COVID-19 and the trials of treatment | News, Sports, Jobs – Escanaba Daily Press

Features

Oct 16, 2020

Karen Wils photo Shown at right is Karen Wils, the Chemo Beagler or the COVID Beagler.

ESCANABA The year 2020 has put me and most everybody else in a very unusual position.

We all feel a little trapped and uneasy thrown into a situation we have never faced before.

I always kind of thought I would need to have a stem cell transplant someday after I was diagnosed with multiple myeloma in 2008.

I often referred to this blood cancer as my pesky woodtick. Fortunately, I have been blessed with good control of the disease until this year.

Leaving home, going to the Mayo Clinic and going through transplant is enough excitement for one person, but to be doing that while COVID-19 plagues our country is almost too much.

To say the last few months have been an interesting journey would be putting it mildly.

As the summer drew to a close, many changes were closing in on me, too. My son went off to a new job, and my daughter left for college. The very next week, my husband and I left for Minnesota for an unknown amount of weeks for my stem cell transplant.

For three-and-a-half weeks we were at Mayo. My husband was my excellent care giver through the strong chemo, and the transplant of my own stem cells and the long road to recovery.

Doing all of this during a pandemic is really interesting. The Mayo Clinic takes COVID-19 very seriously. So with much testing, temperature taking, sanitizing and constant mask wearing, we maneuvered through the treatment.

Social distancing when you are staying at the Gift of Life Transplant House and so far from home is very difficult. Phone calls, Zoom and Facebook became my life link to the kids, family and friends.

After going through some pretty weak days, finally my new immune system was strong enough for me to go home.

Oh, the great joy of heading down those last miles from Menominee to Escanaba back into the land of trees and water!

Sleeping in my own bed, seeing my pets, and being able to stand in my own garden felt so wonderful, but the house was so quiet without the kids.

The COVID-19 cautions had to continue, too.

I wear my mask and feel a little bit trapped, like everybody else these days. I pray that I am making all healthy decisions when I encourage my children to go to church or my husband to go to the grocery store.

The COVID-19 virus threatens big things and little things like family traditions that have to be rethought. With great sadness, I postponed until next year our annual camp gathering/harvest festival. So many folks have been through canceled or postponed parties, birthdays, anniversaries and funerals.

As hard and as disappointing as this is, the important things remain. The trees still are changing to awesome autumn colors. The harvest season is in full swing. The wild animals are still thriving outside our windows, and our families are together even if we cant do everything we want to do right now.

As I get stronger every day, I thank God. I pray for a cure for COVID-19. Yoopers are tough and our traditions will thrive long after this pandemic!

Karen (Rose) Wils is a lifelong north Escanaba resident. Her folksy columns appear weekly in Lifestyles.

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COVID-19 and the trials of treatment | News, Sports, Jobs - Escanaba Daily Press

Orchard Therapeutics Receives Positive CHMP Opinion for Libmeldy for the Treatment of Early-Onset Metachromatic Leukodystrophy (MLD) | DNA RNA and…

Details Category: DNA RNA and Cells Published on Friday, 16 October 2020 14:20 Hits: 121

First therapy recommended for full marketing authorization in the EU for eligible patients with confirmed diagnosis of late infantile or early juvenile MLD variants

One-time treatment with Libmeldy has been shown to preserve cognitive and motor function in most patients

Libmeldy is backed by data across 35 patients with follow-up of up to 8 years post-treatment, demonstrating the potential durability of HSC gene therapy

BOSTON, MA, USA and LONDON, UK I October 16, 2020 I Orchard Therapeutics (Nasdaq: ORTX), a global gene therapy leader, today announced that the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) of the European Medicines Agency (EMA) has adopted a positive opinion recommending full, or standard, marketing authorization for Libmeldy (cryopreserved autologous CD34+ cells encoding the arylsulfatase-A, or ARSA, gene), an investigational gene therapy for the treatment of metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD), characterized by biallelic mutations in the ARSA gene leading to a reduction of the ARSA enzymatic activity in children with i) late infantile or early juvenile forms, without clinical manifestations of the disease, or ii) the early juvenile form, with early clinical manifestations of the disease, who still have the ability to walk independently and before the onset of cognitive decline.

The CHMPs positive opinion will now be reviewed by theEuropean Commission(EC), which has the authority to grant marketing authorization for Libmeldy in theEuropean Union(EU). A final decision by the EC for Libmeldy is anticipated before the end of 2020. If approved, Libmeldy would be the first commercial therapy and first gene therapy for eligible patients with early-onset MLD.

MLD is a very rare, severe genetic condition caused by mutations in the ARSA gene which lead to neurological damage and developmental regression. In its most severe and common forms, young children rapidly lose the ability to walk, talk and interact with the world around them. A majority of these patients pass away in childhood, with palliative care often as their only option.

Todays positive CHMP opinion for marketing authorization of Libmeldy is a remarkable achievement that we share with the MLD community, as it brings us closer to delivering a one-time, potentially transformative therapy for eligible children suffering from this devastating disease, said Bobby Gaspar, M.D., Ph.D., chief executive officer, Orchard Therapeutics. Data from the Libmeldy clinical program have demonstrated the potential for long-term positive effects on cognitive development and maintenance of motor function, translating to individual preservation of motor milestones such as the ability to sit, stand and/or walk without support, as well as attainment of cognitive skills like social interactions and school attendance, at ages at which untreated patients show severe motor and cognitive impairments.

Libmeldy is designed as a one-time gene therapy, developed in partnership with the San Raffaele-Telethon Institute for Gene Therapy (SR-Tiget) in Milan, Italy, in which the patients own hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are selected, and functional copies of the ARSA gene are inserted into the genome of the HSCs using a lentiviral vector before these genetically modified cells are infused back into the patient. The ability of the gene-corrected HSCs to migrate across the blood-brain barrier into the brain, engraft, and express the functional enzyme has the potential to persistently correct the underlying genetic condition with a single treatment.

This is an important milestone toward making the availability of HSC gene therapy a reality for more patients, and it also is extremely rewarding for our multi-disciplinary team at SR-Tiget who has worked relentlessly along this 15-year journey to move the seminal proof of principle studies to the first in-human testing of this therapy, said SR-Tiget director Luigi Naldini, M.D, Ph.D. The robust and durable clinical benefits observed in early-onset MLD patients who received HSC gene therapy are compelling, especially when compared to the natural history of the disease. These results also further illustrate our view that the HSC gene therapy approach has the potential to deliver transformative effects in other storage diseases as well, especially when the cells are designed to overexpress the functional enzyme and provide an enhanced supply of it to the affected tissues.

As a parent, watching your child start down a seemingly normal developmental path only to suddenly and rapidly lose some or all of his or her abilities is heart-wrenching, and the agony is even more acute knowing no approved therapies currently exist for MLD, said Georgina Morton, Chair of ArchAngel MLD Trust. Todays decision to advance Libmeldy to the final EC approval stage represents a huge step forward for the parents of these young children and for all of us in the MLD community.

We are extremely appreciative of the EMAs expedited and thorough review of Libmeldys marketing authorization application, considering the severity of MLD coupled with the limited treatment options available today for young patients, said Anne Dupraz, chief regulatory officer, Orchard Therapeutics. The Agencys collaboration on this assessment is a testament to their broader public health commitment to ensure timely evaluation of new medicines for diseases where a pressing unmet need exists.

Data Supporting the Clinical Profile of Libmeldy

The positive CHMP opinion is supported by clinical studies of Libmeldy in both pre- and early- symptomatic, early-onset MLD patients. Early-onset MLD encompasses the disease variants traditionally referred to as late infantile (LI) and early juvenile (EJ).

Clinical efficacy was based on the integrated analysis of results from 29 patients with early-onset MLD who were all treated with Libmeldy prepared as a fresh (non-cryopreserved) formulation:

Clinical safety was evaluated in 35 patients with early-onset MLD:

Co-primary endpoints The co-primary endpoints of the integrated efficacy analysis were Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM) total score and ARSA activity, both evaluated at 2 years post-treatment. Results of this analysis indicate that a single-dose intravenous administration of Libmeldy is effective in modifying the disease course of early-onset MLD in most patients.

Pre-symptomatic LI and EJ patients treated with Libmeldy experienced significantly less deterioration in motor function at 2 years and 3 years post-treatment, as measured by GMFM total score, compared to age and disease subtype-matched untreated patients (p0.008). The mean difference between treated pre-symptomatic LI patients and age-matched untreated LI patients was 71.0% at year 2 and 79.8% at year 3. Similarly, the mean difference between treated pre-symptomatic EJ patients and age-matched untreated EJ patients was 52.4% at year 2 and 74.9% at year 3. Although not statistically significant, a clear difference in GMFM total score was also noted between treated early-symptomatic EJ patients and age-matched untreated EJ patients (28.7% at year 2; p=0.350 and 43.9% at year 3; p=0.054).

A statistically significant increase in ARSA activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells was observed at 2 years post-treatment compared to pre-treatment in both pre-symptomatic patients (20.0-fold increase; p<0.001) and early-symptomatic patients (4.2-fold increase; p=0.004).

At the time of the integrated data analysis, all treated LI patients were alive with a follow-up post-treatment up to 7.5 years and 10 out of 13 treated EJ patients were alive with a follow-up post-treatment of up to 6.5 years. No treatment-related mortality has been reported in patients treated with Libmeldy.

Key secondary endpoints For EJ patients who were early-symptomatic when treated with Libmeldy, meaningful effects on motor development were demonstrated when these patients were treated before entering the rapidly progressive phase of the disease (IQ85 and Gross Motor Function Classification (GMFC)1). By 4 years post-disease onset, an estimated 62.5% of treated, early-symptomatic EJ MLD patients survived and maintained locomotion and ability to sit without support compared with 26.3% of untreated early-symptomatic EJ MLD patients, representing a delay in disease progression following treatment with Libmeldy.

A secondary efficacy endpoint that measured cognitive and language abilities as quantified by Intelligence Quotient/Development Quotient (IQ/DQ) found:

Clinical safety Safety data indicate that Libmeldy was generally well-tolerated. The most common adverse reaction attributed to treatment with Libmeldy was the occurrence of anti-ARSA antibodies (AAA) reported in 5 out of 35 patients. Antibody titers in all 5 patients were generally low and no negative effects were observed in post-treatment ARSA activity in the peripheral blood or bone marrow cellular subpopulations, nor in the ARSA activity within the cerebrospinal fluid. Treatment with Libmeldy is preceded by other medical interventions, namely bone marrow harvest or peripheral blood mobilization and apheresis, followed by myeloablative conditioning, which carry their own risks. During the clinical studies, the safety profiles of these interventions were consistent with their known safety and tolerability.

About MLD and Investigational Libmeldy

Metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD) is a rare and life-threatening inherited disease of the bodys metabolic system occurring in approximately one in every 100,000 live births. MLD is caused by a mutation in thearylsulfatase-A(ARSA) gene that results in the accumulation of sulfatides in the brain and other areas of the body, including the liver, gallbladder, kidneys, and/or spleen. Over time, the nervous system is damaged, leading to neurological problems such as motor, behavioral and cognitive regression, severe spasticity and seizures. Patients with MLD gradually lose the ability to move, talk, swallow, eat and see. Currently, there are no approved treatments for MLD. In its late infantile form, mortality at 5 years from onset is estimated at 50% and 44% at 10 years for juvenile patients.1Libmeldy (autologous CD34+ cell enriched population that contains hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPC) transduced ex vivo using a lentiviral vector encoding the human arylsulfatase-A (ARSA) gene), formerly OTL-200, is being studied for the treatment of MLD in certain patients. Libmeldy was acquired from GSK inApril 2018and originated from a pioneering collaboration between GSK and the Hospital San Raffaele and Fondazione Telethon, acting through their jointSan Raffaele-Telethon Institute for Gene TherapyinMilan, initiated in 2010.

About Orchard

Orchard Therapeutics is a global gene therapy leader dedicated to transforming the lives of people affected by rare diseases through the development of innovative, potentially curative gene therapies. Our ex vivo autologous gene therapy approach harnesses the power of genetically modified blood stem cells and seeks to correct the underlying cause of disease in a single administration. In 2018, Orchard acquired GSKs rare disease gene therapy portfolio, which originated from a pioneering collaboration between GSK and theSan Raffaele Telethon Institute for Gene Therapy in Milan, Italy. Orchard now has one of the deepest and most advanced gene therapy product candidate pipelines in the industry spanning multiple therapeutic areas where the disease burden on children, families and caregivers is immense and current treatment options are limited or do not exist.

Orchard has its global headquarters in London and U.S. headquarters in Boston. For more information, please visit http://www.orchard-tx.com, and follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn.

1Mahmood et al. Metachromatic Leukodystrophy: A Case of Triplets with the Late Infantile Variant and a Systematic Review of the Literature.Journal of Child Neurology2010, DOI:http://doi.org/10.1177/0883073809341669

SOURCE: Orchard Therapeutics

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Orchard Therapeutics Receives Positive CHMP Opinion for Libmeldy for the Treatment of Early-Onset Metachromatic Leukodystrophy (MLD) | DNA RNA and...

UofL-born company secures an additional $115 million to advance cell therapy – uoflnews.com

A company born at the University of Louisville has raised an additional $115 million to further develop a therapy that could improve the lives of kidney transplant recipients.

The company, Talaris Therapeutics Inc., plans to use the series B funding to support a Phase 3 clinical trial the last step before applying for FDA approval. This follows a $100 million series A funding round announced last year to hire staff and initiate the trial.

Talaris recently began dosing patients in that trial of the unique cell therapy, called FCR001, which allows living-donor kidney transplant recipients to stay off immunosuppression drugs they would otherwise need for the rest of their lives.

Immunosuppressants help prevent rejection of the transplanted organ, but can cause side effects, including high blood pressure, diabetes, high cholesterol, neurological effects, increased risk of infection and decline in kidney function over time.

This technology could help transplant patients live fuller, healthier lives,said UofL Executive Vice President for Research and Innovation, Kevin Gardner.This UofL research, in the hands of strong industry partners and backed by investors, is a big step in advancing our health.

FCR001 consists of stem cells taken from the organ donor and processed at the Talaris facility, then infused into the organ transplant recipient. The goal is to create a durable dual immune system (part donor-derived and part recipient) in the transplant recipient. These two immune systems coexist, recognizing both the recipients own body as well as the donated organ as self.

The new funding also will advance aplanned Phase 2 trial of FCR001 in diffuse systemic sclerosis, a severe form of the rare autoimmune disease scleroderma.

Talaris, formerly known as Regenerex LLC, was founded by UofL researcher and innovator Suzanne Ildstad to commercialize the pioneering work of her team at the university. She now serves as Talaris chief scientific officer.

This financing moves us one step closer to helping organ transplant recipients no longer be dependent on immunosuppressive drugs, resulting in a greatly improved quality of life, Ildstad said of the earlier Phase 3 trial financing. The support and research infrastructure at UofL have been invaluable in our journey to this important juncture.

In an earlier Phase 2 trial, FCR001 allowed 70% of living donor kidney transplant patients durably to be weaned off all of their immunosuppression treatments.

The Phase 3 trial is expected to enroll 120 adult living donor kidney transplant recipients at multiple sites across the U.S. To date, the trial has been initiated at five clinical sites around the country.

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UofL-born company secures an additional $115 million to advance cell therapy - uoflnews.com

Gamida Cell and Be The Match BioTherapies Expand Strategic Collaboration – BioSpace

Oct. 13, 2020 12:01 UTC

Organizations to work together to integrate Be The Match BioTherapies existing cell therapy infrastructure to manage the supply chain for potential commercialization of omidubicel

BOSTON & MINNEAPOLIS--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Gamida Cell Ltd.. (Nasdaq: GMDA), a leading cellular and immune therapeutics company, and Be The Match BioTherapies, an organization offering solutions for companies developing and commercializing cell and gene therapies, today announced an expansion of their existing strategic collaboration for omidubicel, Gamida Cells advanced cell therapy in Phase 3 clinical development as a potentially life-saving treatment option for patients in need of an allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell (bone marrow) transplant. The broadened agreement represents an important step in both organizations patient access efforts and in Gamida Cells preparation for potential approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20201013005030/en/

The original partnership agreement between the organizations focused on the omidubicel development program and leveraged a wide range of Be The Match BioTherapies capabilities and services. This included providing cellular source material from the Be The Match Registry, which offers the most ethnically diverse listing of potential donors and umbilical cord blood units in the world, with 22 million potential donors and more than 300,000 umbilical cord blood units, as well as cell therapy supply chain and logistics management services. In building upon the existing collaboration, Gamida Cell will work through Be The Match BioTherapies for the ordering and supply of cord blood units, which serve as the starting material for omidubicel. The expanded agreement is designed to provide a smooth process throughout the omidubicel therapy supply chain.

Gamida Cells work to bring a new stem cell graft source to patients aligns with our core mission to help organizations deliver cellular therapies that can save more lives and improve the quality of life for patients, said Amy Ronneberg, chief executive officer of the National Marrow Donor Program/Be The Match and Be The Match BioTherapies. Were delighted to expand upon our collaboration to more fully leverage our infrastructure and technology to support the advancement of Gamida Cells efforts to seamlessly bring omidubicel to patients in clinical and commercial settings. Gamida Cells efforts to make stem cell transplant more accessible to patients could be particularly impactful for patients who do not have a matched donor of suitable age.

Be The Match BioTherapies is a respected leader in cell therapy and has an extensive history of assuring broad transplant access through the delivery of source material, globally, for patients in need of a transplant, stated Michele Korfin, chief operating and commercial officer of Gamida Cell. Deepening our collaboration represents an important step for Gamida Cell as the company increases its focus on potentially bringing omidubicel to patients in the commercial setting after reporting that omidubicel met its primary endpoint and all three secondary endpoints in our randomized, multi-center Phase 3 study. We look forward to our continued collaboration with Be The Match BioTherapies to ensure that we have an efficient and reliable cell therapy supply chain that can provide a positive experience for transplant teams and their patients.

In May, Gamida Cell reported that its Phase 3 study of omidubicel met its primary endpoint, demonstrating a highly statistically significant reduction in time to neutrophil engraftment, a key milestone in recovery from a stem cell transplant. Additionally, in October, Gamida Cell reported that all three secondary endpoints for the study related to platelet engraftment, infections and hospitalizations demonstrated statistical significance. Gamida Cell expects to begin submitting the biologics license application for omidubicel to the FDA on a rolling basis in the fourth quarter of 2020.

Despite the curative potential of bone marrow transplants, it is estimated that more than 40 percent of eligible patients in the U.S. do not receive one for various reasons, including difficulty in finding a matched donor. Omidubicel is designed to potentially serve as a universal alternative to existing donor sources for bone marrow transplant.

About Omidubicel Omidubicel is an advanced cell therapy under development as a potential life-saving allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell (bone marrow) transplant solution for patients with hematologic malignancies (blood cancers). In clinical studies (NCT01816230 and NCT02730299), omidubicel demonstrated rapid and durable time to engraftment and was generally well tolerated. Omidubicel is also being evaluated in a Phase 1/2 clinical study in patients with severe aplastic anemia (NCT03173937). The aplastic anemia investigational new drug application is currently filed with the FDA under the brand name CordIn, which is the same investigational development candidate as omidubicel. For more information on clinical trials of omidubicel, please visit http://www.clinicaltrials.gov.

Omidubicel is an investigational therapy, and its safety and efficacy have not been evaluated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration or any other health authority.

About Gamida Cell Gamida Cell is an advanced cell therapy company committed to cures for patients with blood cancers and serious blood diseases. We harness our cell expansion platform to create therapies with the potential to redefine standards of care in areas of serious medical need. For additional information, please visit http://www.gamida-cell.com or follow Gamida Cell on LinkedIn or Twitter at @GamidaCellTx.

About Be The Match BioTherapies Be The Match BioTherapies is the only cell and gene therapy solutions provider with customizable services to support the end-to-end cell therapy supply chain. Backed by the industry-leading experience of the National Marrow Donor Program (NMDP)/Be The Match, and a research partnership with the CIBMTR (Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research), the organization designs solutions that advance the development of cell and gene therapies across the globe.

Be The Match BioTherapies is dedicated to accelerating patient access to life-saving cell and gene therapies by providing high-quality cellular source material from the Be The Match Registry, the worlds largest and most diverse registry of more than 22 million potential blood stem cell donors and more than 300,000 umbilical cord blood units. Through established relationships with apheresis, marrow collection and transplant centers worldwide, the organization develops, onboards, trains and manages expansive collection networks to advance cell therapies. Be The Match BioTherapies uses a proven integrated model of both cell therapy supply chain and logistics managers, complimented by regulatory compliance experts to successfully transport and deliver life-saving therapies across the globe. Through the CIBMTR, Be The Match BioTherapies extends services beyond the cell therapy supply chain to include long-term follow-up tracking for the first two FDA-approved CAR-T therapies.

For more information, visit http://www.BeTheMatchBioTherapies.com or follow Be The Match BioTherapies on LinkedIn or Twitter at @BTMBioTherapies.

Gamida Cell Forward Looking Statements This press release contains forward-looking statements as that term is defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including with respect to the effect on any cell therapy supply chain or Gamida Cells anticipated timing regulatory filing submissions for omidubicel, which statements are subject to a number of risks, uncertainties and assumptions, including, but not limited to the ongoing global COVID-19 pandemic and manufacturing, clinical, scientific, regulatory and technical developments. In light of these risks and uncertainties, and other risks and uncertainties that are described in the Risk Factors section and other sections of Gamida Cells Annual Report on Form 20-F, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on February 26, 2020, and other filings that Gamida Cell makes with the SEC from time to time (which are available at http://www.sec.gov), the events and circumstances discussed in such forward-looking statements may not occur, and Gamida Cells actual results could differ materially and adversely from those anticipated or implied thereby. Any forward-looking statements speak only as of the date of this press release and are based on information available to Gamida Cell as of the date of this release.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20201013005030/en/

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Gamida Cell and Be The Match BioTherapies Expand Strategic Collaboration - BioSpace

Houghton Regis dad appeals for help for life-saving treatment abroad – Dunstable Today

A father from Houghton Regis who was diagnosed with liver cancer is hoping to raise money for life-saving treatment in Holland.

Stuart Finlay (Finn), 36, was diagnosed with 10 weeks ago and was told the life expectancy was ten years with 44 per cent of the cases, and five years with 60 per cent of the cases, but after doing some research he found studies of treatment using different drugs that have seen people at stage 3 cancer making a full recovery.

He is now planning to get treatment that is not available in the UK , so he will be travelling to Holland and Frankfurt for two different procedure that he believes will help him more.

He said: "Fortunately, I was diagnosed early so the chances of survival are better than they normally would be .

"The treatment from the nurses and doctors with the NHS has been amazing but with Covid19 here it has been made harder then normal, so thank you all for your help and everything you have done for me.

"So far I have started chemotherapy and had cryotherapy which has freezed the tumor to kill any cancer cells and the tumor itself and then I will be starting a course of chemotherapy at the end of Oct, this is all that has been offered to me and my life expectancy with this treatment is 5 years.

"I will be getting targeted therapy in the Holland from UMC, VUmc Holland and then in Frankfurt, Germany, Stem cell Therapy."

The former army soldier, who has a three-year-old son and 14-year-old daughter, is now appealing for the public's help to raise the money for the treatment.

Finn said: "Having already put all the money I can into the treatment, my friend suggested making a page and seeing if any friends or family could help, and it started from there.

"The main thing for me is to raise awareness of this type of treatment and remove the stigma that is attached to CBD - which has really helped me - and stem cell treatment.

"If I don't survive this I want to be able to help someone else. I want to raise awareness of these treatments.

"I will be making videos of the treatment that I will be taking and of each of the doctors as well about this so that if anyone else thinks there is no hope trust me there is.

"I will be asking questions about it and how it works and if you have any questions please send them to me and I will ask them.

"You will be able to watch my Vlogs of everything I do and everywhere I go and what happens when you get these treatments."

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Houghton Regis dad appeals for help for life-saving treatment abroad - Dunstable Today

Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (iPSCs) Industry 2020 Includes The Major Application Segments And Size In The Global Market To 2026 – PRnews Leader

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Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (iPSCs) Industry 2020 Includes The Major Application Segments And Size In The Global Market To 2026 - PRnews Leader

Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Market 2020 Is Slated to Grow Rapidly in the Forthcoming Years with Key Players Addgene, Axol Bioscience, Cell…

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This press release was orginally distributed by SBWire

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Leading Companies in the Global Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Market:

Thermo Fisher Scientific, Allele Biotechnology and Pharmaceuticals Inc., ABM (Applied Biological Materials Inc.), Addgene, Axol Bioscience, Cell Signaling Technology, Bluerock Therapeutics, Alstem LLC, Applied Stemcell Inc., ATCC, Creative Bioarray, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Bio-Techne, Reprocell Group Co., Primorigen Biosciences, ID Pharma Co. Ltd., Megakaryon Corp., FUJIFILM Cellular Dynamics, Inc., Waisman Biomanufacturing, Roslin Cell Sciences, Opsis Therapeutics, Corning Life Sciences, Fate Therapeutics, Genecopoeia, Gentarget Inc., Viacyte Inc., Ncardia, Invivogen, Lonza Group Ltd., Plasticell Ltd., Stemcell Technologies, Newcells Biotech, Orig3N Inc., Peprotech, Promega Corp., Promocell Gmbh, Qiagen N.V., System Biosciences Inc., Reprocell Inc., Sciencell Research Laboratories, MilliporeSigma, and Takara Bio Usa Inc.

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Global Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Market Segmentation by Product Type:

Amniotic Cells

Fibroblasts

Keratinocytes

Hepatocytes

Others

Global Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Market Segmentation by Application:

Drug Development

Toxicity Testing

Regenerative Medicine

Academic

Global Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Market segmentation by Region/Country:

North America

Europe

Asia Pacific

Latin America

Middle East & Africa

Key Takeaways from the Global Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Market Report:

Full coverage of the global Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells market analysis

Market Mechanism and Dynamics

Fluctuating market trends and market developments

Systematic market segmentation

Historical, current, and projected market size

Competitive outlook

Expansion strategies adopted by key players

Product offerings

Niche segments/regions exhibiting potential growth

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The report analyzes the changing competitive scenario.

The analytical data and strategic planning methodologies are expected to aid businesses in decision-making

Proffers a seven-year assessment of the global market, elaborating on the key product segments

Market dynamics, such as drivers, opportunities, restraints, and threats, have been listed in the report

The report presents an exhaustive regional analysis of the global Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells market and lists the business profiles of various stakeholders.

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For more information on this press release visit: http://www.sbwire.com/press-releases/induced-pluripotent-stem-cells-market-2020-is-slated-to-grow-rapidly-in-the-forthcoming-years-with-key-players-addgene-axol-bioscience-cell-signaling-technology-etc-1309333.htm

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Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Market 2020 Is Slated to Grow Rapidly in the Forthcoming Years with Key Players Addgene, Axol Bioscience, Cell...

Novellus Therapeutics Exclusively Licenses Induced Mesenchymal Stem Cells (iMSCs) to NoveCite for COVID-19 Related Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome…

Novellus Therapeutics Exclusively Licenses Induced Mesenchymal Stem Cells (iMSCs) to NoveCite

"Novellus's iMSCs have the potential to be a breakthrough in the field of cellular therapy for acute respiratory conditions because of their high potency as demonstrated in our pre-clinical studies, as well as our ability to cost-effectively provide high doses and repeat doses." said Myron Holubiak, CEO of Citius.

"We are excited to be developing iMSCs because of their promise to save lives and reduce long term sequelae in patients with devastating respiratory diseases such as ARDS caused by COVID-19," said Matt Angel, Chief Science Officer of Novellus. He continued, "Our iMSCs have multimodal immunomodulatory mechanisms of action that make them promising for treatment of acute respiratory diseases."

About Novellus Therapeutics LimitedNovellus is a pre-clinical stage biotechnology company developing engineered cellular medicines using its patented non-immunogenic mRNA, high-specificity gene editing, mutation-free & footprint-free cell reprogramming and serum-insensitive mRNA lipid delivery technologies. Novellus is privately held and is headquartered in Cambridge, MA. For more information, please visit http://www.novellustx.com.

About NoveCite, Inc.NoveCite, Inc. is a newly formed subsidiary of Citius Pharmaceuticals, a late-stage specialty pharmaceutical company dedicated to the development and commercialization of critical care products, with a focus on anti-infectives and cancer care. For more information, please visit http://www.citiuspharma.com.

Contact: [emailprotected]

SOURCE Novellus Therapeutics

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Novellus Therapeutics Exclusively Licenses Induced Mesenchymal Stem Cells (iMSCs) to NoveCite for COVID-19 Related Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome...

Brain organoids reveal neuronal flaws in syndrome tied to autism – Spectrum

Electric organoid: Neurons derived from people with 22q11.2 syndrome are hyperexcitable and show calcium-signaling deficits.

Courtesy of Pasca lab

Neurons derived from people with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome, a genetic condition linked to autism, show deficits in electrical activity and calcium signaling, according to a new study1. A single gene appears to be largely responsible for these defects, the study shows.

Up to 20 percent of people who lack part or all of the chromosomal region 22q11.2 have autism. Individuals with the deletion may also have schizophrenia, seizures, heart defects, immune dysfunction or learning problems.

The new findings uncover factors that may contribute to the development of psychiatric conditions associated with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome. They could also help researchers identify new therapeutic targets, says lead author Sergiu Pasca, associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford University in California.

The syndrome is relatively common, occurring in up to 1 in 4,000 newborns, Pasca says. But researchers do not fully understand how genes in the 22q11.2 region contribute to autism or other conditions, he adds.

To solve this molecular puzzle, Pasca and his team reprogrammed skin cells from 15 people with the deletion and 15 controls into induced pluripotent stem cells. Using a technique they developed in 2015, they coaxed these cells to turn into neurons, which self-organize in a dish into spherical clusters called organoids. The organoids show some key features of the developing cerebral cortex, a brain region implicated in autism.

The neurons derived from people with 22q11.2 syndrome spontaneously fire four times as frequently as neurons derived from controls, the researchers found. And the electrical activity of the 22q cells does not set off the usual spike in calcium levels, which is crucial for neurons to exchange messages.

In some other syndromes tied to schizophrenia and autism, calcium-channel genes are mutated. But the number of channels and the speed at which they work in 22q neurons is the same as in control neurons. Instead, the 22q cells show an unusually low voltage difference across the cell membrane when they arent firing, causing the signaling defects and hyperexcitability, the researchers found.

The researchers suspected that a gene called DGCR8 might be responsible for the neuronal deficits in the organoids because it lies within 22q11.2 and is linked to abnormal electrical activity in the neurons of mice2. DGCR8 is essential for the synthesis of short RNA fragments, called microRNAs, that regulate gene expression.

Lowering DGCR8s expression levels in control neurons reproduced the abnormalities seen in 22q neurons. In contrast, boosting the genes activity in 22q neurons or treating them with antipsychotic drugs prevented them from being overly excitable and reversed their calcium-signaling defects. The study was published 28 September in Nature Medicine.

Previous studies have analyzed lab-grown neurons derived from people with schizophrenia or autism-related disorders such as Rett and fragile X syndromes. But most used only a few human-derived cell lines, says Guo-li Ming, professor of neuroscience at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. The new study, Ming says, has a total of 30 human lines thats a huge effort.

By studying brain organoids derived from so many people, the researchers were able to identify the gene that might be involved in the psychiatric conditions associated with 22q11.2 syndrome, says Sally Temple, scientific director of the Neural Stem Cell Institute in Rensselaer, New York. Whenever we have a light shining ahead, saying, This is what you should really be looking at, it means that were making progress, she says.

The study participants with 22q11.2 syndrome vary in their psychiatric diagnoses, and yet all the brain organoids derived from their cells show the same neuronal abnormalities. Thats somewhat surprising, because we know there are a lot of differences in the genetic background of different people, Ming says.

The deletion might conspire with other factors to ultimately determine which psychiatric conditions a person has, Pasca says. It could be that the deletion causes cellular defects, and once there is a stressor such as social stress, disease develops. Its also unclear whether these cellular defects are related to the high prevalence of seizures in people with 22q11.2 syndrome, he says.

The hallmarks of most neuropsychiatric conditions can change over time, says Giuseppe Testa, director of the stem cell epigenetics unit at the European Institute of Oncology in Milan, Italy. Studies that look at a larger number of people with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome or other neurodevelopmental conditions could help to elucidate the relationship between the neuronal defects observed in the lab and the psychiatric manifestations of the conditions, Testa says. The new study, however, is a great resource for understanding how the 22q11.2 deletion contributes to schizophrenia and autism, he says.

Pascas team is trying to pinpoint molecules that could open new therapeutic avenues for 22q11.2 deletion syndrome. The antipsychotics they tested restore the unusual voltage differences in the 22q neurons, but they dont address the core mechanisms responsible for psychiatric conditions linked to the syndrome, Pasca says.

Whats more, antipsychotics have many side effects, and not all individuals respond to them, he says. We need better therapies we need to identify what the key molecular players are and target those.

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Brain organoids reveal neuronal flaws in syndrome tied to autism - Spectrum

Disruptive Technologies and Mature Regulatory Environment Vital for Cell Therapy Maturation – BioSpace

Immuno-oncology and CAR T cells energized the field of regenerative medicine, but for cell and gene to deliver on their promises, new, disruptive technologies and new modes of operation are needed. Specifically, that entails improving manufacturing to control variables and thus ensure product consistency, and maturing the regulatory environment to improve predictability.

Manufacturing cells is not like manufacturing small molecules, Brian Culley, CEO of Lineage Cell Therapeutics, told BioSpace. For cell therapy products to mature into real products that deliver on the promises of 10 years ago, they must be scalable which drives affordability and they must solve their purity issues.

On the clinical side, cell and gene therapies must find places where small molecules, antibodies or other traditional approaches may not be the best option.

For example, The era of transplant medicine is unfolding before us, Culley said. Because of the transplant component, cell therapy may enable changes the body never could do alone.

Lineage is addressing dry AMD and spinal cord injuries with two of its therapeutics.

Our approach is fundamentally different from traditional approaches. We replace the entire cell rather than modulate a pathway. There is a rational hypothesis where cell therapy can win, but first we need to fix the operational hurdles, Culley said.

To address the manufacturing challenges, Culley said, We work only with allogeneic approaches. For us, not being patient-specific is a huge advantage.

Not long ago, the industry was focused on 3D manufacturing in bioreactors.

Were beyond that, Culley said. For our dry AMD product, we can manufacture 5 billion retinal cells in a three liter bioreactor. The advantage is that the cells exist in a very homogenous space and are 99% pure.

As a result, they are more affordable and can be harvested with little manipulation.

Manual manipulation affects gene expression, he pointed out, so minimizing that, as well as the vast quantities of plastics typically required, results in a more controlled process and a more consistent product.

Additionally, Lineage introduced a thaw and inject formulation, so the cell therapy can be thawed in a water bath, loaded into a chamber and injected, all within a few minutes. Traditional dose administration requires washing, plating and reconstituting the cells the before they are administered to a patient.

Getting rid of the prior day dose prep is one example of the maturation of the field, which we are deploying today to help usher in a new branch of medicine, Culley said.

At Lineage, were tackling problems that largely were intractable. For dry AMD, theres nothing approved by the FDA. No one know why the retinal cells die off, so we manufacture brand new retinal cells (OpRegen) and implant them, Culley said. Were seeing very encouraging clinical signs, including the first-ever case of retinal restoration.

Retinal cells compose a thin layer in the back of the eye, Culley explained.

They start to die off in one spot, and that area grows outward. When we inject our manufactured cells where the old ones died, weve seen the damaged area shrink and the architecture in previously damage areas completely restored, Culley said. Weve treated 20 patients for dry AMD in, ostensibly, safety trials, but you cant help but notice efficacy when a patient reads five more lines on an eye chart. Its hard to imagine our intervention wasnt responsible for that, especially when humans cant regenerate retinal tissue.

The spinal injury program (OPC1) may represent an even greater breakthrough. As with dry AMD, there is no FDA-approved therapy.

We manufacture oligodendrocytes and transport them into the spinal cord, to help produce the myelin coating for axons, he told BioSpace. Because of the oligodendrocytes, the axons grow, become myelinated, and begin to function. Small molecule and antibody therapies havent been able to do that.

So far, 25 people have been treated in a Phase I/II trial. Culley reported cases in which a quadriplegic man, after OPC1 therapy, is now typing 30 to 40 words per minute, and another who now can throw a baseball. Its not unusual for patients who initially were completely paralyzed to now schedule their treatments around college classes, Culley said.

Humans can have varying degrees of recovery from spinal cord injury, but these are higher than we would expect, Culley said.

Other cell and gene companies are advancing solutions, too.

Many companies with induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are trying to figure out how to get scalability, purity, and reproducibility to work for them. Its not a quick fix, he said.

One of the challenges is balancing the clinical and manufacturing aspects of development.

If you have a technology thats not yet commercially viable, but you have clinical evidence, its tempting to focus on the clinical side, Culley said.

Too many companies do that, and then find their candidate must be reworked for scale up. Therefore, consider scale up and manufacturing early.

Theres a need for balance at a more granular level, too. For example, he asked, How many release criteria do you need? Just because you know a cell expresses a certain surface marker, does that add to your process? Ive seen companies ruined by trying to be perfect, and others by rushing headlong, seeing evidence where evidence doesnt exist.

As Lineage matures its processes to support larger clinical trials, the greatest challenges have been time It takes 30 to 40 days to grow cells, Culley said and regulatory uncertainty. Often, there is no regulatory precedence so there are holes to be addressed. For example, cell and gene therapies sometimes have a delivery component such as a scaffold or delivery encapsulation technology that also must be considered. Real-time regulatory feedback isnt available, so you proceed, presuming that what youre doing will be acceptable to regulators.

The FDA recognizes that new, disruptive technologies and approaches are being used, and must be used, for cell and gene therapy to reach patients.

The FDA is responsive and is trying to push guidance out, Culley said, but it takes time.

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Disruptive Technologies and Mature Regulatory Environment Vital for Cell Therapy Maturation - BioSpace