Stanford Medicine opens center for stem cell, gene therapy – The Stanford Daily

Stanford Medicine will open a new Center for Definitive and Curative Medicine (CDCM) to treat people with genetic diseases using stem cells and gene therapies. The center is a joint-initiative with the school of medicine, Stanford Health Care and Stanford Childrens Health.

Maria Grazia Roncarolo, MD, who is the George D. Smith Professor in Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine, will direct the center, located within the Department of Pediatrics in Lucile Packard Childrens Hospital. Roncarolo said the same physician-scientists developing the drugs will treat patients, expediting the process of finding appropriate and precise treatments.

We will use the discoveries from the Stanford labs to design the therapy for Phase 1 trials, Roncarolo said. Instead of using drugs generated from biotech companies, were using drugs generated from our own labs.

Certain complex diseases like type 1 diabetes, leukemia, lymphoma, metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular disease, neurodegenerative diseases and some pediatric cancers currently have no cure but symptoms can be remedied using stem cell or gene therapy. Stem cell therapy takes stem cells from donors while gene therapy takes stem cells from the patient which were engineered to correct the genetic defect.

Diseases that arent genetic such as degenerative diseases, heart attacks and strokes can also be treated by stem cell transplantation. The CDCM will be equipped with the standard stem cell transplantation beds and investigative beds for clinical trials.

Roncarolo will lead a team of four other associate directors and physicians. Roncarolo said the team has specialties in multiple fields which will help address a range of genetic diseases.

The aspirational goal of this center is to work in multidisciplinary teams with different expertise to cure patients with incurable diseases, Roncarolo said.

According to one of these team members, Anthony Oro, MD, who is the Eugene and Gloria Bauer Professor and professor of dermatology, babies born with birth defects can have their defective genes taken out and corrected in a laboratory then re-inserted back using stem cells. Oro explained this is similar to a heart transplant, where a healthy organ replaces the damaged one to cure the patient. By using the persons own DNA to manufacture the healthy genes and organs, the patient doesnt need to be on immunosuppressant drugs or be matched with a donor who is compatible in blood type and tissue type.

Its a revolutionary idea to use cells and tissues as drugs to actually cure diseases which we havent been able to cure before because we only had surgery and medicine before, Oro said. The difference between potential cures and actual cures with huge effects is a mile apart. Were bringing the potential of cures to reality here.

Contact Jessica Zhang at jessica at stanforddaily.com

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Stanford Medicine opens center for stem cell, gene therapy - The Stanford Daily

US FDA steps up enforcement against unscrupulous stem cell firms – BioPharma-Reporter.com

The US FDA has warned a Florida-based clinic and seized vials of a smallpox vaccine in California used to create an unapproved product in a crackdown against "unscrupulous" stem cell firms.

Cell therapies are a new and emergent entity in the biopharma space, and last years 21st Century Cures Act looked to address industrys regulatory concerns by introducing the Regenerative Medicine Advanced Therapy (RMAT) designation offering personalised medicine makers anefficient development program for, and expedite review of, [their] drug if the drug qualifies as a regenerative advanced therapy.

But two separate enforcement actions in the past week have shown the abuse of such therapies within the US, and pushed the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to step up its regulation of the sector.

Stem cell clinics that mislead vulnerable patients into believing they are being given safe, effective treatments that are in full compliance with the law are dangerously exploiting consumers and putting their health at risk, FDA commissioner Scott Gottlieb said.

As the FDA takes new steps to advance an efficient, modern approach to the regulation of cell based regenerative medicine, at the same time we will be stepping up our enforcement actions against clinics that abuse the trust of patients and, more important, endanger their health with unsanitary conditions or by purporting to have treatments which may not provide any benefit.

Warning letter in Florida

US Stem Cell Clinic and its Chief Scientific Officer Kristin Comella received a warning letter for marketing its autologous stem cell products without FDA approval, as well as significantly deviating from current good manufacturing practice (cGMP) requirements in the manufacture of at least 256 lots.

The firm, located in Sunrise, Florida, claimed to offer stem cell treatments for a range of neurological, autoimmune, orthopaedic and degenerative diseases based on a patients own adipose tissue, which are processed into stromal vascular fraction (SVF) before being administered back into the patient.

However, the products are not the subject of an approved biologics license application (BLA) and have not demonstrated safety and efficacy. As such, the FDA said in a statement the company abused the trust of patients and put their health at risk and vowed to step up its vigilance against others offering unregulated stem cell treatment.

StemImmune and Smallpox

And yesterday the Agency announced it took action to stop the use of an unproven treatment developed by StemImmune Inc set to be administered to patients at the California Stem Cell Treatment Centers in Rancho Mirage and Beverly Hills, California.

Under the FDAs orders, five vials containing 100 does of the non-commercially available Vaccinia Virus Vaccine (Live) were seized by the US Marshals Service. The vaccine was intended for combination with stromal vascular fraction to create an unapproved stem cell product intended to be directly injected into cancer patients tumours.

The Agency said it investigating how StemImmune sourced the vaccine, which is reserved only for people at high risk for smallpox and is not commercially available.

Gottlieb also attacked the audacious but ultimately hollow claims made by these kinds of unscrupulous clinics or others selling so-called cures.

He added:The FDA will not allow deceitful actors to take advantage of vulnerable patients by purporting to have treatments or cures for serious diseases without any proof that they actually work. I especially wont allow cases such as this one to go unchallenged, where we have good medical reasons to believe these purported treatments can actually harm patients and make their conditions worse.

Furthermore, he pledged to vigorously investigate these kinds of unscrupulous clinics using the full range of our tools, be it regulatory enforcement or criminal investigations.

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US FDA steps up enforcement against unscrupulous stem cell firms - BioPharma-Reporter.com

FDA Reaffirms Its Commitment to the Approval of Stem Cell Therapies Amidst Enforcement Actions Against … – JD Supra (press release)

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FDA Reaffirms Its Commitment to the Approval of Stem Cell Therapies Amidst Enforcement Actions Against ... - JD Supra (press release)

Quick scouting report on Milwaukee Brewers call-up Taylor Williams – Brew Crew Ball

The Milwaukee Brewers announced seven September call-ups yesterday, including one player who was making his first trip to the major leagues: right-handed pitcher Taylor Williams. The Kent State product started his career back in 2013 as a 4th-round pick by the Brewers and quickly began to see his fastball velocity rise along with his stock as a prospect. During Spring Training in 2015, Ryan Braun likened Williams explosive fastball to that of All-Star closer Craig Kimbrels.

Unfortunately for Williams and the Brewers, arm issues started cropping up shortly thereafter. He began the 2015 season on the disabled list with and ultimately was forced to undergo Tommy John surgery after physical therapy and platelet-rich plasma injections couldnt heal his ailing elbow. He wound up missing all of the 2015 and 2016 minor league seasons, returning to action last fall for instructional league. Even after the lengthy layoff, Williams showed enough at instructs to convince Milwaukees front office to add him to the 40 man roster in order to protect him from the Rule 5 Draft.

Williams spent this year with AA Biloxi under very close watch from the organization, and hell now join the big league club for the stretch run as the Milwaukee Nine chases their first postseason berth since 2011. So, what should we be looking for from the hard-throwing righty?

Williams is considered a bit undersized as a pitching prospect, standing at just 511 though he is a stout 195 lbs. Scouts consider his delivery to be rather high effort, featuring a notable leg kick and throwing from a three-quarters arm slot. Williams has lighting-quick arm speed, which helps him consistently generate big velocity on his fastball. Because of his smaller stature and high-effort mechanics, many scouts have had him ticketed to become a reliever since he was drafted.

Williams relies mainly on two power offerings in his arsenal, a fastball and slider. He hasnt shown any issues in finding his pre-injury velocity this season, with his fastball sitting in the mid-90s and touching as high as 99 MPH recently for the Shuckers. The late tail that the pitch features can give batters fits at home plate, and he misses plenty of barrels and bats with his heater. His hard slider features 1-to-7 action that breaks down and away from right-handed batters. He typically uses this as his put-away pitch when hes ahead in the count. Williams also will throw on occasion a below-average changeup that lags a good bit behind of his two other pitches in terms of quality. Williams high-octane stuff leads to plenty of strikeouts, but his two-pitch arsenal and fringy command again support that ultimately hell be better suited for bullpen duty.

Williams only crossed the 200 professional innings threshold this season after he missed so much time with his elbow troubles, but statistically hes had little issue with minor league hitters to this point. After debuting in the Pioneer League in 2013, Williams posted a 2.72 ERA/2.23 DRA in 132.1 innings pitched between A-level Wisconsin and high-A Brevard County in 2014. He struck out 137 batters while walking only 28 and inducing ground balls at a 50% clip.

When Williams finally returned to regular season action in 2017, Milwaukee closely monitored his work load at AA Biloxi. Working mostly in a piggyback with pitching prospect Jon Perrin, Williams started in 14 of his 22 appearances this year but never worked beyond 3.2 innings or threw more than 65 pitches in any of his outings. He had been on the once-every-five-days schedule that is typical of a starting pitcher, but at the end of July the org stopped having him start games and began pitching him every 2 or 3 days while entering later on in games in preparation for a move to the bullpen.

Williams wound up tossing a total of 46.2 innings for Biloxi and registering a 3.09 ERA before getting his first call to The Show. He did strike out 28.6% percent of the batters he faced, 57 whiffs in all. He managed to keep the both ball on the ground (48%) and in the park (2 home runs allowed) very well this season. Opponents were able to hit .237 against him though, which ranked right around the median for Southern League pitchers. He also had a notable difficulty with free passes, issuing them at a rate of 4.05 per nine innings, helping lead to a WHIP of 1.35. Based on these and several other factors, Williams work in AA translated to a Deserved Run Average of 4.19 this season. Thats more than a run worse than his ERA, and in terms of overall production DRA feels his performance was actually a tiny bit worse than the average Southern League pitcher in 2017 (102 DRA-).

Ultimately there appears to be little doubt that the best way for Taylor Williams to produce meaningful value at the major league level will be out of the bullpen. Williams advanced age (he turned 26 in July) and the fact that he missed two full years of developmental time really put him behind the eight-ball in terms of building up the stamina and arm strength needed to pitch 160+ innings on a year-to-year basis. His middling command, lack of a trustworthy third pitch, and diminutive stature work against him as well.

Williams should get some opportunities to showcase his stuff in Milwaukees bullpen this September and he will probably compete for an Opening Day spot as a reliever next spring. His dynamic fastball-slider combination and high strikeout approach should continue to play extremely well out of the bullpen for the next several seasons.

In fact, one might even say that Williams is Taylor-made for a role as a big league setup man.

Statistics courtesy of Baseball Prospectus and Fangraphs

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Quick scouting report on Milwaukee Brewers call-up Taylor Williams - Brew Crew Ball

Canadian clinics begin offering stem-cell treatments …

The arthritis in Maureen Munsies ankles was so intense until barely a year ago, she literally had to crawl on hands and knees to get upstairs.

The pain, she recalls now, took my breath away, and played havoc with the avid hikers favourite pastime.

In desperation, Munsie turned to a Toronto-area clinic that provides a treatment many experts consider still experimental, unproven and of questionable safety.

The 63-year-old says the stem cells she received at Regenervate Medical Injection Therapy 18 months ago were transformational, all but eliminating the debilitating soreness and even allowing her to hike Argentinas Patagonia mountains two months ago.

For me its been a life saver, Munsie says. Ive been able to do it all again I dont have any of that pain, at all.

Canadians drawn to the healing promise of stem cells have for years travelled outside the country to such places as Mexico, China or Arizona, taking part in a dubious form of medical tourism.

But Regenervate is one of a handful of clinics in Canada that have begun offering injections of stem cells, satisfying growing demand but raising questions about whether a medical idea with huge potential is ready for routine patient care.

Especially when those patients can pay thousands of dollars for the service.

Clinics in Ontario and Alberta are treating arthritis, joint injuries, disc problems and even skin conditions with stem cells typically taken from patients fat tissue or bone marrow.

The underlying idea is compelling: stem cells can differentiate or transform into many other types of cell, a unique quality that evidence suggests allows them to grow or regenerate tissue damaged by disease or injury.

Researchers including hundreds in Canada alone are examining stem-cell treatments for everything from ailing hearts to severed spinal cords.

With few exceptions, however, the concept is still being studied in the lab or in human trials; virtually none of the treatments have been definitively proven effective by science or approved by regulators like Health Canada.

The fact that Canadian clinics are now offering stem-cell treatments commercially is concerning on a number of levels, not least because of safety issues, says Ubaka Ogbogu, a health law professor at the University of Alberta.

Three U.S. women were blinded after receiving stem-cell injections in their eyes, while other American patients have developed bony masses or tumours at injection sites, Ogbogu said.

Stem cells have to be controlled to act exactly the way you want them to act, and thats why the research takes time, he said. It is simply wrong for these clinics to take a proof of concept and run with it.

Ogbogu says Health Canada must crack down on the burgeoning industry but says the regulator has so far been conspicuous by its inaction.

Other experts say the procedures provided here typically for joint pain are likely relatively safe, but still warn that care must be taken that the stem cells do not develop into the wrong type of tissue, or at the wrong place.

Alberta Health Services convened a workshop on the issue late last year, concluding there is an urgent need to develop a certification system for cell preparation and delivery to avoid spontaneous transformation of (stem cells) into unwanted tissue.

But one of the pioneers of the service in Canada says theres no empirical evidence that such growths can develop, and suggests the treatments only real risk as with any invasive procedure is infection.

Meanwhile, patients at Regenervate have enjoyed impressive outcomes after paying fees from $750 to $3,900, says Dr. Douglas Stoddard, the clinics medical director.

About 80 per cent report less pain, stiffness and weakness within a few months of getting their stem-cell injection, he said. His treatments efficacy, though, has not been tested in a randomized controlled trial, the gold-standard scientific study which would compare the injections to a sham or other treatment and identify any placebo effect.

I believe medical progress is not just limited to the laboratory and randomized double-blind trials, Stoddard said. A lot of progress starts in the clinic, dealing with patients You see something works, you see something has merit, and then its usually the scientists that seem to catch up later.

The Orthopedic Sport Institute in Collingwood, Ont., the Central Alberta Pain and Rehabilitation Institute and Cleveland Clinic in Toronto all advertise similar stem-cell treatments for orthopedic problems.

Edmontons Regen Clinic says it plans to start doing so this fall.

Ottawas Innovo says it also treats a range of back conditions with injections between the vertebrae, and uses stem cells to alleviate nerve damage.

Orthopedic Sport says its doctor focuses on FDA and Health Canada approved stem-cell injection therapy for patient care.

In fact, no treatment of the sort the clinics here provide has ever been authorized.

Health Canada says the vast majority of stem-cell therapies would constitute a drug and therefore need to be authorized after a clinical trial or new drug submission.

A number of stem-cell trials are underway, but only one treatment Prochymal has been approved, said department spokesman Eric Morrissette. Designed to combat graft-versus-host disease where bone marrow transplants for treating cancer essentially attack the patients body its unlike any of the services the stem-cell providers here offer.

But as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration aggressively pursues the hundreds of clinics in America, Health Canada says only that its committed to addressing complaints it receives.

It will take action based on the risk posed to the general public, said Morrissette, who encouraged people to pass on to the department information about possible non-compliant products.

Stoddard said the injections his clinics provide are made up of minimally manipulated tissue from patients own bodies and any attempt to crack down would be regulation for the sake of regulation.

But academic experts remain skeptical about the effectiveness of the treatments.

Scientific evidence suggests the injections may help alleviate joint pain temporarily, but probably just because of anti-inflammatory secretions from the cells not regeneration, said Dr. David Hart, an orthopedic surgery professor at the University of Calgary who headed the Alberta workshop.

Theres a need for understanding whats going on here and theres a need for regulation, he said.

Most of the clinics say they use a centrifuge to concentrate the stem cells after removing them from patients fat tissue or bone marrow. But its unclear if the clinics even know how many cells they are eventually injecting into patients, says Jeff Biernaskie, a stem-cell scientist at the University of Calgary.

Munsie, on the other hand, has no doubts about the value of her own treatment, even with a $3,000 price tag.

The procedure from extraction of fat tissue in her behind to the injection of cells into her ankles took barely over an hour.

Within three months, the retired massage therapist from north of Toronto says she could walk her dogs again. Last week, she was hiking near Banff.

Im a real believer in it, and the possibility of stem cells, says Munsie. I just think Wow, if we can heal with our own body, its pretty amazing.

(The story was modified July 6 to clarify lack of clinical-trial evidence for Regenervate procedures.)

tblackwell@nationalpost.com

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FDA cracks down on clinics selling unproven stem cell therapies – Gears Of Biz

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) yesterday targeted a booming national market for suspect medical treatments, announcing actions against clinics offering questionable stem-cell treatments for cancer and other diseases.

The FDA moved against California Stem Cell Treatment Centers in Beverly Hills and Rancho Mirage; StemImmune Inc of San Diego; and the US Stem Cell Clinic of Sunrise, Florida.

In what it termed as decisive action to protect patients, the FDA on Friday dispatched US marshals to the California clinics and seized close to 500 doses of smallpox vaccine supplied by StemImmune. The vaccine was to be mixed with stem cells taken from patients body fat, for direct injection into patients malignant tumors.

According to the FDAs statement issued Monday, this is an unapproved and potentially dangerous treatment for cancer.

Of the five vials of vaccine, one had been opened and was partially used, the FDA said.

According to the agency, the seizure of the smallpox vaccine was necessary to prevent the use of a potentially dangerous and unproven treatment.

The FDA said it would investigate how StemImmune Inc came to be in possession of the smallpox vaccine, which is not commercially available and is normally reserved for people who are at risk of exposure to smallpox, such as military personnel and healthcare workers.

Meanwhile, the FDA said in a press release, As the vaccine is not commercially available, the FDA has serious concerns about how StemImmune obtained the product for use as part of an unapproved and potentially dangerous treatment. The FDA is actively investigating the circumstances by which StemImmune came to possess the vaccine.

Speaking as a cancer survivour, I know all too well the fear and anxiety the diagnosis of cancer can have on a patient and their loved ones and how tempting it can be to believe the audacious but ultimately hollow claims made by these kinds of unscrupulous clinics or others selling so-called cures, said FDA commissioner Scott Gottlieb, MD.

The FDA will not allow deceitful actors to take advantage of vulnerable patients by purporting to have treatments or cures for serious diseases without any proof that they actually work. I especially wont allow cases such as this one to go unchallenged, where we have good medical reasons to believe these purported treatments can actually harm patients and make their conditions worse.

The seizure comes after recent FDA inspections at StemImmune Inc and the California Stem Cell Treatment Centers confirmed that the vaccine was used to create an unapproved stem cell product (a combination of excess amounts of vaccine and stromal vascular fraction stem cells derived from body fat), which was then administered to cancer patients with potentially compromised immune systems and for whom the vaccine posed a potential for harm, including myocarditis and pericarditis (inflammation and swelling of the heart and surrounding tissues). The unproven and potentially dangerous treatment was being injected intravenously and directly into patients tumors.

Serious health problems, including those that are life-threatening, can also occur in unvaccinated people who are accidentally infected with the vaccinia virus by being in close contact with someone who has recently received the vaccine. In particular, unvaccinated people who are pregnant, or have problems with their heart or immune system, or have skin problems like eczema, dermatitis, psoriasis and have close contact with a vaccine recipient are at an increased risk for inflammation and swelling of the heart and surrounding tissues if they become infected with the vaccine virus, either by being vaccinated or by being in close contact with a person who was vaccinated.

Ive directed the agency to vigorously investigate these kinds of unscrupulous clinics using the full range of our tools, be it regulatory enforcement or criminal investigations. Our actions today should also be a warning to others who may be doing similar harm, we will take action to ensure Americans are not put at unnecessary risk, Gottlieb added. I also urge health care providers, patients and consumers to report these kinds of activities or any adverse events associated with these unproven treatments to the agency through MedWatch.

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FDA cracks down on clinics selling unproven stem cell therapies - Gears Of Biz

Government website steers patients to unproven medical treatments – MyAJC

ClinicalTrials.gov, the federal governments public listing of medical trials, is providing false comfort to consumers and free advertising to for-profit stem-cell clinics offering unproven and loosely regulated treatments, a Sun Sentinel investigation has found.

Patients typically assume trials on the site must have government oversight and be carefully vetted.

They are wrong.

An official of the National Institutes of Health, which oversees the agency that operates ClinicalTrials.gov, confirmed that it does not verify information submitted for posting. Nor does it approve the trials listed, check the qualifications of those who run them, or monitor their results.

Yet unsuspecting patients, many facing diseases without traditional treatments or cures, routinely scour the site in search of experimental options. Their doctors encourage them to use ClinicalTrials.gov. So does the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Experts say some for-profit stem-cell clinics are exploiting ClinicalTrials.gov as a powerful marketing tool and putting at risk patients who assume their trials are government-approved.

The cases of three women who had severe vision loss following injections at a Sunrise stem-cell clinic have cast scrutiny on the issue. All three traveled to South Florida for treatments at U.S. Stem Cell, and two said they heard about the clinic from its listing on ClinicalTrials.gov.

Florida is a hotspot for for-profit stem-cell clinics. A 2016 report by two professors on the growing number of these clinics nationwide found California had the most with 113, followed closely by Florida with 104. The third-highest was Texas, with 71.

Stem cells are considered one of medicines most promising tools because they have the unique capacity to regenerate and repair damaged tissue. Major U.S. universities and research institutions are exploring cutting-edge stem-cell treatments under established medical protocols.

But this medical frontier has also spawned a cottage industry of for-profit stem-cell clinics that operate with little oversight. They specialize in procedures that slide through an FDA regulatory loophole because they use a patients own cells, extracted from one part of the body and injected into another, in a process that takes no more than one day.

Listings of their trials can be found alongside those of universities, major research institutions and FDA-regulated studies on ClinicalTrials.gov. But their practices may be far different.

Some of these clinics charge thousands of dollars for treatments, unlike most traditional trials that are free to patients. Some dont follow up with patients or collect treatment results data, as is standard in true research trials. Some use the same procedure to treat a variety of maladies, like multiple sclerosis, erectile dysfunction and chronic lung disease.

Patients will find them all on ClinicalTrials.gov.

ClinicalTrials.gov runs on an honor system, said Dr. Michael Carome, health research group director for the nonprofit consumer advocacy group Public Citizen.

While the vast majority of ClinicalTrials.gov listings involve regulated research, Carome said he finds it deeply troubling that a well-intentioned consumer resource is being repurposed by some to promote unproven medical care.

Carrie Wolinetz, associate director for science policy at the National Institutes of Health, said it is the responsibility of those who submit information to ClinicalTrials.gov to be transparent.

They basically are declaring the information is true when they submit the application, Wolinetz said.

She said the NIH agency, the National Library of Medicine, does not have the money, staff or expertise to approve registrations or study results submitted by scientists and researchers.

Some stem-cell clinics listed on ClinicalTrials.gov market themselves as NIH-registered. That doesnt mean they are approved or monitored by the NIH.

The NIH monitors only the trials it funds, Wolinetz said. The FDA monitors trials it regulates.

Private trials without government oversight or funding, including those of for-profit stem-cell clinics, are required to list an Institutional Review Board on ClinicalTrials.gov. These boards are composed of industry professionals hired by the study runners to oversee protocols and progress.

Experts like Paul Knoepfler, a biomedical scientist and frequent blogger on the for-profit stem-cell industry, have questioned the quality of IRBs that serve the stem-cell industry.

Todays bottom line, unfortunately, is that IRB approval of experimental for-profit stem-cell offerings that lack FDA approval may in some cases carry very little weight on its own, Knoepfler, from the University of California, Davis, wrote in March.

He advised patients not to assume IRB approval means a trial is well-run and to ask serious questions about the boards history and track record.

Earl Stringer traveled from his home in Ohio to South Florida for a procedure he saw on ClinicalTrials.gov.

When you go to the website, you think its government-backed. I thought, wow, this is a real solution, he said.

Stringer, 35, was looking to regain vision he had been slowly losing since he was born with optic atrophy. He signed up for the Stem Cell Ophthalmology Treatment Study, a collaboration of a Connecticut-based company called MD Stem Cells and Dr. Jeffrey Weiss, a Margate, Fla., ophthalmologist.

While the MD Stem Cells website says the study is NIH-registered, it is not government-approved or -regulated. The site also says the trial is the largest and most comprehensive stem-cell eye study registered with (NIH).

Weiss said he doesnt need government approval, and his study and results are reviewed by an independent panel that is FDA-monitored. He said he has done stem-cell procedures for eye disease on about 500 patients.

I am using peoples own stem cells. I dont need the FDAs approval, Weiss said.

With others in the stem-cell industry, Weiss said his clinic is helping seriously ill people by offering cutting-edge medicine that would take years to come to market under the FDAs standard trial path. FDA approval requires years of studies showing a treatment is safe and effective.

Stringer, a fitness trainer, Stringer said he borrowed $19,000 from his family for the treatments. In June 2016, he had his own stem cells injected into both of his eyes by Weiss. He said he was disappointed that his vision did not improve and that he now constantly sees spots in his right eye. He stopped sending Weiss the follow-up reports required for the trial.

I thought, Ive wasted my money, he said.

Weiss said Stringers vision had improved when he last saw him, but that none of his patients are told that success is certain.

Weiss said his trial follows proper scientific standards, that he is doing research and publishing papers in medical journals.

There are four peer-reviewed articles attached to his eye studys listing on the website.

Three involve case results from individual patients. A fourth involves a five-patient group.

Vanna Belton, a 30-year-old, Baltimore-area restaurant owner who was almost legally blind, said she was one of those patients profiled. Belton said she dramatically regained much of her vision following her 2014 procedure.

She found the study on ClinicalTrials.gov. For Belton, the studys inclusion on the website meant it was NIH-approved, assuring her the trial was not a for-profit, back-alley clinic selling false promises, she said.

The trial Stringer and Belton participated in was one of 18 cited in a recent analysis that concluded some for-profit stem-cell clinics are using ClinicalTrials.gov to attract customers with the suggestion they are doing government-sanctioned research.

The report, by University of Minnesota bioethicist Leigh Turner and published in the peer-reviewed medical periodical Regenerative Medicine, looked at autologous adult stem-cell therapy trials that he believed required patients to pay for treatment. Twelve had a site in Florida. He found them using search terms online, including patient-funded, patient-sponsored and self-funded.

Experts say charging patients thousands of dollars to participate in a clinical study often is a red flag. Studies traditionally have been funded through drug companies, the government or private grants. Turner found some trials disclosed upfront that there were participation fees but others did not.

They have repurposed the NIHs site as a marketing device, he said. You can see its a powerful technique. Its intelligent and it works.

Duncan Ross, an immunologist who founded Kimera Labs in Miramar, also was included in Turners report. He charges lung disorder patients $7,000 to $10,000 but said he created the nonprofit Kimera Society to help finance needy patients.

To those who criticize clinics that charge for treatments, Ross would say he sees little difference between patients subsidizing research and taxpayer dollars going to NIH-funded studies at universities.

New federal guidelines are being phased in this year to help determine who is responsible for whats on ClinicalTrials.gov and what information must be posted. They would also add penalties for noncompliance and strengthen rules about reporting participants injuries.

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Government website steers patients to unproven medical treatments - MyAJC

Study: Cocoa Compounds Help Cells Release More Insulin – Sci-News.com

When a person has diabetes, their body either doesnt produce enough insulin or doesnt process blood sugar properly; at the root of that is the failure of -cells (beta cells), whose job is to produce the sugar-regulating hormone insulin. A Brigham Young University-led study finds beta cells work better and remain stronger with an increased presence of monomeric cocoa catechins.

According to Rowley IV et al, cocoa compounds have beneficial effects on beta-cell function. Image credit: Pernilla Klockars.

You probably have to eat a lot of cocoa, and you probably dont want it to have a lot of sugar in it. Its the compound in cocoa youre after, said Dr. Jeffery Tessem, a researcher at Brigham Young University and corresponding author of the study published in the Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry.

In the study, Dr. Tessem and co-authors from Brigham Young University and Virginia Tech first fed the cocoa compound to animals on a high-fat diet.

The scientists found that by adding it to the high-fat diet, the compound would decrease the level of obesity in the animals and would increase their ability to deal with increased blood glucose levels.

They then dove in and dissected what was happening on the cellular level specifically, the beta cell level.

Thats when they learned monomeric cocoa catechins enhanced beta cells ability to secrete insulin.

What happens is its protecting the cells, its increasing their ability to deal with oxidative stress, Dr. Tessem said.

These compounds are making the mitochondria in the beta cells stronger, which produces more ATP (a cells energy source), which then results in more insulin being released.

These results will help us get closer to using these compounds more effectively in foods or supplements to maintain normal blood glucose control and potentially even delay or prevent the onset of type-2 diabetes, said co-author Dr. Andrew Neilson, of Virginia Tech.

But rather than stocking up on the sugar-rich chocolate bars at the checkout line, we believe the starting point is to look for ways to take the compound out of cocoa, make more of it and then use it as a potential treatment for current diabetes patients, the researchers said.

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Thomas J. Rowley IV et al. 2017. Monomeric cocoa catechins enhance -cell function by increasing mitochondrial respiration. Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry 49: 30-41; doi: 10.1016/j.jnutbio.2017.07.015

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Study: Cocoa Compounds Help Cells Release More Insulin - Sci-News.com

Xeno-free Cell Culture Medium for Regenerative Medicine Research – Technology Networks

Stem cells and genome editing offer exciting opportunities within regenerative medicine. However, any clinical application of stem cells requires strict regulation to ensure that the cells are not exposed to animal derived products.

StemFit Basic02 is a xeno-free, defined medium for human pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) culture that offers an effective solution for regenerative medicine research. This medium has been proven to effectively maintain Induced Pluripotent Stem (iPS) and Embryonic Stem (ES) cells under feeder-free conditions, during the reprogramming, expansion and differentiation phases of stem cell culture.

Specially formulated to enhance single cell expansion in the cloning step of stem cell genome editing, StemFit Basic02 offers superior and stable growth performance, high colony forming efficiency and robust scalable cell expansion. This ensures high karyotype stability over long periods and hence reproducible culture conditions.

StemFit cell culture media has been independently evaluated by CGT Catapult, an independent centre of excellence helping advance the UK cell and gene therapy industry. In these tests, StemFit not only delivered higher cell proliferation, but also showed characteristics such as homogeneity of gene expression compared with iPS cells cultured with 4 other media without any chromosomal abnormalities.

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Xeno-free Cell Culture Medium for Regenerative Medicine Research - Technology Networks

Does Immune System Hold Clues to Preterm Births? – Montana Standard

FRIDAY, Sept. 1, 2017 (HealthDay News) -- By learning more about the immune system changes that occur during pregnancy, scientists hope they can someday predict if babies will be born prematurely.

"Pregnancy is a unique immunological state. We found that the timing of immune system changes follows a precise and predictable pattern in normal pregnancy," said study senior author Dr. Brice Gaudilliere. He's an assistant professor of anesthesiology, perioperative and pain medicine at Stanford University School of Medicine in California.

If scientists can identify immune-system changes predicting premature birth, they say they might eventually develop a blood test to detect it.

"Ultimately, we want to be able to ask, 'Does your immune clock of pregnancy run too slow or too fast?'" Gaudilliere said in a university news release.

Nearly 10 percent of U.S. infants are born three or more weeks early. Currently, doctors have no reliable way to predict which babies will be born prematurely.

For the study, the researchers collected blood samples from 18 women who had full-term pregnancies. The women gave one sample during each trimester and another six weeks after childbirth. The researchers used samples from another group of 10 women who also had full-term pregnancies to verify the findings.

Using a technique called mass cytometry, the researchers simultaneously measured up to 50 properties of each immune cell in the blood samples. The investigators counted the types of immune cells, determined which signaling pathways were most active in each cell, and assessed how the cells reacted when exposed to compounds that mimic bacterial or viral infection.

The research team then used advanced statistical modeling to document the immune system changes occurring throughout pregnancy. (These adjustments keep the mother's body from rejecting the unborn baby.)

"This algorithm is telling us how specific immune cell types are experiencing pregnancy," Gaudilliere said.

The study confirmed that natural killer cells and certain white blood cells have enhanced action during pregnancy. The researchers also found that a signaling pathway among helper T-cells increases on a precise schedule.

"It's really exciting that an immunological clock of pregnancy exists," said study lead author Nima Aghaeepour, an instructor in anesthesiology, perioperative and pain medicine.

"Now that we have a reference for normal development of the immune system throughout pregnancy, we can use that as a baseline for future studies to understand when someone's immune system is not adapting to pregnancy the way we would expect," Aghaeepour added.

The study results were published Sept. 1 in Science Immunology.

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Does Immune System Hold Clues to Preterm Births? - Montana Standard