CAR T-cell therapy may rollout for Indian cancer patients in 8 months: Siddhartha Mukherjee – Moneycontrol

Indian-American oncologist and Pulitzer prize-winning author Dr Siddhartha Mukherjee has joined hands with Biocon Chairperson Kiran Mazumdar Shaw to bring innovative Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy to cancer patients in India.

CAR T-cells stands for a kind of immunological cell that is derived from your own body and is engineered or weaponised to go and kill cancer cells in your body.

At present, CAR T-cell treatment isnt available at any price in India. A company formed this year in Bangalore by Mukherjee, Shaw and Kush Parmar plans to pioneer care delivery models at a much lesser cost that could change the way CAR T and other cell therapies are developed around the world.

In a free-wheeling interview with CNBC-TV18, Mukherjee talks about the cutting edge treatment and its implications on cancer care in the country.

A part of the reason that I began to collaborate with Kiran was that if we can have one of those most viable telecom and software sectors on the planet, we should be able to make cellular therapies; we should be able to make CAR T-cell, T-cell. There is no fundamental reason that Indian engineers and Indian scientists and of course ultimately Indian patients cannot get access to these therapies, Mukherjee pointed out.

See original here:
CAR T-cell therapy may rollout for Indian cancer patients in 8 months: Siddhartha Mukherjee - Moneycontrol

CAR T-Cell Therapy May be Available to Cancer Patients in India Next Year: Dr Siddhartha Mukherjee – News18

Indian-American oncologist and author Dr Siddhartha Mukherjee, Biocon chairperson Kiran Mazumdar Shaw and Kush Parmar, managing partner at 5AM Ventures, are bringing the innovative Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy to cancer patients in India. Cell therapies are therapies in which your own body cells are used as drugs to fight cancer. In CAR T-cell therapy, immunological cell is derived from the patients body and weaponised to kill cancer cells in the body.

In an interview to CNBC TV-18, Dr Siddhartha Mukherjee touches upon the affordability of this therapy and the other challenges facing cancer research and treatment in India.

Edited excerpts:

I want to talk to you about your visit to India. There is an announcement you are making with Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw. So tell me a little bit more about that.

We are announcing the formation and launch of a company that will deliver cell therapies in India. Cell therapies are therapies in which cells your own body cells are used as drugs to fight cancer.

One example of this is a so-called CAR T-cell. The name stands for a kind of immune cell, immunological cell that is derived from your own body and is engineered, weaponised to go and kill cancer cells in your body.

This therapy has been in development in many countries for several years but was finally launched as an FDA-approved drug a couple of years ago against certain cancer zones. Different ones work for different cancers but it was not available in India at all. So we, Kiran, Kush Parmar and I partnered up and our goal is to deliver the first in human cellular therapy in India for cancer.

When are we going to be seeing this commercialised?

So, these are extraordinarily complicated. They are called living drugs. They are drugs but they are alive. So you can imagine that producing them, making them available is an extraordinarily complicated process. Also, you have to be extremely careful because it is not like manufacturing aspirin or penicillin. It is taking cells, weaponising them, usually with a virus, and then re-injecting them into the body. So the whole process to develop this, we are hoping, will take about six to eight months. We hope to be in human patients in India within eight months.

Do you have all the regulatory clearances here in India?

A completely new regulatory framework needs to be created so that it is not just free for all as it were because these are toxic therapies, they are reserved for cancer patients, you have to know how to use them. These are living drugs, these are living things. You can imagine that if you dont control them properly, they can go out of control. So you require not just the scientific framework, which is important, but also the regulatory framework. What are the circumstances that an individual hospital or a medical centre can be allowed to use them, what are the safety precautions.

We dont have that yet in India?

We have the broad framework, but it has to be made specific for the use of cellular therapies. India has a very powerful regulatory framework for the use of drugs, but for living drugs, there are some special things that need to be addressed; safety needs to be addressed, you can get contamination. So you cannot just decontaminate a living drug like you decontaminate a chemical.

For instance, just to give you a very practical example, imagine if I am growing a patients T-cells in an incubator and that incubator gets infected with a bacteria or a virus, that whole batch has to be destroyed, the whole incubator has to be cleaned. Maybe the entire facility has to be cleaned to ensure that the next one doesnt get infected. So it is a very different process. It fits under the broad umbrella but it is fundamentally a different process.

It is all going to happen out of Bangalore. How is this going to work?

Kiran and I have had extensive discussions. The best way to do this is to do it at one facility to start with. The closest analogy that we have to living drugs is drug made out of living cells, insulin being one of them. So we decided to start off with a facility where we could have exquisite control. We need to have exquisite control so that we can deliver the therapy to the first needy patients. These are extraordinarily effective drugs, we wouldnt be doing this if these werent extraordinarily effective drugs for particular cancers.

Would these be affordable and accessible?

The challenge is affordability. Just to give you a sense of what the numbers are in the US, there are two T-cell drugs that are now approved in the US and the ticket price for them they are called Yescarta and Kymriah is around $400,000 per person. Part of the problem is that they are intrinsically expensive to make. It is not like making aspirin, it is not like making insulin, it is not like making penicillin. You have to take the cells out of someones body, weaponise them with a virus, grow them in incubators, ensure the safety and then return them back into patients. So I think that the real trick and the real advantage is we will be taking advantage of the ingenuity of Indian engineers and Indian bio-engineers.

We are pretty convinced, we have done very detailed analysis of this. This is my fourth visit and we are confident that we can reduce that $400,000 price tenfold. Even that lies beyond affordability, but it is on the order of a bone marrow transplant in most countries outside the West.

The goal is to make it affordable but this is never going to be an insulin or a penicillin or an aspirin, this is reserved for patients who are very needy, very desperate. We will almost certainly have programmes for the most needy and the most desperate that will allow them to afford it. These are intrinsically very difficult to make.

I want to pick up this latest collaboration that you have with Kiran who is part of the healthcare system in India. You have also got a similar venture where Johnson & Johnson is an investor and that venture you started around three years ago. Do you see more of these collaborations picking up pace? Global pharma has tried to reinvent itself post the backlash that it faced a few years ago. That backlash has now shifted to the technology companies. So do you see more of a collaborative approach being taken and what does it mean for research and development (R&D) going forward?

There is no other option. The maturation of a living drug, the natural cycle is exactly this. So usually drugs are born in laboratories; I am a laboratory investigator, I am a research scientist. I own the patterns that lead to the companies called Vor. I have another one called Myeloid, there are about 6-7 of them. These originate in my ideas or in the ideas of very young investigators who are really driven to solve this problem.

How do you fight cancer with cell or with other therapies? But that is their skillset. Now to convert that into a real therapy, to run a human study to be able to deliver that therapy, safely, effectively to humans, you have to collaborate.

So the way we collaborate now is that we form a biotech company. This company is ceded by investors, its ceded on the basis of science. These investors are extremely savvy, they are extremely thoughtful. Before making an investment, they will make deep analysis of the product itself; is it viable, is it effective, what data do we provide etc. And then you form that company and at that stage you begin to attract companies like Johnson & Johnson, Novartis and open your asset to them, open what you have invented and ask the question would you partner with us in bringing this thing which is just an idea to becoming a real medicine. This is a tried and tested process and this is what is happening.

I know that your research approach has been to understand the micro environment as you call it, to understand cause and co-relation. So given the approach that you have taken and with the likes of Johnson & Johnson, Novartis, Biocon etc. partnering with you, what could it mean for costs? Do you see this becoming more accessible and hence affordable for a country like India?

There is a pipeline process. Part of the reason that I began to collaborate with Kiran was that if we can have one of those most viable telecom and software sectors on the planet, we should be able to make cellular therapies; we should be able to make Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) T-cell, T-cell. There is no fundamental reason that Indian engineers and Indian scientists, and of course, ultimately Indian patients cannot get access to these therapies. This is not like rocket science.

We have mastered that too

We have almost mastered that, but it requires that kind of effort. It requires a certain sense of audacity, it requires an ambition but that is what we are in for. We know the challenges but we have a kind of deep confidence that we can reduce the cost 5-10 fold and still deliver effective therapies. The engineers that I have met here, the scientists that I have met here, the board that we formed is of the bluest chip quality. They involve some of the inventors of these therapies in the United States and in the UK. There is no lack of quality and determination. Operationalising it, making sure that the government partners with us in an appropriate way. Those are the challenges that we are facing right now and we will solve them.

I want to ask you this because you meet people who are backing or funding healthcare. You talk to regulators, you talk to governments around the world. What is the priority, for instance, for the government of India at this point in time? How do you deal with the cancer problem? It is a crisis that this country is also dealing with? What will it take for the government to prioritise it or how should they prioritise it?

The problem of cancer or the crisis of cancer is in some ways the side effect or cross effect of a population that is living longer thats one reason; in India that is compounded by the fact that smoking is still a major problem; cigarette smoking, and pollution is a major problem. We are not effectively vaccinating for cancer such as cervical cancer thats caused by human papillomavirus. Vaccine is available. So there are many arenas in which you could handle the cancer problem but for a government to handle cancer, that strategy is built on a pyramid. The bottom of the pyramid is prevention and that is the deep bottom pyramid.

And that is where there isnt enough attention?

That requires a vast amount of attention and prevention. I gave you some examples, thats why I used those examples first. I used the example of stopping of cigarette and tobacco, the effects of various pollutants particularly in the air and water, and finally vaccination against cancers that can be vaccinated against.

The second layer of that is early detection. This would include finding cancer at the earliest possible phases. The very effective ones are Pap smearing, colonoscopy, less so mammography but still effective to find breast cancer, and in general cancer health screening. The final layer of the pyramid is of course cancer treatments, therapies, including chemotherapy, things like Tamoxifen, which is actually quite inexpensive. Tamoxifen is an inexpensive drug and very effective for breast cancer.

Its important to realise that this pyramid is part of an ecosystem. It feeds back on itself. So you begin with prevention. There is early detection and there is final treatment. You only create a strategy against cancer by creating this entire ecosystem. You dont slice out one piece of it and you certainly dont slice out the most expensive piece of it, which is treatment. Cancer treatment is at the top of the pyramid, the narrowest edge of the pyramid. The base, as far as the government is concerned, is to focus on prevention and that is an important idea for the Indian government and all other governments to internalise. It has done that to some extent. There are now finally anti-smoking, anti-pollution and vaccination campaigns all across India.

But do you see that happening at a pace that will ensure that we are being able to deal with this issue?

So for schizophrenia and depression that process has happened. We now understand very well that schizophrenia is not just a kind of random madness but rather is a genetic disease that has an environmental component to it but has a genes and environment component to it so that is one example.

For schizophrenia, in fact, some of the genes are now being identified and we are trying to understand the circuits, the mental circuits that interact with the environment and thereby cause schizophrenia. We are beginning to understand similarly for depression.

In some cases, it has to do with the destigmatisation of things that were called illnesses, but in fact are not illnesses at all. Homosexuality is one of them. Around 50-70 years ago, a mental health handbook would define homosexuality as a mental illness. It has been a striking mark of progress to understand that that is not the case.

So we have seen a lot of this happen already in many countries. We are seeing that happening in India and it was a very proud moment for the Indian courts to recognise this fact, to recognise that there is biology behind all sorts of health and some things that were called illnesses 20 years ago are really not illnesses, they are states of human behaviour.

What is it that is exciting you in the work that you are doing or the research that you are doing today?

We are doing a lot of work on gene therapy. We have a completely exciting new programme to try to cure a previously incurable form of leukaemia and we are going to run that first in human study next year.

We have invented a new way to try to cure leukaemia, it is the most exciting thing I have ever done in my life and I am basically so anxious to get this study off the ground. It will be the first time that we will get a gene therapy linked cure for leukaemia.

We have a lot of work that we are doing on stem cells. We identified a stem cell that contributes to osteoarthritis, one of the most common diseases of women around the world but also men.

We are doing a lot of work on pancreatic cancer and breast cancer, finding new medicines and again going through this process. I think of myself as an inventor. I invent drugs, all the programmes in my laboratory are now focused on making human medicines. If you are working in my laboratory and you cannot tell me how your work relates to the development of a new human medicine, for me it is a failure. Everything in my laboratory is directed towards absorbing the research from others but trying to make new human medicines.

I was reading this interview that you had done a few years ago where you spoke of how research that was done for prostate cancer came up with ideas on how to deal with breast cancer. So how much of that kind of cross-pollination are you seeing happen?

It is among the richest arenas of cross-pollination going on right now. The word for a person like me is translational scientist. I am a translator. I take insights from basic researchers, people who work on enzymes, bacteria, genes and genetics. I take those insights and ask the question how can I make a human medicine out of that? I take that all the way into a human clinical trial or human clinical study, the invention of the new drug. This can only happen if there is very deep cross-pollination.

Is more of that happening today? Are the two camps more aligned?

The camps have decided to become more aligned because there is no other choice. This is the only way that we know to make medicine move forward. There is a third camp, clinicians, but it is more like a relay race. There is a handoff between the basic scientists of insights to the translation researchers who then hand off that towards the clinicians. Now all of this process has to come together and requires governments to provide regulations. It requires philanthropists. Of course, it requires patients, it requires venture funds. It is a risk-taking process, but nothing moves in the world of science without risk. So all of this has to come together and that is the only way it moves forward.

As you try to get this ecosystem to work together, what is the biggest challenge that you foresee today? Do you see people now reacting differently to the needs of healthcare and putting more money behind research?

We are sort of in that middle of the road and this is the time that requires the most energy because the middle of the road is when people get the most tired. Bill Gates and I have had many conversations together in Seattle, in Davos and other places. The challenges of global health are extraordinarily acute today. They include a vast spectrum from arenas that the Gate Foundation has focused traditionally on, which are contagious or infectious diseases, all the way to chronic non-infectious disease such as hypertension, diabetes, obesity and of cancer.

So, the challenges are great, they are not solved. We are living longer as a population, we now also need to learn to live healthier and we need to learn to live more fulfilling, robust and ultimately more dignified life.

If you are in a particular country in the African continent, maybe your crisis is Ebola. If you are in Seattle, may be you are facing down breast cancer, but the spectrum of disease is vast and is turning out to be quite universal. One interesting statistic which you may not know, and has not been talked about is that in countries where we think most of the deaths are from infectious diseases are slowly turning around. Countries like Tanzania are seeing trends in which the number of deaths from infectious diseases is fewer than the number of deaths from hypertensions or from diabetes or from kidney diseases. So the entire world is experiencing spectra of diseases that range from things that we thought would be sort of flames in one corner but in fact are across the entire world.

Do you see more venture-backed funding, especially when we talk about new therapies, new research?

Biotech has been in the United States, now one of the most attractive arenas, recently. We looked enviously at the tech industry, at the software tech industry and at social media. I have to say, personally I barely use social media, and I have to say social media might have created more ills than it solved. Now it has left biotech to solve those ills or medicines to solve those ills.

I think there has been resurgence of interest in ventures in the biotech world. Medicine has been historically regulated. We have very strong ethical boundaries that we have to abide by and for good reasons because we in the past have violated those ethical boundaries. I think that similar ethical boundaries should have been drawn for all technologies, including social media.

Why are you not on social media at all?

I am on Twitter. It is the only social media that I use and I use it quite sparingly. I dont find using anything less particularly inspiring. I like to talk to people directly. If you very carefully curate as a scientist or a writer, if you very carefully curate who you follow on Twitter, it can be very useful because you can get news. But I like traditional news. I like the long form news and I have never found that joy that some people find in connecting through social media.

Is there another book in the works?

There are two books in the works. Very broadly speaking, one of them will address the history of medicine and the other will address questions of immortality, our search for immortality - digital, social and other.

Has the writing process for you changed? I know that you had rules about how to structure your chapters and so on and so forth? Has it changed over the years?

It has been very much the same. My writing process begins with a lot of research and reading. It begins in a very close space. I need silence, I need a lot of time to think and then it comes out as a work.

How much time do you spend writing every day?

I try to spend at least a couple of hours writing every day, but the writing can be diverse, and they interlock with each other.

You are working on both the books at the same time?

No, but it might involve writing a long letter to a regulator about a clinical study that I am excited about and then switch to the book. Now you could say those are two completely different parts of your brain, but they are not. You see, if every experience that I have becomes fuel for the writing, this interview might find its way into a book. The clinical study that we are doing in leukaemia will almost certainly become a book. What is interesting is that even if it fails, it will become a book. It will become a book about failure. So nothing is off the record in some ways to me in my brain.

What is the one thing that gives you the most hope as we look ahead and what is the one thing that worries you the most?

I think the most hopeful thing is the community of thinkers that exists around the world. I think a vibrant community of thinkers has arisen in India asking vibrant questions.

The more we resist the temptation of groupthink, the more likely we contribute to the world of ideas that is inspiring for me. What is worrisome is just the opposite. What is worrisome is the descent into groupthink.

Recent political developments around the world have not given much hope. People are retiring backwards, towards nostalgic isms driven by fear typically. So what worries me the most is that in 2019 we are living at the end of a cycle of innovation and invention which has been unprecedented in history. If we were to take all these isms and put them on national stages, these isms will inevitably stop the cycle of innovation that we are inheriting. We will not pass it on to our children, we will deny them a generation of invention and innovation and that is a very sad thing. We should be very careful about it.

Get the best of News18 delivered to your inbox - subscribe to News18 Daybreak. Follow News18.com on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Telegram, TikTok and on YouTube, and stay in the know with what's happening in the world around you in real time.

Read more here:
CAR T-Cell Therapy May be Available to Cancer Patients in India Next Year: Dr Siddhartha Mukherjee - News18

Five benefits of gene therapies – Echo Live

GENES are the building blocks of life but like all things, they can sometimes go wrong, resulting in a range of conditions and diseases.

Repairing or replacing these genes with good ones, however, could solve or at the very least treat the problem, and this is what the emerging science of gene therapy is all about.

It was first suggested in the early-1970s that using good DNA (genes are short sections of DNA) to replace defective DNA could treat inherited diseases, and since then scientists have been trying to work out how to do it, both for inherited conditions and many others.

The British Society for Gene and Cell Therapy (bsgct.org) says the first approved human gene therapy took place in 1990, on four-year-old Ashanti DeSilva who had ADA-SCID an inherited disease that prevents normal development of the immune system. The therapy made a huge difference, meaning the little girl no longer needed to be kept in isolation and could go to school.

When the human genome was mapped nearly 20 years ago, the notion that it could potentially unlock therapies capable of fixing genes responsible for some of the worlds most devastating diseases was an idea of the future, says gene therapy expert Professor Bobby Gaspar, speaking on behalf of Jeans for Genes Day, the annual campaign for Genetic Disorders UK (geneticdisordersuk.org).

We are at the forefront of a new era of treatment for genetic diseases using gene and cell therapies. Some of these are one-time, potentially curative investigational therapies that could provide life-changing benefits to patients and their families.

Gaspar says there are currently more than 10 cell and gene therapy products approved in the European Union, ranging from products that treat cancer to rare immune deficiencies. A number of these are approved in the UK and available on its National Health Service in specialised centres.

And with nearly 3,000 clinical gene therapy trials underway worldwide, the number of available treatments is expected to grow significantly over the next few years.

Here, Gaspar a professor of paediatrics and immunology at the UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health and chief scientific officer at Orchard Therapeutics, a gene therapy company that seeks to permanently correct rare, often-fatal diseases outlines five of the ways gene therapy can cure, stop, or slow a disease...

A variety of efforts are underway to use gene therapy to treat cancer. Some types of gene therapy aim to boost the bodys immune cells to attack cancer cells, while others are designed to attack the cancer cells directly.

One way the body protects itself from cancer is through T-cells, a main component of the immune system. But some cancers are good at avoiding these protection mechanisms, says Gaspar.

Chimeric antigen receptor, or CAR T-cell therapy, is a new form of immunotherapy that uses specially altered T-cells to more specifically target cancer cells.

Some of the patients T-cells are collected from their blood, then genetically modified to produce special CAR proteins on the surface.

When these CAR T-cells are reinfused into the patient, the new receptors help the T-cells identify and attack cancer cells specifically and kill them.

There are more than 250 genetic mutations that can lead to a type of blindness called inherited retinal diseases, or IRD. People with a defect in the RPE65 gene start losing their vision in childhood.

As the disease progresses, patients experience gradual loss of peripheral and central vision, which can eventually lead to blindness.

Gene therapy for some IRD patients became available in 2017, delivering a normal copy of the RPE65 gene directly to the retinal cells at the back of the eye using a naturally-occurring virus as a delivery vehicle.

For children with the genetic disorder spinal muscular atrophy, or SMA, a rare muscular dystrophy, motor nerve cells in the spinal cord are damaged, causing patients to lose muscle strength and the ability to walk, eat or even breathe, says Gaspar.

SMA is caused by a mutation in a gene called SMN which is critical to the function of the nerves that control muscle movement. Without this gene, those nerve cells cant properly function and eventually die, leading to debilitating and often fatal muscle weakness.

Researchers recently developed the first US-approved gene therapy to treat children less than two years of age with SMA.

The therapy is designed to target the cause of SMA by replacing the missing or nonworking gene with a new, working copy of a human SMN gene, helping motor neuron cells work properly.

Researchers believe targeted gene therapy and gene editing may have widespread application for a range of infectious diseases that arent amenable to standard clinical management, including HIV.

Although HIV isnt a hereditary disease, the virus does live and replicate in DNA, Gaspar explains.

Another early but encouraging approach uses a gene editing technology combined with a new long-acting, antiretroviral treatment to suppress HIV replication and eliminate HIV from cells and organs of infected animals.

Gene editing is an approach that precisely and efficiently modifies the DNA within a cell. In this approach, gene editing can knock out a receptor called CCR5 on immune cells used by HIV to enter and invade cells. Without CCR5, HIV may no longer invade and cause disease.

One approach being investigated for a number of rare, often-fatal diseases uses gene-modified blood stem cells with a goal of permanently correcting the underlying cause of disease.

Blood stem cells are taken from the patient, and corrected outside the body by introducing a working copy of the gene into the cells. The gene-corrected cells are then put back into the patient to potentially cure the disease.

Gene-modified blood stem cells have the capacity to self-renew and, once taken up in the bone marrow, can potentially provide a lifelong supply of corrected cells. Because of their ability to become many different types of cells in the body, this approach has the potential to provide a lasting treatment for many different severe and often life-limiting inherited disorders, many of which have no approved treatment options available, says Gaspar.

For instance, ADA-SCID, sometimes referred to as bubble baby syndrome, is a disease where babies lack almost all immune protection, leading to frequent and devastating infections. Left untreated, babies rarely live past two years of age. Standard treatment options are not always effective or can carry significant risks. In 2016, the European Medicines Agency approved Strimvelis, a blood stem cell gene therapy for the treatment of ADA-SCID. Strimvelis was the first approved ex vivo gene therapy product in Europe.

Jeans for Genes Day helped fund some of the earliest work using this type of gene therapy at Great Ormond Street Hospital in 2002, when Rhys Evans, a little boy with SCID, became one of the first children worldwide to be treated by gene therapy.

Jeans for Genes Day aims to raise money for children with life-altering genetic disorders by asking people to donate money for wearing jeans to work, school or wherever they like, on any day between September 16-20. Visit jeansforgenesday.org.

Read more:
Five benefits of gene therapies - Echo Live

When it Comes to Federal Stem Cell Regulation, Less is More – The Regulatory Review

FDA ought to promote stem cell therapy by easing up on regulation and its aggressive enforcement.

On International Rare Disease Day 2017, one month after being sworn in as President, Donald Trump gave his 2017 Joint Address to Congress. During his speech, he took particular note of the slow and burdensome approval process at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that keeps too many advances from reaching those in need. With a specific emphasis on the health of sick children, President Trump argued that if we slash the restraints at FDA, then we will be blessed with far more miracles.

In attendance that night was Sarah Hughes, a young woman who was forced to travel to Mexico for stem cell therapy (SCT) to treat her systemic idiopathic juvenile diabetes. In 2014, Hughes had her own cells extracted, processed and then infused back into her in a process known as adult autologous stem cell therapy. The results were life-changing.

Before the SCT, Hughes was taking 23 medications a day. After nearly two dozen stem cell infusions over a two-year period, Hughes was down to eight medications a day, and at lower doses. SCT alleviated Hughes chronic pain, allowed her to eat normally and absorb nutrients from food, and gave her choices in life she never had before. Despite her progress, she lamented the fact that that other Americans in her position could not avail themselves of SCT.

Since delivering his address to Congress, President Trump has in fact made progress in modernizing FDA, most notably by signing into law the Right to Try Act of 2017, which allows terminally ill patients increased access to experimental drugs that have completed Phase I of the clinical trial process but have not been approved by FDA.

President Trumps actions continue a broader trend in easing patients access to emerging medical treatments. In December 2016, for example, President Obama signed the 21st Century Cures Act into law, which contains special provisions for the accelerated approval for advanced regenerative therapies like SCT.

Despite the clear trend toward FDA modernization and the easing of restrictions by Presidents Obama and Trump, the U.S. House of Representatives Energy and Commerce Committee has recently signaled that it wants to see enhanced FDA regulatory enforcement over SCT. Leaders of the committee sent a letter to Acting FDA Commissioner Ned Sharpless voicing its concern about FDAs seemingly permissive use of its discretionary regulatory enforcement authority against potentially violative clinics.

The Committee is seeking more information about FDAs long-term enforcement strategy, including: financial resources dedicated to approving legitimate SCT products; human resources dedicated to the reporting of adverse events; and the possibility of state-federal partnerships to revoke the medical licenses of SCT clinicians.

To be sure, concerns over the safety of patients receiving SCT are reasonable and necessary. But any call for increased regulatory enforcement against clinics offering SCT is premature and will likely disadvantage far more Americans than it helps. At a time when an increasing number of Americans suffer from debilitating chronic medical conditions, we need more medical choice, not less.

The unspoken truth is that despite the constant invocation of the threat of harm from SCT, the actual number of reported cases of adverse harm is remarkably few. Conversely, success stories are numerous.

These SCT successes are built upon robust scientific literature and clinical practice that demonstrate the safety and efficacy of SCT for certain medical indications. The scientific and anecdotal evidence on SCTs efficacy in treating orthopedic conditions is substantial. Research has shown that it can facilitate the healing of bone fractures, stimulate cartilage regeneration, treat meniscus repair, and decrease lower back painthe greatest contributor to global disability according to 2010 Global Burden of Disease data.

Stem cell therapy has also been shown to treat both the chronic pain caused by opioid abuse and the effects of opioid tolerance. Likewise, SCTs ability to treat the symptoms of certain autoimmune conditions is well established. Perhaps most noteworthy is the virtual absence of adverse events that can be directly ascribed to adult SCT.

Although officials such as former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb and current Commissioner Sharpless acknowledge the power and uniqueness of SCT, federal policy on stem cell research and rulemaking has a Janusian quality. On the one hand, it has expanded significantly in the past decade as a result of the relaxing of rules restricting embryonic and other types of stem cell research and the passage of federal laws aimed at expediting regenerative medicine therapies to market. On the other hand, FDA regulations that define the standards for determining which therapies can be offered without FDA approval and those that require approvallegally deemed drugstend to operate to slow down medical innovation.

In fulfillment of its obligations under the Cures Act, FDA released a guidance document in November 2017 with a new framework that is intended to balance the agencys commitment to safety with mechanisms to drive further advances in regenerative medicine so innovators can bring new, effective therapies to patients as quickly and safely as possible. Importantly, the guidance purports to clarify the terms minimally manipulated and homologous use, key standards that determine the availability of stem cell therapies to patients. Stem cells that are minimally manipulated and used for homologous purposes do not need to undergo clinical trials. However, by all accounts, the guidance document interprets these terms quite narrowly, effectively proscribing the therapies altogether.

In an effort to facilitate compliance for clinics that offer unapproved SCT services, FDA has stated that for the first 36 months following issuance of the guidance, it will adopt a risk-based approach to enforcement of the new rules. So far, FDA has indeed exercised its enforcement authority judiciously, targeting clinics that it deems flagrant in their marketing or medical practices. Enforcement has generally taken the form of either warning letters or federal lawsuits. The combination of FDAs narrow interpretations with increasing public demand for alternative medical therapies, however, has meant that the number of clinics offering unapproved SCT products has grown.

The Energy and Commerce Committee should consider the following four factors in determining how to proceed. First, it must recognize that SCT is a unique and unprecedented medical modality that requires a unique regulatory enforcement approach that balances the interest of regulators, scientists, clinician and patients.

Second, FDAs stated three-year grace period has not yet run. Any evaluation of enhanced enforcement should be deferred until that time comes.

Third, the reporting of adverse events resulting from the use of SCT in clinics is astonishingly small. Of course, any adverse events should be meticulously documented, investigated, and taken seriously. That said, to indict an entire practice because of the negligence or recklessness of a few is a step too far, especially given how many Americans have benefitted from SCT.

Fourth, it is precisely because so many people with no viable medical alternatives have benefitted from the therapy that the Committee should re-think its aggressive posture toward enforcement. When taken together, these four factors weigh against enhanced federal enforcement at this time.

Furthermore, states have played a critical role in SCT regulation. In 2017, Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed a law that makes Texas the first state to authorize the use of SCT for patients with certain severe chronic condition or terminal illnesses. Arkansas is on course to be the first state to require medical insurance companies to cover stem cell therapy.

States are also actively participating in enforcement against clinics that they believe fraudulently market SCT. New York State Attorney General Letitia James recently filed a lawsuit against a clinic offering SCT, maintaining that it misled patients with deceptive marketing practices. The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation is also investigating patient complaints. These two cases show that states are more than capable of weeding out alleged SCT bad actors without enhanced efforts by FDA.

Like Sarah Hughes, I was forced to travel abroad for SCT. In 2010, I traveled to Nanjing, China for SCT to treat a progressive neuromuscular condition. Although my time in China was wonderful, no Americans should have to travel for SCTa safe and inexpensive therapyto save or improve their lives. Stem cell therapy is a paradigm-shifting medical modality that allows persons to use cells from their own bodies to heal themselves. As such, it embodies the democratization of medicine. To unduly stifle, impair, or otherwise restrict the availability and affordability of SCT would not only injure the constituents that members of Congress fight for, but also wound our democratic ideals.

Despite disagreements over policy, all interested parties agree that SCT represents a revolution in medicine. Americans have recognized this shift, and the desire for SCT has reached a tipping point. Thoughtful, judicious, and balanced regulatory enforcement that targets the most flagrant bad actors and allows states to take the lead is the proper way forward at this point.

Read more from the original source:
When it Comes to Federal Stem Cell Regulation, Less is More - The Regulatory Review

Researchers Identify Promising Target for CAR T-cell Therapy in Myeloma – Myeloma Research News

Designing CAR T-cells to specifically target GPRC5D a protein appreciably present on the surface of myeloma cells may be a safe and effective therapy against multiple myeloma, a preclinical study shows.

The study, GPRC5D is a target for the immunotherapy of multiple myeloma with rationally designed CAR T cells, was published in the journal Science Translational Medicine.

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy is a type of immunotherapy in which a patients T-cells immune cells with anti-cancer activity are collected and genetically modified in the lab to recognize specific cancer cell molecules. Once expanded to several million, the modified cells are inserted back into the patients body, where they will kill the cancer cells.

CAR T-cell therapies against B-cell mature antigen (BCMA) a cell surface protein highly produced by myeloma cells are being evaluated in myeloma patients in several clinical trials (ChiCTR1800018137, NCT03933735, and the UNIVERSAL trial), which are showing promising results.

However, some myeloma cells have low-to-negative levels of BCMA and are not targeted by such therapies, being largely associated with relapse after treatment with BCMA-targeted CAR T-cell therapy. This highlights the need to identify new efficient targets to fight myeloma.

Researchers have now identified a new potential target GPRC5D that may overcome this issue.

Several analyses showed that GPRC5D, a cell surface protein, is present only at high levels in myeloma cells and in the hair follicle, which is considered an immune-privileged site (isolated from the actions of the immune system).

High levels of GPRC5D and BCMA were found in similar proportions of myeloma patients, but they are independently produced by myeloma cells. Also, higher levels of GPRC5D in myeloma patients were associated with shorter progression-free survival (the time a patient lives without cancer progression).

The team designed and analyzed several versions of GPRC5D-targeted CAR T-cells, and proceeded to tests with myeloma cells with the version that showed the best response to GPRC5D while interacting exclusively with the target molecule.

The results showed that GPRC5D-targeted CAR T-cells successfully eradicated myeloma cells grown in the lab and in a mouse model. In mice, their anti-cancer effectiveness was superior to that of BCMA-targeted CAR T-cells, and they were able to efficiently eliminate cancer cells resistant to BCMA-targeted therapy.

The team also found that GPRC5D-targeted CAR T-cells were safe in mice and monkeys, with no clinical signs of toxicity, even in the skin and hair (possibly due to its immune-privileged nature).

These findings, along with the preferential presence of GPRC5D in myeloma cells, highlight the use of GPRC5D-targeted CAR T-cells as a potential new therapy for myeloma patients.

We anticipate that GPRC5D will become an important clinical target for MM [multiple myeloma] immunotherapy, the researchers wrote.

They also noted that future studies on GPRC5D-targeted CAR T cell therapy should focus on patients with advanced disease, regardless of previous BCMA-targeted therapy. However, they hypothesize patients with low to negative levels of BCMA may benefit from a double CAR T-cell therapy, targeting not only BCMA, but also GPRC5D.

Total Posts: 140

Ins Martins holds a BSc in Cell and Molecular Biology from Universidade Nova de Lisboa and is currently finishing her PhD in Biomedical Sciences at Universidade de Lisboa. Her work has been focused on blood vessels and their role in both hematopoiesis and cancer development.

View post:
Researchers Identify Promising Target for CAR T-cell Therapy in Myeloma - Myeloma Research News

Is your hair thinning? Try stem cell therapy – Philippine Star

Is your hair thinning? Try stem cell therapy

Hair loss is one of the most frustrating signs thatwomen or even men have to deal with in their life.This is because our hair is an integral part of our sense of beauty, attractiveness and our way of expressing our style and personality.Thinning hair or bald spots can be devastating and can destroy ones self-confidence.

And since the quest for the fountain of youth is universal, so does the quest for the fountain of ones crowning glory. There have been a lot of recent developments about skin, hair and nail treatments with the latest procedure update usually culminating in surpassing its predecessor.This article is actually about the principle from a years old technology that was just recently developed to address a balding problem seen in both men and women.

Regenera Activa is a medical breakthrough that uses a not so old technique that of stem cells.It is a non-surgical, non-invasive method of stimulating hair growth.This is a procedure specifically designed to treat hair loss and balding due to Androgenetic Alopecia a genetic disorder on balding.This technique is a new approach that relies on capillary regeneration technique in combatting hair loss, balding and hair thinning.But first you have to be a skillful surgeon who must have done hair transplants before to be able to use this device.In this process we will be using a special tool that uses micrografts(the grafting of a very small amount of tissue)of progenitor cells (a biological cell that, like a stem cell, has a tendency to become a specific type of cell like hair cells) that are also able to repair damage tissues.Stem cells refers to the mother of all cells that is able to produce a lot more other cells or any other cells of the body and heal whatever is troubling the present cells therefore repairing it.This concept refers to the stem cells being used to treat leg ulcers, chronic ulcers, surgical wounds and now alopecia, too.This treatment method enables hair to return to its normal life cycle, thus increasing its density, thickness and improving the quality of the hair as well.

The science behind this is to treat hair loss by providing aid through strengthening of the hair follicles, that is to support tissue cells from the hair root in addition to the skin tissue of the person in order to renew, bolster and toughen the weakened hair root.

This new technique is absolutely safe and is effective to regrow hair without the risk of complications and no downtime either.With this treatment you do not only stimulate hair regrowth you also slow down hair loss allowing both the male and female population to reverse the signs of hair loss.All this using the concept of progenitor cells to allow your own body to regenerate new hair follicles for the scalp, which will eventually lead to new hair follicles that mean new hair for cases of alopecia.

Here is a step-by-step recount of the procedure:

It begins with a three to four hair follicles being removed from the back of the head (the donor site) after cleaning it and putting local anesthesia.

The cells obtained by tissues taken through a punch biopsy and afterwards fused with a special solution.

The hair follicles retrieved are then transformed into a special supercell suspension in the Regenera Activa device.The device helps to divide cell samples into miniature and absorbable portions.

The disintegration process is started, which can take about five minutes.

The solution is then injected into areas experiencing an abnormal loss of hair, also known as Androgenetic Alopecia

This whole process in the treatment of hair loss and hair thinning is quick and efficient taking only 30 minutes.With only one treatment needed per year, it has never been easier to treat hair loss.

Regenera Activa is a great alternative to traditional hair transplantation or Follicular Unit extraction (FUE) and there is a huge role for a noninvasive treatment like this for both female pattern hair loss and male pattern hair loss early on at the start of hair balding.Excellent candidates are mostly among those experiencing some hair thinning over the parting areas or just simply those with generalized hair thinning.Therefore, one important consideration too would be the careful selection of the right candidate for the procedure.Men who have severe hair loss will likely not see much results and in those groups hair transplants would do better.

This treatment is uneventful.It was over in 30 minutes and there was no redness, no swelling, no bleeding.Hair loss treatment has never been this simple.And I especially like the idea that this treatment only needs to be repeated once a year or not at all (depends on the patient if he still wants to add more density to the scalp hair).

The only downside of the procedure is that injection of the micrograft solution into the scalp hurt a little.It needed about 20 30 micro injections of the solution into the scalp, into the areas experiencing hair loss and hair thinning.But it was over very quickly and so you would not even remember the pain after.

* * *

For inquiries, call 401-8411, SMS 0917-4976261, 0999-8834802 or email atgc_beltran@yahoo.com. Follow me on facebook@dragracelbentran.

Read more:
Is your hair thinning? Try stem cell therapy - Philippine Star

Patient finds relief from severe arthritis pain | Life – Brunswick News

As we all know, life is life, and busier than it should be. Pam Kerrs life has been exactly that and about getting things done. A former teacher, she took control of her familys business, Duraclean, after her husband passed away in 2008. Its based in Chicago. We clean carpet and upholstery, she explained. Instead of going back to teaching after he died, I started managing the business.

But becoming the head of a busy company came with some unexpected challenges. Time was little and stress was high, and as the owner and wanting to get things done right, Kerr would physically help with the cleaning. Kerr soon found that having a physical laborious job, along with all of lifes to dos was taking a toll on her body.

Theres a lot of repetitive movement, pushing and pulling. It was more stressful to one side of the body over the other, she said.

Feeling like she was no longer in control of her body was unacceptable to her. Even though she has been a longtime yoga practitioner and very active, she knew it just wasnt enough to combat the arthritis.

I couldnt stand on one foot in the balance poses, she said. It was tough walking on the sand and going upstairs was becoming difficult. Her foot pain and arthritis was so bad that she had been recommended to get her ankle fused.

That, coupled with Kerrs severe osteoarthritis, made daily activities a challenge. Gripping and opening her hands all the way, difficulty sleeping with the hip pain at night, and even her knees and shoulders suffered quite a bit, but she continued on. She eventually had a knee replacement, but even after the replacement she still had daily pain and stiffness. All of this pain, stiffness, and arthritis was now affecting the things she loves to do, so she started looking for other ways to find relief.

Not long ago, Kerrs friend started a discussion with her about stem cell therapy. The two were intrigued and wanted to learn more, so they attended a seminar offered by Heller Healthcare in Brunswick. There, they learned about the innovative treatment offered right here in the Golden Isles, and how it can help a variety of ailments.

They also learned about the practice as a whole. Heller Healthcare, located at 208 Scranton Connector in Brunswick, is an integrative practice that specializes in Regenerative, Traditional, and Functional Medicine. They offer comprehensive plans that include chiropractic care, rehab, bio-identical hormone optimization, physician guided weight loss, massage and more. All of the modalities, under one roof, work together to give patients better quality of life and health. And, what really resonated with Kerr were their programs that focus on living life without chronic pain, especially stem cell therapy.

The Bodys Building Blocks Stem cells are the basic foundation cells that grow all of the tissue and organs in our body. When injected into a damaged tissue, joint, or organ, they support the natural healing process by regenerating and making new tissue.

Stem cell therapy, also known as regenerative medicine, uses stem cells to stimulate the bodys natural repair mechanisms. Many in the medical community including those at the National Institutes of Health and the Institute of Medicine consider it the future of medicine.

At Heller Healthcare, the cells used are Human Umbilical Cord Tissue (HUCT) cells, which are derived from the consented, donated umbilical cords from healthy mothers who birthed healthy babies. The quantity and quality of umbilical stem cells is much greater than taking an aged persons own stem cells. A simple injection of millions of stem cells into a joint can take less than a minute. This also makes it a less-invasive treatment with fewer steps since your own stem cells are not harvested from ones own body.

Stem cell therapy can be used anywhere in the body where there is arthritis, or a muscle or tendon tear. In additional to knees and shoulders, medical providers at Heller Healthcare have performed the procedure on ankles, wrists, hands, feet, low back, and the neck. Even patients with COPD and other lung diseases are getting relief by taking breathing treatments with stem cells. These treatments can help patients heal and regenerate lung tissue and improve their quality of life.

Kerr was impressed by what she heard and scheduled her consultation that day. And, despite all the damage to her body over the years, Kerr was still a good candidate for stem cell therapy. She was an eager candidate as well, having multiple joints treated. I did my whole body. The nurse practitioner Jenny Sharpe marked each joint and gave me the injections, she said.

The process was simple and a lengthy one, but something that Kerr felt good about from the moment she left the office. And, while she was told that results could take time to manifest, she actually saw improvements right away.

Jenny said not to expect immediate results. Its not like a cortisone shot where you feel better immediately, she said. It can take up to four months for the stem cells to work. But, unlike cortisone shots that may offer temporary relief, stem cells therapy offers a long-term solution. What was the biggest surprise for Kerr was when she walked out of the procedure she could fully open and close her hands pain free, which is something she hasnt been able to do for a long time.

Since Kerrs treatment two months ago, the stem cells have started to replicate and produce new tissue. That can cause some literal growing pains, but Kerr welcomes that as a sign of progress.

It creates space which can bring some discomfort. Some days I feel great and some days Id feel that ache, she said. But overall, I feel like theres a lot of progress. For one thing, I can now stand on my ankle during yoga! Im doing great but still have a ways to go.

Kerr is now able to enjoy her walks on the beach again and is excited about what the future holds. She encourages anyone who is living with pain to explore the options available, especially stem cell therapy.

I think for anyone struggling with joint issues or really any kind of pain. Its worth it, even if you started with one joint, it would be very helpful, she said.

Read the original here:
Patient finds relief from severe arthritis pain | Life - Brunswick News

CTI presents on real world evidence in product development at ISCT N. America Regional Meeting – User-generated content

Covington-based Clinical Trial and Consulting Services (CTI), a global, privately held, full-service contract research organization,presented at the International Society of Cell & Gene Therapy (ISCT) North America Regional Meeting, which took place September 13-15 in Madison, Wisconsin.

CTIs John Booth, PhD, Principal Research Scientist Real World Evidence, North America, presented in the session titled Quality & Operations Track Session 8 Real World Evidence and Applications in Product Development on Sunday, September 15th at 10:45a local time.

We arethrilled to have Dr. Booth be a part of the ISCT North America Regional Meeting, remarksLynn Fallon, Co-founder and President of CTI. We have a combined expertise in Real World Evidence andCell & Gene Therapythat is unique to the industry, and we are excited to share our extensive knowledge with those attending.

ISCT is a global society of clinicians, regulators, technologists, and industry partners with a shared vision to translate cellular therapy into safe and effective therapies to improve patients lives. ISCT members gain access to an influential global community of peers, experts, and organizations invested in cell therapy.

ISCT offers a collaboration between academia, regulatory bodies, and industry partners in cell therapy translation.

CTI has contributed toone of the first approvals in the cell and gene therapy spaceand hasbeen actively working with cell and gene therapies since nearly the advent of the technology, making them one of the industrys experts in regenerative medicine. CTIswork in regenerative medicine reaches across 400 sites in 30 countries around the world.

Dr. Booth has extensive experience in Real World Evidence, including spending more than a decade at the University of Alabama at Birmingham as an epidemiologist withexperience in clinical and outcomes research in association with the American Heart Association and with Amgen.

He hasworked as a clinical trial project manager, a project lead, and principal investigator on natural history, health outcomes, comparative effectiveness, and safety studies.

Dr. Booth also worked at the University of Chicago doing research sponsored by Sunovion and by the NIH, following a role as medical writer. He earned his Bachelor of Science in Biology from Birmingham-Southern College, and his Master in Science and Doctorate in Epidemiology from the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

CTI Clinical Trial and Consulting Services is a global, privately held, full-service contract research organization (CRO), delivering a complete spectrum of clinical trial and consulting services throughout the lifecycle of development, from concept to commercialization.

With clinical trial experience across 6 continents, CTI partners with research sites, patients, and sponsors to fulfill unmet medical needs. CTI has operations across North America, Europe, Latin America, and Asia-Pacific.

For more information click here. http://www.ctifacts.com

Read this article:
CTI presents on real world evidence in product development at ISCT N. America Regional Meeting - User-generated content

FDA approves 2nd gene therapy cancer drug from Durham’s Precision Bio for clinical trial – WRAL Tech Wire

DURHAM Precision BioSciences, a genome-editing company based in Durham, has received authorization from the U.S. Food and Drug Administrationto advance its second genome-edited cancer therapy to clinical trials.

The FDA has accepted Precisions Investigational New Drug application for PBCAR20A to treat non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CCL), and small lymphocytic lymphoma (SSL).

Precisions technology is part of a new approach to fighting cancer using T cells a type of immune system cell that recognizes invading germs or cancer cells. T cells are engineered to carry a cancer bullet called a tumor-targetingchimericantigenreceptor (CAR). These engineered cells have the potential to save the lives of many patients unresponsive to traditional chemotherapy and radiation regimens.

Precision Biosciences

Autologous CAR T therapies currently on the market rely on patient-derived T cells, which are extracted and individually manufactured for each patient using that patients own cells. They require a complex and lengthy process.

Precisions allogeneic CAR T product candidates use T cells derived from qualified donors. The T cells are manufactured in large batches and are cryopreserved (safely preserved, intact, at extremely low temperatures) for shipment, storage and off-the-shelf use.

These allogeneic CAR T product candidates rely on Precisions ARCUS genome-editing platform to remove the T cell receptor to prevent graft versus host disease without the need for donor-patient matching. ARCUS editing also enables targeted insertion of the CAR gene into a single, specific location in the T cell genome for more controlled, consistent expression.

Pfizers 300 new jobs, $500M investment symbolize Triangles growth as gene therapy hub

The company said it will begin a Phase1/2a clinical trial later this year in non-Hodgkin lymphoma patients, including a subset of patients with a cancer called mantle cell lymphoma, for which Precision has received the FDAs Orphan Drug designation.

PBCAR20A is Precisions second off-the-shelf cell therapy. The company is also studying the precursor to PBCAR20A PBCAR0191 in adult patients who are not responding to other therapies. Technically, these are designated as patients with relapsed or refractory (R/R) NHL or R/R B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL).

Both of Precisions treatments use the companys ARCUS genome editing technology to produce CAR T cells derived from healthy donors, rather than relying on cancer patients own blood. The development of these allogeneic CAR Ts is designed to overcome the manufacturing limitations of traditional autologous CAR T therapies, to target a broader range of malignancies, and to increase the number of patients who can potentially benefit.

FDA clearance to begin clinical trials with our anti-CD20 off-the-shelf therapy candidate is a significant milestone for Precision, said Matt Kane, the companys CEO and co-founder. Todays announcement demonstrates our ability to advance multiple product candidates in parallel into the clinic, leveraging the unique capabilities of our ARCUS genome editing platform, CAR T development approach and highly differentiated manufacturing process developed in-house.

Precision uses ARCUS to remove T cell receptors to prevent graft versus host disease, thus avoiding the need for donor-patient matching that is required in traditional tissue donation procedures. And the ARCUS technology also provides for the targeted insertion of the CAR gene into a single, specific location in the T cell genome for controlled, consistent expression. Precisions product candidates can be made in advance, manufactured in large batches and then cryopreserved for shipment, storage and off-the-shelf use.

AskBio gets $235 million in gene therapy support

PBCAR20A, if approved, will fill an important gap in current cancer treatments. In the United States, B-cell malignancies account for 85 percent of all non-Hodgkin lymphoma. And CLL and SLL represent 25 to 30 percent of leukemia cases. Precision said that, while front-line treatments benefit more than half of newly diagnosed NHL patients, at least a third of those achieve only partial remission or relapse after remission.And patients with CLL have limited success with autologous CAR T therapies. An allogeneic CAR T like PBCAR20A may overcome treatment resistance and offer the possibility of combination treatments.

It is our hope that PBCAR20A will provide a new allogeneic CAR T therapy option with the benefits of reliable, off-the-shelf access and optimized cellular activity to patients living with NHL or CLL/SLL, where a significant need for new treatment options remains, said David Thomson, Precisions chief development officer.

Precision Biosciences is a 2006 Duke University spin-out dedicated to improving life by using its ARCUS gene editing technology to treat human diseases and create healthy and sustainable food and agriculture solutions.

In 2018 the company created a new name and brand identity for its food and agriculture business,Elo Life Systems. The business is using Precisions ARCUS platform and other new technologies for applications in crop improvement, animal genetics, industrial biotechnology and sustainable agriculture.

(C) N.C. Biotech Center

Read the original here:
FDA approves 2nd gene therapy cancer drug from Durham's Precision Bio for clinical trial - WRAL Tech Wire

Michael Schumacher ‘Conscious’ After Undergoing Stem Cell Therapy in Paris – News18

The stricken seven-time Formula One world champion Michael Schumacher has undergone cell therapy surgery in Paris' Georges-Pompidou hospital and is now "conscious", according to French daily Le Parisien.

According to the daily, Schumacher was in the cardiovascular department overseen by surgeon Philippe Menasche, described as a 'pioneer in cell surgery against heart failure'.

The German received stem cells to obtain an anti-inflammatory effect throughout his system, Le Parisien suggested.

While there has been no official statement from Schumacher's entourage, Le Parisien quoted an unnamed nurse at the hospital regarding the Formule One legend's situation.

"Yes he is in my service," the nurse was quoted as saying. "And I can assure you that he is conscious."

The athlete was struck down by a skiing accident that snapped his helmet in December 2013 and little information on his condition has been made public since then.

He was placed in a medically-induced coma for six months after the fall and was moved from Grenoble hospital to Lausanne before being returned home in September 2014 where he receives private treatment.

It has been suggested by old friends he is unable to walk or properly communicate.

Schumacher won his first world title 25 years ago and had won his first Grand Prix back in 1992. His glory years were spent at Benetton and Ferrari, for whom he won the last of his 91 Grand Prix victories in China in 2006.

He came out of retirement in 2010 for a three-year stint with Mercedes. Fans revere the determined German and his name was chanted at the Monza circuit last weekend for Ferrari's most successful Formula One driver Schumacher, with his son Mick, who is part of the Ferrari Driver Academy, present.

Get the best of News18 delivered to your inbox - subscribe to News18 Daybreak. Follow News18.com on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Telegram, TikTok and on YouTube, and stay in the know with what's happening in the world around you in real time.

Go here to read the rest:
Michael Schumacher 'Conscious' After Undergoing Stem Cell Therapy in Paris - News18