Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market 2020 Outlook Ready for Prosperous Growth by Revenue till 2024 – Daily Research Chronicles

Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market report gives a comprehensive and detail picture of the present and upcoming market opportunities that is been completed by investigating the effect by buyers, new entrants, Animal Stem Cell Therapy industry competitors and suppliers available in the Animal Stem Cell Therapy market. The goal of this report is to incorporate both authentic and future trends for Animal Stem Cell Therapy supply, Market size, costs, exchanging, competition and value chain. The top to bottom information and data on what the business sectors definition, arrangements, applications, and commitment are covered and furthermore clarifies with the drivers and restraints of the market which is gotten from SWOT analysis.

This research essentially examines the market size, current trends and growth status of the Animal Stem Cell Therapy market, as well as financing opportunities, government policy, drivers, restraints, opportunities, supply chain, and ambitious landscape. Technological innovation and rise will additionally upgrade the presentation of the product, making it all the more generally utilized in downstream applications. Moreover, Porters Five Forces Analysis (potential entrants, suppliers, substitutes, buyers, industry competitors) provides vital data for knowing the Animal Stem Cell Therapy market.

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Major Players Of Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market

Medivet Biologics LLC, VETSTEM BIOPHARMA, J-ARM, U.S. Stem Cell, Inc, VetCell Therapeutics, Celavet Inc., Magellan Stem Cells, Kintaro Cells Power, Animal Stem Care, Animal Cell Therapies, Cell Therapy Sciences, Animacel

This report covers the Types as well as Application data for Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market along with the country level information for the period of 2015-2024

Market Segmented By Types and By its Applications:

Type: Dogs Horses Others

Application: Veterinary Hospitals Research Organizations

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Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Scope and Features

Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Industry Introduction and Overview Includes Animal Stem Cell Therapy market Definition, Market Scope and Market Size Estimation and region-wise Animal Stem Cell Therapy Value and Growth Rate history from 2015-2024, Animal Stem Cell Therapy market dynamics:Drivers, Limitations, challenges that are faced, emerging countries of Animal Stem Cell Therapy , Industry News and Policies by Regions.

Industry Chain Analysis To describe upstream raw material suppliers and cost structure of Animal Stem Cell Therapy , major players of Animal Stem Cell Therapy with company profile, Animal Stem Cell Therapy manufacturing base and market share, manufacturing cost structure analysis, Market Channel Analysis and major downstream buyers of Animal Stem Cell Therapy .

Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Analysis by Product Type and Application It gives Animal Stem Cell Therapy market share, value, status, production, Animal Stem Cell Therapy Value and Growth Rate analysis by type from 2015 to 2019. Although downstream market overview, Animal Stem Cell Therapy consumption,Market Share, growth rate, by an application (2015-2019).

Regional Analysis This segment of report covers the analysis of Animal Stem Cell Therapy production, consumption,import, export, Animal Stem Cell Therapy market value, revenue, market share and growth rate, market status and SWOT analysis, Animal Stem Cell Therapy price and gross margin analysis by regions.

Competitive Landscape, Trends And Opportunities: It includes the provides competitive situation and market concentration status of major players of Animal Stem Cell Therapy with basic information i.e company profile, Product Introduction, Market share, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2019

Animal Stem Cell Therapy Industry Analysis and Forecast by Region Includes Market Value and Consumption Forecast (2015-2024) of Animal Stem Cell Therapy market Of the following region and sub-regions including the North America, Europe(Germany, UK, France, Italy, Spain, Russia, Poland), China, Japan,Southeast Asia (Malaysia, Singapore, Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam) Middle East and Africa(Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Turkey, Egypt, South Africa, Nigeria), India, South America(Brazil, Mexico, Colombia)

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1 Animal Stem Cell Therapy Introduction and Market Overview

2 Industry Chain Analysis

3 Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Value (US$ Mn) and Market Share, Production , Value (US$ Mn) , Growth Rate and Average Price (US$/Ton) analysis by Type (2015-2020)

4 Animal Stem Cell Therapy Consumption, Market Share and Growth Rate (%) by Application (2015-2020) by Application

5 Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Production, Value (US$ Mn) by Region (2015-2020)

6 Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Production (K Units), Consumption (K Units), Export (%), Import (%) by Regions (2015-2020)

7 Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Status by Regions

8 Competitive Landscape Analysis

9 Global Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Analysis and Forecast by Type and Application

10 Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Analysis and Forecast by Region

11 New Project Feasibility Analysis

12 Research Finding and Conclusion 13 Appendix 13.1 Methodology 13.2 Research Data Source

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Tech: New material mimics strength, toughness of mother of pearl – Tdnews

In the summer, many people enjoy walks along the beach looking for seashells. Among the most prized are those that contain iridescent mother of pearl (also known as nacre) inside. But many beachcombers would be surprised to learn that shimmery nacre is one of natures strongest, most resilient materials. Now, researchers reporting in ACS Nano have made a material with interlocked mineral layers that resembles nacre and is stronger and tougher than previous mimics.

Some mollusks, such as abalone and pearl oysters, have shells lined with nacre. This material consists of layers of microscopic mineral bricks called aragonite stacked upon alternating layers of soft organic compounds. Scientists have tried to replicate this structure to make materials for engineering or medical applications, but so far artificial nacre has not been as strong as its natural counterpart. Hemant Raut, Caroline Ross, Javier Fernandez and colleagues noticed that prior nacre mimics used flat mineral bricks, whereas the natural material has wavy bricks that interlock in intricate herringbone patterns. They wanted to see if reproducing this structure would create a stronger, tougher nacre mimic for sustainable medical materials.

READ Apple to pay US teen who found FaceTime bug

Using the components of natural nacre, the team made their composite material by forming wavy sheets of the mineral aragonite on a patterned chitosan film. Then, they interlocked two of the sheets together, filling the space between the wavy surfaces with silk fibroin. They stacked 150 interlocked layers together to form a composite that was about the thickness of a penny. The material was almost twice as strong and four times as tough as previous nacre mimics close to the strength and toughness reported for natural nacre. The artificial nacre was also biocompatible, which the researchers demonstrated by culturing human embryonic stem cells on its surface for one week. These features suggest that the material could be suitable for sustainable, low-cost medical uses, the researchers say.

READ Tech: Contest between superconductivity and insulating states in Magic Angle Graphene

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The authors acknowledge funding from the Singapore University of Technology and Design and the National Research Foundation, Singapore.

The abstract that accompanies this paper can be viewed here.

The American Chemical Society (ACS) is a nonprofit organization chartered by the U.S. Congress. ACS mission is to advance the broader chemistry enterprise and its practitioners for the benefit of Earth and its people. The Society is a global leader in providing access to chemistry-related information and research through its multiple research solutions, peer-reviewed journals, scientific conferences, eBooks and weekly news periodical Chemical & Engineering News. ACS journals are among the most cited, most trusted and most read within the scientific literature; however, ACS itself does not conduct chemical research. As a specialist in scientific information solutions (including SciFinder and STN), its CAS division powers global research, discovery and innovation. ACS main offices are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus, Ohio.

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Blood Test Could Reveal When Rheumatoid Arthritis Will Strike – Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Scientists have identified a new type of cell that appears in the bloodstream of rheumatoid arthritis patients shortly before joint inflammation flares.

A never-before-seen cell type could forewarn of rheumatoid arthritis symptoms.

The cells, dubbed PRIME cells, accumulate in the blood during the week prior to disease flare-ups, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator Robert Darnell's team reports July 15, 2020, in the New England Journal of Medicine. The findings could lead to better prediction of when severe pain and swelling, called flares will occur, as well as provide new avenues for treatment.

PRIME cells are one thing you might want to target to arrest the flare before it happens, Darnell says. Thats the ideal of medical science to know enough about a disease that you can put your finger on whats about to make someone sick.

Rheumatoid arthritis is a disease of the immune system that causes inflammation in the joints, especially around the hands and feet. It can be debilitating and frequently strikes people in their 30s or 40s. The symptoms come in waves, with stretches of relative quiet interspersed with painful flares. Current therapeutics, chiefly steroids, can treat these symptoms, but theres no cure.

To study this sort of disease, where symptoms vary dramatically from week to week, its critical to track changes in the body over an extended time. But its hard for patients to trek to a clinic for frequent testing. So Darnell, a neuro-oncologist at the Rockefeller University, and his colleagues developed an at-home blood collection system. Patients with rheumatoid arthritis did simple finger sticks and sent their blood to his lab. Each participant also kept a record of symptoms to identify when flares occurred.

PRIME cells are one thing you might want to target to arrest the flare before it happens.

Robert Darnell, HHMI Investigator at The Rockefeller University

Armed with these records, the researchers tested the blood samples, looking for molecular changes preceding the onset of symptoms. By analyzing the RNA of cells in the bloodstream, Darnells team could identify which types of cells were present during symptom-free times and in the weeks preceding a flare.

In samples collected two weeks prior to a flare, researchers saw an increase in immune cells called B cells. Thats not surprising, Darnell says researchers already knew these cells attacked patients joints in rheumatoid arthritis.

But in samples collected one week before a flare, his team noticed something odd. They saw an increase in RNA that didnt match the genetic signature of any known type of blood or immune cell. That got us thinking there was something fishy going on, says study coauthor Dana Orange, a rheumatologist at Rockefeller. The RNA signature instead resembled that of bone, cartilage, or muscle cells cells not typically found in the blood.

Darnells team called the newfound cell type a PRIME cell, for pre-inflammation mesenchymal cell. (Mesenchymal cells are a type of stem cell that can develop into bone or cartilage.) In the patients, PRIME cells accumulated in the bloodstream a week before the flare but disappeared during the flare. This observation, combined with previous work from another lab in mice, suggests a possible role for PRIME cells in rheumatoid arthritis flares, Darnell says.

One of the teams next steps is to test in more patients whether the presence of these cells can predict a flare, Darnell says. The researchers are still recruiting patients for this study; currently the teams blood collection system is only available for use in research. Darnell also wants to study PRIME cells molecular characteristics. If the cells do indeed take part in causing flares, he says, understanding the unique aspects of PRIME cells might enable us to target them with a drug and get rid of them.

###

Citation

Dana E. Orange et al. RNA Identification of PRIME Cells Predicting Rheumatoid Arthritis Flares, New England Journal of Medicine. Published online July 15, 2020. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa2004114

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Blood Test Could Reveal When Rheumatoid Arthritis Will Strike - Howard Hughes Medical Institute

U of T spin-off Empirica Therapeutics acquired by US firm – News@UofT

Empirica Therapeutics, a startup co-founded by Donnelly Centre investigatorJason Moffathas beenacquired by Century Therapeutics, a U.S. based company developing off-the-shelf cell therapy products for cancer.

Century will develop Empiricas proof-of-principle treatment for glioblastoma, an aggressive form of brain cancer, into therapy that can be tested on patients.

Moffat co-founded Empirica in 2018 with Dr. Sheila Singh, professor in the department of surgery at McMaster University, to leverage their combined expertise in cell engineering, functional genomics and brain tumour modelling. The teams recently demonstrated the potential of CAR-T cell therapy, in which immune cells are instructed to kill tumour cells, for the treatment of glioblastoma in preclinical models, as published in a May 2020Cell Stem Cellpaper.

Recent advances in immunotherapy have offered hope to patients with previously untreatable cancers, says Moffat, a professor of molecular genetics at U of T and the Canada Research Chair in Functional Genomics of Cancer who served as Empiricas chief scientific officer. We hope that our approach of specifically targeting glioblastoma cells with CAR-T therapy will give the patients a better quality of life and increase their chances of survival.

Philadelphia-based Century Therapeutics will further develop this type of treatment for patients. Backed by Bayer, Fujifilm, and Versant Ventures, the company specializes in developing cell therapies from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) that have been genetically engineered to avoid immune rejection. Century is working to harness the power of stem cells to develop curative cell therapy products for cancer that overcome the limitations of first-generation cell therapies. The companys CEO, Lalo Flores, acknowledged Empiricas deep expertise and unique capabilities that will accelerate their efforts to develop iPSC derived immune effector cell products designed to treat brain cancer.

Chimeric antigen receptor T cell (CAR-T) therapy involves genetically engineering a patients immune T cells to target and bind to a specific protein present on cancer cells directly and eliminate them. Centurys technology skirts the need to collect patients own immune cells thanks to its ability to manufacture off-the-shelf T cells that can be implanted without rejection.

Our team is excited to become part of Century Therapeutics, whose iPSC-derived allogeneic cell therapy platform is creating promising treatments for patients who need them most, says Dr. Singh, who is also a Canada Research Chair in Human Cancer Stem Cell Biology and served as Empiricas chief executive officer.

Now known as Century Therapeutics Canada, the new subsidiary will be based at McMaster Innovation Park.

Empiricas first CAR-T program was focused on a protein called CD133, which was the first brain tumor initiating cell marker discovered by Singh while a PhD student at the University of Toronto. Subsequent work by both the Singh and Moffat groups led to a deeper functional understanding of CD133 and an antibody that proved useful for marking cells for therapy.

When used in mice with human glioblastoma, CD133-targetting CAR-T therapy was considered a success due to reduced tumor burden and improved survival. These pre-clinical results were partly supported by a Terry Fox Research Institute New Frontiers Program Project Grant awarded to a multidisciplinary team of scientists including Singh and Moffat.

Glioblastoma is the most common and aggressive form of brain cancer owing to tumour heterogeneity at the molecular level and its ability to evolve into new forms that resist therapy. Standard treatment involves surgery, radiation and chemotherapy but most patients relapse within seven to nine months, while median survival between diagnosis and death has not extended beyond 16-20 months over the past decade.

CAR-T will be delivered in recurrent glioblastoma patients after Moffat and Singhs teams found that a population of CD133 positive glioblastoma cells remain following initial treatment.

If we can hit those cells at minimal disease, we should buy the patient more time, says Moffat. And hopefully well find a way to figure out how to combine multiple CAR-Ts; for example, by combining CD133 and other targets to potentially even cure the disease.

Empirica Therapeutics was supported by investments from U of Ts strategic partners, the Centre for Commercialization of Antibodies and Biologics and the Centre for Commercialization of Regenerative Medicine.

We are proud to have been involved with the launch and growth of Empirica, stated Rob Verhagen, former CEO of CCAB. The outcome with Century marks another stride in building a productive life science industry at U of T and McMaster and we look forward to seeing this valuable research benefiting patients in the future. The startup was also supported by the McMaster Industry Liaison Office and the Ontario Bioscience Innovation Organization through important connections to relevant business networks and partners.

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Dr. Daver on the Utility of Maintenance Therapy in AML – OncLive

Naval G. Daver, MD, discusses the utility of maintenance chemotherapy in acute myeloid leukemia.

Naval G. Daver, MD,anassociate professor in the Department of Leukemia, Division of Cancer Medicineat The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, discusses the utility of maintenance chemotherapy in acute myeloid leukemia (AML).

Inconsistent findings from phase 2 clinical trials have led to the long-standing debate of whether maintenance chemotherapy is effective in patients with AML, says Daver.

However, in May 2020 the FDA granted a priority review designation to oral azacitidine (CC-486) as maintenance therapy in patients with AML who achieved a complete remission (CR) or CR with incomplete blood count recovery following induction therapy with or without consolidation treatment, and who are not candidates for or choose to forego hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. The indication was based on findings from the phase 3 QUAZAR AML-001 study, in which the agent extended median overall survival compared with placebo as maintenance therapy in these patients.

Patients may forego transplant due to age, lack of donor availability, financial restrictions, or patient preference, says Daver. Notably, more than 30% of patients do not undergo transplant.

The positive findings from the QUAZAR AML-001 study establish a role for maintenance therapy in AML, says Daver.

Other research efforts should focus on whether maintenance therapy has utility in the post-transplant setting and for patients who are transplant-eligible, concludes Daver.

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Dr. Daver on the Utility of Maintenance Therapy in AML - OncLive

Video: The Science Of Cannabis And CBD With Four Leading Experts – Benzinga

While there is mounting anecdotal evidence on the therapeutic benefits of cannabis and CBD, including their anti-inflammatory and anxiolytic effects, we still dont fully understand the underlying biological mechanisms leading to their efficacy, or why they can be effective for some people, but not for others.

Groundbreaking new human studies from UC San Diego, University of Utah, and the Wholistic Research and Education Foundationare about to change all that:

Watch the expert panel put together by Trailblazers, moderated by Benzinga Cannabis Managing Director and El Planteo CEO Javier Hasse, to learn about the cutting edge, multidisciplinary studies underway to explore just how cannabis and CBD deliver their diverse health benefits.

Photo: Pelin Thorogood announcing the Trailblazers Partnership with Wholistic Foundation August 18, 2019 with , Dr. Jeff Chen , Dr. Jeff Anderson, and Tyler Wakstein.

2020 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.

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Reversing Parkinson’s in mice; dyeing dogs with cancer; engineered rabbit births – S&P Global

This is a recurring column on early-stage research in animals or other laboratory models that has not yet entered the clinic but could have implications for future research and development of human medicines.

Creating new neurons in mice with Parkinson's

A group of researchers has created a treatment that can inhibit a protein called PTB in mice brains and effectively reverse the symptoms of Parkinson's disease.

The disease is a degenerative neurological disorder that predominantly affects dopamine-producing neurons in the brain. Patients typically experience tremors, limb rigidity and problems with walking and balance.

Researchers were able to increase dopamine production in mice by 30%.Source: Pixabay

In the study, published in the journal Nature on June 24, researchers discovered that after inhibiting PTB in mice, support cells called astrocytes in the brain transformed into dopamine-producing neurons.

"Researchers around the world have tried many ways to generate neurons in the lab, using stem cells and other means, so we can study them better, as well as to use them to replace lost neurons in neurodegenerative diseases. The fact that we could produce so many neurons in such a relatively easy way came as a big surprise," said Xiang-Dong Fu, professor at the University of California's San Diego School of Medicine, who led the research team.

The researchers administered a PTB antisense oligonucleotide treatment which turns off the PTB protein into the midbrains of one group of mice who had been induced to mimic the symptoms of Parkinson's disease, while giving a control group a mock treatment.

In the treated mice, some astrocytes turned into neurons and increased dopamine production by 30%. Within three months, these mice regained normal movement and showed no more signs of Parkinson's disease for the rest of their lives. Meanwhile, there was no improvement in the control group.

"It's my dream to see this through to clinical trials, to test this approach as a treatment for Parkinson's disease, but also many other diseases where neurons are lost, such as Alzheimer's and Huntington's diseases and stroke," said Fu.

Glowing dye improves cancer surgery in dogs

The University of Pennsylvania's Perelman School of Medicine and School of Veterinary Medicine teamed up to test a dye that illuminates cancer cells in order to more accurately detect and remove mammary tumors in dogs.

Dogs were injected pre-surgery with the glowing dye

Source: Pixabay

Mammary cancer in dogs is very similar to breast cancer in humans, the researchers said, which made dogs ideal candidates for testing the dye.

The researchers injected the U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved contrast agent indocyanine green, which glows under near-infrared light, into dogs prior to surgery. The results, published in the journal Plos One, confirmed that the dye accumulates in cancerous cells, highlighting both tumors and cancer cells that had spread to the dogs' lymph nodes.

"In women with breast cancer and also in dogs with mammary cancer, it's prognostic if the cancer has spread to the lymph nodes. What we showed was that we could identify both draining lymph nodes and lymph nodes with metastatic disease," said David Holt, a veterinary surgeon and senior author of the study.

Holt and other researchers from the medical school plan to continue testing how well these near-infrared dyes can identify cancer cells in patients and how surgeons can use them to achieve clean margins when removing tumors, which will likely limit the reoccurrence and spread of cancer.

Bioengineered uterine tissue leads to live rabbit births

A bladder scaffold is "seeded" with cells in the labSource: Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine

A group of researchers at the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine successfully bioengineered uterine tissue that was able to support live births by rabbits.

Tissue engineering uses scaffolds, or models, of tissues or organs that are combined with cells to create tissues that can be used in living beings or for research purposes.

In the study, published in Nature Biotechnology, the rabbits had portions of their uteruses removed and then were divided into three groups. One group was reconstructed using scaffolding seeded with autologous cells, meaning cells from the rabbits were including in the scaffolding, while another group was reconstructed with scaffolding that did not include the cells. The final group was repaired through suturing.

The rabbits with the cell-seeded constructs four out of 10 of the rabbits were able to give birth to live young and had pregnancies equivalent to those in the control group.

"Someday, with further development, the approach outlined in this paper may provide a regenerative medicine solution to uterine factor infertility. It will allow us to create a uterus for a woman from her own cells combined with biomaterials, eliminating the risk of rejection and the need for anti-rejection drugs," said Anthony Atala, director of the institute and author of the study. "When she is ready to have a baby, the organ will be ready to be activated."

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Totipotent Stem Cell Market Report, History and Forecast 2019-2023, Breakdown Data by Manufacturers, Key Regions, Types and Application – Jewish Life…

Global Totipotent Stem Cell market- Report defines the vital growth factors, opportunities and market segment of top players during the forecast period from 2019 to 2025. The report Totipotent Stem Cell offers a complete market outlook and development rate during the past, present, and the forecast period, with concise study, Totipotent Stem Cell market effectively defines the market value, volume, price trend, and development opportunities. The comprehensive, versatile and up-to-date information on Totipotent Stem Cell market is provided in this report.

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The report firstly introduced the Totipotent Stem Cell basics: definitions, classifications, applications and market overview; product specifications; manufacturing processes; cost structures, raw materials and so on. Then it analyzed the worlds main region market conditions, including the product price, profit, capacity, production, supply, demand and market growth rate and forecast etc. In the end, the report introduced new project SWOT analysis, investment feasibility analysis, and investment return analysis.

The major players profiled in this report include: Company A

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On the basis on the end users/applications, this report focuses on the status and outlook for major applications/end users, sales volume, market share and growth rate of Totipotent Stem Cell for each application, including- Medical

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In continuation using earnings, this section studies consumption, and global Totipotent Stem Cell market. This area also sheds light on the variance between ingestion and distribution. Export and Totipotent Stem Cell significance data are provided in this part.

In this section, key players have been studied depending on product portfolio, their Totipotent Stem Cell market company profile, volume, price, price, and earnings.

Totipotent Stem Cell market analysis aside from business, the information, and supply, contact information from manufacturers, consumers and providers can also be presented. Additionally, a feasibility study to asset and SWOT analysis for endeavors have been contained.

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Totipotent Stem Cell Market Report, History and Forecast 2019-2023, Breakdown Data by Manufacturers, Key Regions, Types and Application - Jewish Life...

Neural Stem Cells Industry Market Incredible Possibilities, Growth Analysis and Forecast To 2025 – Cole of Duty

MarketStudyReport.com presents latest report on global Neural Stem Cells Industry Market, which evaluates the growth trends of the industry through historical study and estimates future prospects based on comprehensive research. The report extensively provides the market share, growth, trends and forecasts for the period 2020-2025.

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Pressing ahead – PharmaTimes

3D bioprinting pushes the boundsof human tissue engineering

From aerospace components to complete building structures, 3D printing technologies are at the forefront of innovation across a range of industries. The possibilities in flexible design, accuracy and personalisation are also being grasped in bionics with the manufacture of prosthetic hands and limbs.

Yet the human applications of advanced manufacturing are even more fundamental when the ink in the 3D printer is literally the stuff of life. Using biological materials such as human cells, the advancing technology of 3D bioprinting is generating great interest, investment and hope. The applications and benefits are significant and wide-ranging. 3D bioprinting is pushing the boundaries of tissue engineering, with huge gains in time, efficiency, precision and reproducibility. Reducing the need for animal testing, 3D-bioprinted tissues can also raise the success rate of new drugs in clinical trials, cutting the exorbitant cost and long lead times for development. In the longer term, fully functional human organs could be bioprinted, saving lives by bypassing transplant waiting lists and pre-empting rejection with a perfect match to each patients unique physiology.

What is 3D bioprinting?

A technological breakthrough amid many 3D printing (3-DP) technologies, bioprinting is not always clearly defined or understood.

The European Parliament defines 3D bioprinting broadly as the use of 3D printing technology for applications related to the body, whether the products themselves include biological material or not, and whether or not their purpose is medical. It includes any application for rehabilitating, supporting or augmenting any kind of biological functionality.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) does not have an official definition, but regularly uses the term 3D bioprinting to refer to the use of biological materials. Canadas Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health (CADTH) makes the distinction between 3-DP techniques that manufacture biocompatible materials such as implants or prosthetics and 3D bioprinting as a 3-DP technique that uses biological materials such as human cells.

It is this narrower sense and a 3D-P sector that is undergoing a surge of interest that is the focus here.

How it works

3D bioprinting fabricates tissues from biological materials such as human and animal cells and collagen. Stem cells have the advantage of being able to adapt to host tissues and create an organ-like tissue or organoid, a model resembling a mini-organ. The bioprinting occurs inside a bioreactor, which maintains a sterile environment to avoid contamination. Specific temperatures and humidity conditions are also necessary for the cells to stay alive. To produce the bioink used for bioprinting the tissue, cells are collected from patient biopsies and are maintained in culture. Once sufficient cells are generated they are loaded into a cartridge and the bioprinting can start.

Pharma companies see immense potential in 3D bioprinting technology, especially for development of drugs and cosmetics. MSD, for example, entered into an agreement with the bioprinting pioneer Organovo back in 2015 to gain commercial access to its latest 3D-bioprinted human liver tissue for toxicology and pre-clinical drug testing.

Last year chemicals giant BASF joined forces with CTI Biotech to develop a new 3D-bioprinted skin for cosmetic testing. The skin tissue produced by the French specialist in regenerative medicine incorporates immune cells, which are essential for studying the anti-inflammatory properties of active cosmetic ingredients. The collaboration has proved successful, demonstrating major bioprinting capabilities by fabricating a substantial number of skin model copies in a relatively short time. The overarching aim is to accelerate development of innovative and highly reliable ingredients for the huge skincare market.

This prospect of significant time (and cost) savings is one the main advantages the technology offers. The other factor spurring the growing interest of pharmaceutical and chemical groups is the ability to generate complex structures, opening the door to bioartificial tissues and advanced therapies.

Timely production

A tremendous time-saving can be achieved with 3D bioprinting. Scientists in Madrid succeeded in bioprinting a tissue resembling human skin using cells from patient biopsies in just 35 minutes. The same amount of skin-like tissue, which can be used for treating burns and wounds, previously required three weeks of manual fabrication. No decline in the quality of the tissue was observed, in fact, thorough analysis showed that it was not possible to distinguish between the bioprinted and manually produced tissues.

This combination of speed and quality control means the production process can be more easily scaled up. CTI Biotech which produces 3D human tissue models for cancer research as well as dermatology has recently invested 600,000 euros in the acquisition of five bioprinters from Cellink, the Swedish developer of the Bio X printer. These bioprinters are used to produce micro-tumours in the search for new cancer treatments. They have three printheads, with cartridges dedicated to cancer cells (from patients), fibroblasts and immune cells. The bioprinter is programmed to reproduce a replica tumour to a computer design. Previously, lab assistants had to deposit a liquid containing cells drop by drop in a long, tedious process. Now its bioprinting facility can produce hundreds of micro-tumours in a matter of minutes.

Such productivity promises the potential to automate tissue engineering and ramp-up production.

Reproducing complexity

As well as streamlining production, bioprinting technology ensures the reproducibility of the process, eliminating the significant variations arising from manual methods, so the tumours are identical. This means they reproduce with more accuracy the natural environment experienced by cells in the living organism.

In the cancer example, researchers create CAD designs that map the complex morphology of tumours and cell structures with high precision. Using bioprinting software, the production process is capable of creating even highly complex 3D tissues with high reproducibility.

When accurately reproduced, cell arrangements allow a significantly higher connection between different types of cells to mimic human tissue reactions. This creates the potential for identifying the toxicity and effectiveness of new medications much earlier in the drug development process.

Compared with manually produced 3D tissues which have severe limitations in terms of lack of control over size, low reproducibility, and level of complexity bioprinted models can have a far higher impact on the success rate of clinical trials.

There are other drivers behind the investment in 3D bioprinting.

The cosmetic industry began to engage with the technology in the face of legislation prohibiting animal testing. The European Unions first ban covered finished products in 2004, followed by cosmetic ingredients in 2009. A complete ban on production and marketing of products tested on animals took effect in 2013. This has accelerated the development of human-based 3D skin tissues for cosmetic ingredient testing, and statutory bans on animal testing have followed in many other jurisdictions around the world. As bioprinting of this relatively simple form of tissue has become highly advanced, so has bioink and the ability to print more complex structures with different types of cells.

Drug development

Animal testing, however, is still authorised and required for the development of new drugs, and often used for preclinical validation. As well as being highly controversial, the testing of formulations on animals is also one of the reasons blamed for the low success rate of clinical trials. On average, only 10% of drugs that reach clinical stage development obtain FDA approval and are commercialised. Because animal and humans have very different physiologies, a drug that shows promising results in an animal will not necessarily be effective in a person. For the other 90% of drugs, it is estimated that the cost of each failure ranges from $800 million to $1.4 billion. Mitigating this risk and reducing costs is a huge incentive for pharmaceutical companies to develop and exploit bioprinting solutions.

In the case of CTI Biotech, it expects its investment in bioprinting micro-tumours to halve the time taken to develop new medicines to three years and decrease its cost by 20%. Such potential translates into high market values.

Organovo whose bioprinted liver tissues are being used for preclinical toxicology validation values the current market for liver and kidney in vivo tissue testing at close to $3 billion. As bioprinting proves to be a cost-effective and efficient solution in other areas, the value of the technology can only grow.

A 2017 research report projected that 3D bioprinting applications would be generating $1 billion in revenue annually within a decade. Drug discovery and cosmetics testing would account for most of this market, but tissue regeneration could become an even larger opportunity beyond 2027. It was followed, in autumn 2018, by a bullish projection that the global bioprinting market including 3D bioprinting machines, bioink, consumables, software and related services would be worth $4.7 billion by 2025.

As 3D bioprinting proves to be a cost-effective and efficient technology for producing tissue samples in an ethical manner, R&D investment is growing. In 2019, the European Union granted funding to 13 bioprinting research projects, worth a total of 28 million euros.

Where next?

Some scientists estimate that it will be possible to bioprint full-sized and fully functional organs within the next ten years. Not all of the scientific community agrees with this timeline. Given the astounding complexity of organs and their complicated networks of veins and capillaries, the challenges cannot be underestimated. Nerves, blood vessels and lymphatic vessels must not only be incorporated, but also integrated with the bodys other systems.

This goes considerably beyond bioprinting and transplanting skin, bone and other body components such as an ear, trachea or cardiac valve, which is already feasible. It may be that, at least in the medium term, bioprinting remedial patches of tissue yields more reliable and valuable results, perhaps in combination with other regenerative treatments, repairing rather than replacing diseased organs.

Organovo has shown how human liver tissue 3D-printed with the necessary variety of cell types functions and engrafts when implanted in small animal disease models for up to 90 days. It sees the immediate challenge as increasing the size of grown tissue for paediatric patients and small adults.

The ultimate goal for champions of the technology is organ replacement. Expanding the boundaries of 3D tissue engineering to the point of producing sophisticated tissues and organs for patients awaiting transplants would transform and save lives. Bioprinted transplantable organs using patients own cells would overcome the challenges of immunosuppression and rejection.

The human need is near limitless, given a global shortage of organs for lifesaving transplants. In the US the lack of donor organs is the leading cause of death. In the UK patients wait an average of two-and-a-half years for a kidney transplant, with similar shortages for liver, lungs and other organs.

Perfecting the production of implantable organs is a formidable challenge requiring significant investment and research breakthroughs in bioink and 3D bioprinting, while integrating technologies in biomaterials science, cell biology, physics and medicine. If successful, the high costs of the technology would limit the impact on waiting lists, even though more cost-effective bioprinters using 3D printer components are becoming available.The prospect of decentralised bioprinting of personalised implants to order in local hospitals and clinics remains, for now at least, in the realm of science fiction.

Bioprinting advances

Yet innovations in bioink and bioprinting techniques are emerging that lend some credence to optimistic predictions for bioprinting.

Scientists in the US have developed a novel method to bioprint functional parts of a human heart, such as valves and ventricles. Tissue scaffolds are fabricated from collagen, the major structural protein in the human body. Based on an MRI scan, the anatomical structure of a patients heart can be replicated with high precision. Their method also allows transmission of biochemical signals between the bioprinted heart cells, crucial for the organs normal functioning within a living body. The technique is seen as a step closer to bioprinting a full-sized, viable adult human heart.

In Brazil scientists have succeeded in bioprinting a fully functional mini-liver that is able to store vitamins and provide vital body functions. Combining several bioengineering techniques, their innovative bioink used clumps of cells to maximise contact between them and maintained tissue functionality for much longer than in other studies. The mini-organ was bioprinted in 90 days using a patients blood cells.

A joint team of researchers in France and the Netherlands claimed in summer 2019 that their volumetric bioprinting technique was a game-changer for tissue engineering. They projected a laser down a spinning tube of hydrogel laden with stem cells. Focusing the energy creates complex 3D shapes in a few seconds. Introducing endothelial cells (from lymphatic and blood vessels) makes the tissue vascular. A heart valve, meniscus and complex-shaped part of the femur were produced.

Another bioprinting avenue of development, which GE Healthcare is pursuing, is 4D bioprinting. This would mean printing of 3D tissues with the capability to respond over time to their environment and change in shape (eg growing) or function (eg cellular differentiation or even organ development). Frances Poietis is developing a 4D bioprinting approach using single-cell resolution, artificial intelligence and software designed to programme tissue self-organisation so it matures in a controlled way until biological functions emerge.

Personalisation of medicine on the back of advances in gene therapy is also expected to reinforce interest in custom-building tissues and organs from patients own cells and ongoing innovation in this field.

As on other new frontiers of medicine, there will be safety, ethical and regulatory controls to navigate.

There is currently no overarching regulatory regime governing the whole bioprinting process, but various pieces of legislation apply to tissue engineering and regenerative medicine (such as the European Commissions Regulation on Advanced Therapy Medicinal Products). In the UK, the Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology (POST) has started to take a close interest. A POSTnote due during 2020 will give parliamentarians advance knowledge of the public policy issues and pay specific attention to quality management in what would be decentralised manufacturing.

Development of bioprinting could be affected by disallowing certain bioinks or techniques. Contrariwise, clarification from regulatory agencies around safety and efficacy could help clear the way for clinical trials.

The legislative framework on bioprinting is sure to evolve in coming years. The only question is the pace, and to what extent this will lag or be dictated by developments in the field.

Delphine Malard is associate consultant at Ayming

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Pressing ahead - PharmaTimes