Archive for the ‘adult stem cells’ Category

Adult Stem Cell Treatments Move Ahead, Embryonic Stem Cells Fall Farther Behind

Friday, May 25th, 2012
David Prentice

David A. Prentice, Ph.D, Senior Fellow for Life Sciences at the Family Research Council

By David A. Prentice, Ph.D

Embryonic stem cells continue to receive the majority of news coverage, yet remain the least likely stem cell to help patients. In fact, even the embryonic stem cell advocates are beginning to admit failure. The California company Geron, first to receive approval to inject embryonic stem cells into a few patients, gave up on their trial and shut down all of their embryonic stem cell research. After a year, none of the patients showed improvements, though they will need to be monitored for many years to come for potential tumor formation. Even celebrity stem cell promoter Michael J. Fox recently admitted that “[embryonic] stem cells” were unlikely to help any patients any time soon. Given that embryonic stem cells are ethically tainted, requiring the destruction of young human life or even creating a new human life via cloning (somatic cell nuclear transfer) specifically for destruction, it’s heartening that many are seeing the many problems associated with this type of stem cell.

Adult stem cells remain the only type of stem cell used successfully to treat human patients.  They are the one and only gold standard for clinical treatments with stem cells.  Adult stem cells have many advantages.  They can be isolated from numerous tissues, including bone marrow, muscle, fat, and umbilical cord blood, just to name a few.  And isolating the adult stem cells from tissues of a patient or a healthy donor does not require harming or destroying the donor, giving adult stem cells a decided ethical advantage over embryonic stem cells.  Adult stem cells also have a proven track record for success at saving lives and improving health on a daily basis.  Over 50,000 people around the globe are treated each year with adult stem cells. The diseases and conditions successfully treated by adult stem cells, as shown by published scientific evidence, continue to expand, with published success for numerous cancers, spinal cord injury, heart damage, multiple sclerosis, sickle cell anemia, and many others.

Here are a few samples of adult stem cell advances in the last year.

* Heart damage.  Adult stem cells continue to pile up the evidence for their success at improving the health of damaged hearts.  Repair of damaged heart muscle in patients has been documented both for new heart attack damage as well as for patients with chronic heart failure.  Doctors at Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles used adult stem cells from the hearts of the patients themselves, grown in the lab and then injected back into the patients’ own hearts.  They found that the adult stem cells could re-grow damaged heart muscle and reduce scars in the heart tissue.  Meanwhile Yale scientists used a young girl’s own bone marrow adult stem cells to grow heart tissue and blood vessels to repair the girl’s congenital heart problem.  And doctors from the Texas Heart Institute in Houston presented evidence that adult stem cells from a patient’s own bone marrow could repair damaged areas of hearts suffering from severe heart failure, allowing the heart to increase its pumping capacity to deliver oxygenated blood t the body.  If you think that using adult stem cells to treat heart damage is a new fad or unproven in the medical literature, you need to understand that it’s not.  Prof. Dr. med. Bodo-Eckehard Strauer of Germany recently published a review of his own and other’s clinical trials, starting with his first adult stem cell transplant for a heart patient back in 2001.

* Muscle repair.  Scientists at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine have shown that adult stem cells from the muscle of young mice can improve the health and extend the life of aged mice.  While this doesn’t mean that the cells are truly the fountain of youth, it highlights the possibility of using adult stem cells for muscle repair, as well as the ability eventually to isolate “rejuvenating factors” from adult stem cells in muscle or other tissues.

* New windpipes.  Italian Dr. Paolo Macchiarini, who is a Visiting Professor at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, continues to improve on his procedure to grow new windpipes for patients.  Dr. Macchiarini has grown new trachea for at least eight patients, using the patient’s own adult stem cells from bone marrow to grow functional windpipes in patients with cancer or other tracheal problems.  His most recent advance this year was using a synthetic substrate on which the adult stem cells are seeded, allowing them to grow and take the shape of a normal windpipe.

* Grow your own transfusion.  French scientists showed for the first time that a few adult stem cells from a patient could be used to grow enough red blood cells in the lab for a transfusion.  The adult stem cells efficiently produced new cells that survived transfusion back into the patient’s body and functioned normally.

If you’d like to see a few more samples of the tremendous success of adult stem cells, see the videos at http://www.stemcellresearchfacts.org

Dr. Prentice is Senior Fellow for Life Sciences at the Family Research Council.

 

 

Adult Stem Cell Foundation Launched In Ireland

Wednesday, April 25th, 2012

A leading world expert on adult stem cell research launches The Adult Stem-cell Foundation of Ireland in Dublin today.

Professor Colin McGuckin who is a director of the new foundation, is the Vatican’s advisor on stem cells. He is also a director of The Cell Therapy Research Institute in Lyon, France

Speaking at the launch, Professor McGuckin said: “Like all countries in Europe, Ireland must look to the future to protect the population and be ready for new treatments. We cannot simply look back and say, ‘I wish we had prepared for that’. In my career, I worked with children who would be alive today, if more stem cell banks had been available.”

The foundation has been set up to provide awareness and information about adult stem cells,  research, development and therapies; to support people in need of or undergoing stem cell therapy; and to support the development of an all-Ireland stem-cell bank and to support adult stem-cell research and development.

On the issue of umbilical cord blood collection, Professor McGuckin added: “Umbilical cord blood, with 130 million births per year, remains the most available stem cell source. The health of Irish citizens demands that we debate now what we can do and umbilical cord blood and adult stem cells must be part of that debate”.

Professor McGuckin believes that Ireland must fund adult stem cell research and be ready to understand the socio-economic issues surrounding cellular therapy, stem cell banking, facilities provision, law and the relevant medical technology.

Adult stem cells are found in bone marrow, peripheral blood, umbilical cord blood, skeletal muscle, skin and teeth. They have been used to successfully treat leukaemia and related blood cancers for many years.

Umbilical cord blood and bone marrow treatments have seen the highest success rate to date. These critical adult stem cells can treat leukaemia, lymphoma, sickle cell disease, thalassaemia and immune deficiencies.

Over 70 diseases are treatable with cord blood and over 15 clinical trials are under way for new conditions. Although most treatments are for third parties (“allogeneic”), cord blood can treat the same person (“autologous”) – which is essential for regenerative medicine.

Professor McGuckin’s research group was the first to identify a rare group of cells with similar characteristics to embryonic stem cells and to develop them into non-blood tissues such as the liver, brain and pancreas. His latest clinical trial includes the use of a child’s own cord blood for the treatment of severe neonatal hypoxia, which may lead to cerebral palsy.

He is also developing a treatment for children with congenital bone malformations such as Cleft Palate, using the child’s own mesenchymal stem cells to make bone implants.

For further information http://www.asfi.ie