beauty movement with all-natural formulations handcrafted in the brands laboratory in Vermont and bottles stamped with a code to trace how fresh your product is and who it was made by. The beauty editors favourite is going one step further with the launch of its Supernaturals 2.0 line of six products boasting 155 ultramodern green ingredients from 46 countries and of course, no synthetic chemicals. The Elixir Vitae Serum (391) alone boasts 34 new radical engineered ingredients from 25 countries, including kelp polymers from France developed to target cellular ageing. Other highlights from the range include the Concentrated Brightening Serum (257), which contains 24 ingredients to hydrate, 17 to reduce wrinkles, 15 to brighten and 13 to even skin tone, and the Boosted Contouring Serum (257), designed to lift, firm and restore youthful elasticity with a combination of Edelweiss stem cells and skin revitalising pomegranate. (tataharperskincare.com)

The brainchild of cosmetologist Anna Buonocore and naturalist Jeanette Thottrup, Seed To Skin believes that effective skincare is threefold. Firstly, that wild ingredients foraged from the land and sea used in conjunction with those sourced from its organic Tuscan farm are among the most potent nature has to offer. Secondly, that just like feeding your body skin requires a healthy, balanced diet and formulas that neither starve nor overload with any one element. Finally, that the most effective absorption relies on a precise mix of perfectly-sized molecules to ensure each ingredient is delivered exactly where it needs to go. As a result, its award-winning product line is loaded with game changers try The AlcheMist Super Active Serum Spray (145) to feed your skin a nutrient-rich drink whenever it needs a boost, or the Black Magic Detoxifying Oxygen Therapy Mask (119) which contains activated charcoal and volcanic clay for a one-stop facial in a jar (libertylondon.com).

(Wildsmith )

Inspired by the arboretums progressive approach to cultivation at Hampshires Heckfield Place and named after its mastermind William Walker Wildsmith, this ethical crafted-in-England skincare brand is designed for those who desire natural products but demand clinical results. Exclusive to Harrods beauty halls, the hero additions to its product line-up include the Platinum Booster (175) a powerful skin-firming treatment powered by encapsulated oxygen and moss cell cultures and a reviving, collagen-boosting Copper Peptide Cream and Serum Duo (150) which delivers a luminous finish to your complexion and comes in a compostable mycelium box (wildsmithskin.com; harrods.com).

After turning to flower arranging as a weekly dose of mindfulness, beauty entrepreneur Kelly S Chung endeavoured to harness the healing power of nature or Flower Therapy, as she has coined it in another form; and Femmue was born. Fusing K-beauty innovation with a clean beauty ethos and the cellular energy of plants, the camellia flower is at the heart of the range and renowned for its antioxidant and restorative qualities. The Divine Camlia Facial Oil (100) is the purest form with 99.8 per cent camellia seed oil, while other must-try products in the line include the bestselling Flower Infused Fine Mask (40) formulated with camellia petals, geranium oil and cactus extract and the lavender-loaded Brilliant Cleansing Oil (73) (net-a-porter.com).

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Super Naturals: the high-tech natural beauty brands changing the face of modern skincare - Evening Standard

Radical treatment of oral infection is not necessary before stem cell transplantation, says study – ANI News

ANI | Updated: Jan 05, 2020 19:56 IST

Washington D.C. [USA], Jan 5 (ANI): A recent scientific study suggests that contrary to the conventional belief, oral infection has no association with the risk of patients that people developing serious infectious diseases within six months of undergoing stem cell transplantation.The study was conducted by the researchers of the University of Helsinki and was published in the journal - PLOS ONE.During the study, researchers investigated to find out if oral infections are associated with infectious complications as well as mortality rate after stem cell transplantation."Contrary to our assumptions, untreated oral infections had no connection with post-stem cell transplantation survival during the six-month follow-up period. Another surprise was that they had no link with any serious infectious complications occurring during the follow-up period," said lead researcher Tuomas Waltimo.The process of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is used for treating cancers and other severe blood and autoimmune diseases.Owing to long durations required for recovery of the human immune system following stem cell transplantation procedure, patients generally have a heightened risk of infections. (ANI)

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Radical treatment of oral infection is not necessary before stem cell transplantation, says study - ANI News

Top 10 ALS Stories of 2019 – ALS News Today

Throughout 2019, ALS News Today brought you daily coverage of key findings, treatment developments, clinical trials, and other events related to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).

As a reminder of what mattered most to you in 2019, here are the top 10 most-read articles of last year with a brief description of what made them interesting and relevant to the ALS community.

We look forward to reporting more news to patients, family members, and caregivers dealing with ALS during 2020.

No. 10 Experimental Gene Therapy Successfully Silences Key ALS Gene C9orf72, Preclinical Studies Show

A tale of two preclinical studies showed that a gene therapy candidate targeting a key ALS mutation in the C9orf72 gene was able to lessen the buildup of toxic RNA clumps and reduce the activity of the mutated gene in cells collected from a patient with frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and a mouse model of ALS.

Developed by uniQure,the therapy is designed to silence thedisease-causing gene. It works by delivering microRNAs (miRNAs) RNA molecules that regulate gene expression that target the mutated C9orf72s RNA for degradation. The results supported the continuation of uniQures gene therapy program in ALS and FTD, the company said.

No. 9 Altered Gut Microbiota in ALS Patients Could Drive Digestive Problems, Study Suggests

In the summer, a small study discovered an altered composition of gut microbes in people with ALS, which could drive digestive problems in those with the disease.

Using genetics, a research team in China found that fecal samples of people with ALS have an increase in harmful microbes of the phylum Firmicutes and a decrease in beneficial microorganisms called Bacteroidetes. The resulting poor gastrointestinal health may lead to a decline in the guts digestion and metabolism functions.

No. 8 Ibudilast-Rilutek Therapy Combo Closer to U.S. Patent for ALS and Other Neurodegenerative Diseases

At the beginning of the year, U.S. biopharmaceutical MediciNova received a notice of allowance stating that its request for a patent covering a combination of its investigational therapy ibudilast (MN-166) plus Rilutek (riluzole) was being consideredby the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

Ibudilast is a small molecule that reduces the activity of immune cells in the brain while supporting the growth of motor neurons, those lost in people with ALS. In a Phase 2 trial (NCT02238626), the treatment was found to work well in combination with Sanofis approved therapy Rilutek, improving patients functional activity, quality of life, and muscle strength.

The notice of allowance was the final step toward patent registration. Such registration will provide patent protection until November 2035 to the combination, for use in treating ALS and other neurodegenerative diseases.

No. 7 MediciNova Launches Phase 2b/3 Trial of Ibudilast for ALS

In June, MediciNova launched a Phase 2b/3 clinical trial to continue studying ibudilast as an add-on therapy to Rilutek. The multicenter, double-blind study (NCT04057898) will recruit approximately 230 participants, who will be randomly selected to receive either ibudilast plus Rilutek or a placebo plus Rilutek for 12 months.

The trials main goal is to study ibudilasts impact on ALS progression and functional disability by determining changes in the Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Functional Rating Scale (ALSFRS-R) score between the beginning and end of the treatment period. Secondary objectives include changes in patients muscle strength, quality of life, and respiratory function. The study also will evaluate the safety and tolerability profile of ibudilast.

No. 6 FDA Approves Pivotal Phase 2b/3 Trial for Ibudilast in ALS Patients

Just a few months earlier, MediciNova had received approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to initiate this trial. Eligible patients must have had the disease for no more than 18 months and present just mild disability.

During the trial, patients will receive Rilutekfor at least 30 days before starting a regimen of either 100 mg per day of ibudilast or a placebo for a period of 12 months. Participants may then enter an extension phase in which they will be offered the ibudilast combination for an additional six months. Top-line data is expected by December 2021.

No. 5 Phase 3 Trial of NurOwn Cell Therapy Fully Enrolls 200 Patients, BrainStorm Announces

The Phase 3 trial evaluatingBrainStorm Cell Therapeuticss cell therapy candidateNurOwn completed patient enrollment in October. The 200 participants will receive three administrations of NurOwn, or a placebo, into the spinal canal every two months. The primary goals are to demonstrate the therapys safety and its ability to slow disease progression.

A cell-based therapy, NurOwn works by removing specific stem cells from patients and converting them to cells that produce molecules that promote nerve tissue growth and survival. The modified cells are then returned to the patient to stimulate nerve tissue growth. NurOwn aims to safely improve abilities like swallowing, speech, handwriting, and walking in people with ALS.

No. 4 High-dose Vitamin B12 May Improve ALS Prognosis if Started Early, Study Suggests

A long-term Phase 2/3 study examining vitamin B12 as a treatment for ALS found that ultra-high doses of methylcobalamin, the physiologically active form of this vitamin, may extend survival and slow the decline in functional capacity, compared with a placebo.

The study included 373 patients, diagnosed fewer than three years earlier, across 51 sites in Japan. However, the benefits were only seen in patients diagnosed less than one year before taking the supplements, and only a trend was observed.

No. 3 CuATSM Therapy May Slow ALS Progression, Improving Cognition and Respiration in Patients, Phase 1 Trial Shows

Results from a Phase 1 clinical trial (NCT02870634) showed that CuATSM a small molecule able to selectively deliver copper to cells with damaged mitochondria slowed disease progression and improved the respiratory and cognitive function of people with ALS.

Damaged mitochondria are considered a hallmark of several neurodegenerative diseases, including ALS, and delivering copper is thought to restore the health of these organelles. Developer Collaborative Medicinal Development (CMD) began testing CuATSM in patients with sporadic and familial ALS in 2016.CMD is now planning to launch a randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial for CuATSM to confirm these results.

No. 2 Bacteria and Fungi Found in Central Nervous System of ALS Patients, Study Reports

In March, a study discovered several species of bacteria and fungi living in the central nervous system (CNS) of people with ALS, suggesting that patients have coexisting bacterial and fungal infections.

The study built on prior research suggesting that ALS might be caused by a fungal infection. Researchers then examined frozen CNS tissue from 11 ALS patients to assess whether bacterial infections accompany fungal infections. Bacterial DNA was found in different regions of the CNS and the presence of bacteria was confirmed in neural tissue samples.

No. 1 Nerve Injury May Trigger Onset, Progression of ALS Symptoms, Rat Study Suggests

Our most-read article of 2019reported that small nerve damage may serve as an ALS trigger. Such damage may accelerate motor symptoms in rats carrying a mutation in the SOD1 gene,one of the 40 genes associated with ALS development in humans.

While rats without the mutation completely recovered leg function four weeks after induced damage to the sciatic nerve, located in the leg, SOD1-mutated animals were unable to fully recover. These rats also lost function in the uninjured leg, likely as a consequence of sustained immune activation and more severe neurodegeneration.

The induced nerve damage mimics head injury and trauma in human patients, which could explain the higher prevalence of the disease among war veterans and professional athletes.

***

At ALS News Today, we hope these stories and our regular reporting throughout 2020 contribute to informing and improving the lives of everyone affected by ALS.

We wish all our readers a happy 2020.

Total Posts: 6

Ins holds a PhD in Biomedical Sciences from the University of Lisbon, Portugal, where she specialized in blood vessel biology, blood stem cells, and cancer. Before that, she studied Cell and Molecular Biology at Universidade Nova de Lisboa and worked as a research fellow at Faculdade de Cincias e Tecnologias and Instituto Gulbenkian de Cincia. Ins currently works as a Managing Science Editor, striving to deliver the latest scientific advances to patient communities in a clear and accurate manner.

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Top 10 ALS Stories of 2019 - ALS News Today

The 2020s: An NJIT researcher gives us a glimpse at the future of technology – NJ.com

By Atam Dhawan

As our civilization evolves, so do our expectations of technology. Together, they demonstrate how dramatic advances in robots, nanotechnology-enabled sensors and high-powered computing will continue to change and evolve our society. Importantly, many of these technologies, including smart robots, point-of-care devices and machine intelligence, will empower individuals to enjoy their lives more purposefully.

Here is my list of new goalposts for the next decade in three spheres: health care, environmental sustainability and technology-assisted living.

Healthcare:

Sustainable Environment:

Technology-Assisted Living:

Atam Dhawan is the senior vice provost for research at NJIT, a distinguished professor of electrical and computer engineering and an inventor. With several issued patents, some commercialized, Dhawan was inducted into the National Academy of Inventors in 2015 for his work on point-of-care technologies in health care. He serves as the chair of the National Institutes of Healths point-of-care research network.

The Star-Ledger/NJ.com encourages submissions of opinion. Bookmark NJ.com/Opinion. Follow us on Twitter @NJ_Opinion and on Facebook at NJ.com Opinion. Get the latest news updates right in your inbox. Subscribe to NJ.coms newsletters.

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The 2020s: An NJIT researcher gives us a glimpse at the future of technology - NJ.com

Wearable monitoring technology helps nurses avoid waking sleep-deprived patients – ABC News

Updated January 06, 2020 08:30:20

Since being diagnosed with Hodgkin's lymphoma 18 months ago, Aliona Grytsenko has spent much of her time in and out of hospital.

When the 22-year-old architecture student developed an infection after having a stem cell transplant, she had to be woken every hour to have her vital signs checked.

"It made it really hard to sleep and rest in the midst of having fevers and going through the treatment and side effects themselves. It's really difficult to manage that when you're so sleep-deprived," Ms Grytsenko said.

Registered nurse and researcher Elise Button has worked in cancer and palliative care for 10 years and said waking people up was one of the worst parts of the job.

"We routinely wake people up every four hours if they're more unwell we wake them up every hour or 15 minutes to do vital sign monitoring to make sure they're safe," Dr Button said.

"The sicker they are, the more we wake them up."

But new technology being trialled at the 20-bed Kilcoy Hospital, north-west of Brisbane, may put an end to what has been one of nurses' core responsibilities taking and recording vital signs.

Patients are being fitted with wearable body sensors that will automatically record their temperature, heart rate, oxygen levels and blood pressure.

Dr Button said it was a potential game-changer in nursing care.

"It gives us more time to focus on all the other roles that a nurse does that are important particularly communicating with people, sitting down and talking to them, while we know they're being safely monitored," Dr Button said.

"This allows people who are unwell to get sleep and rest, with peace of mind that they're being safely monitored."

The Metro North Hospital and Health Service's Adam Scott is overseeing the trial and says the feedback so far has been positive.

"Patients have commented they no longer have to be woken through the night. They can sleep through the process," Professor Scott said.

The wireless monitoring technology has been in development for a decade, but it is the first time in the world it has been put to the test by an entire hospital.

It could also help save hospital bottom lines.

"We have a growing level and burden of chronic disease, we have higher life expectancies and higher community expectations on how healthcare is provided," Professor Scott said.

"We know we have to move towards a value-based healthcare approach to better provide services and care for our patients."

The Australian distributor for the wireless monitoring device, Wearable Health Tech, estimates there are more than 100 million patient observations performed each year in Australia.

Company spokesman Ben Magid said the system not only gave time back to staff to spend on patient care, but improved patient safety through continuous monitoring.

"If patients do start to go downhill, staff are alerted so they can intervene sooner and prevent adverse events and complications from developing," Mr Magid said.

If the trial goes well, the technology could be used more widely, allowing patients to recover at home, while still being monitored by hospital staff.

Ms Grytsenko said it would have given her peace of mind.

"In the first few weeks after the stem cell transplant you don't know how you're going, you don't know, is that bad enough that I should call someone and ask or is it OK?'' Ms Grytsenko said.

Professor Scott said he believed it could also revolutionise rural medicine.

"We could have a command centre located in a metropolitan city where the specialist staff are sitting supervising and looking after and viewing patients that are located in a rural facility," Professor Scott said.

The trial will run until June.

Topics:healthcare-facilities,health-policy,health,government-and-politics,public-sector,medical-research,medical-procedures,doctors-and-medical-professionals,brisbane-4000,qld,maroochydore-4558,kilcoy-4515,australia

First posted January 06, 2020 06:56:17

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Wearable monitoring technology helps nurses avoid waking sleep-deprived patients - ABC News