Archive for the ‘Stem Cell Worx’ Category

Funding Shifts Toward Adult Stem Cell Research

Thursday, February 20th, 2014

In December 2013, the Charlotte Lozier Institute released figures that found that the bulk of stem cell funding grants in California and Maryland are moving toward “ethical” research that doesn’t use human embryos.

In 2007, the Maryland Stem Cell Research Commission funded eleven projects that used human embryos and four that used adult stem cells.  In 2013, the Maryland commission funded only one embryonic stem cell project and twenty eight non-embryonic projects.

“Maryland’s grants can be seen as “an important bellwether” for the research choices, as the State is home to the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, a leading site for stem cell research, Mr. Tarne, author for papers for Charlotte Lozier Institute said.

The two states’ growing preferences for “ethical” stem cell projects reflect the scientific community’s belief that “the best hope for rapid medical advances lies with morally unproblematic alternatives,” said Chuck Donovan, President of the Charlotte Lozier Institute, which is the research arm of the Susan B. Anthony List.

“It’s a matter of starting to recognize that where all the ‘return’ is – especially if we’re talking about helping a patient — is in adult stem cells,” said David Prentice, Senior Fellow for Life Sciences at the Family Research Council and a member of the advisory board for the Kansas Adult Stem Cell Research Center.

“It validates what we have been saying for years, which is ‘the ethical is the successful’ and that’s where we should put all our resources,” said Mr. Prentice.

“This is the beginning,” said Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback on Nov. 23, 2013, when the Midwest Stem Cell Therapy Center held its inaugural conference.

“We are catching it right as the field is really starting to burgeon,” he said, according to the Kansas Health Institute News Service.  The Center (approved in April 2013) is “a visionary move” to “support science that can actually lead to a lot of new therapies and potentially change the face of medicine,” said Dr. Buddhadeb Dawn, Director of the center, which is housed at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City.

“Excluding embryonic stem cell research is not an impediment,” Dr. Dawn said. “Adult stem cells are the ones that have been shown to be effective for patient treatment,” he said.

Separately, the National Institutes of Health remains a major player in all kinds of stem cell research: In fiscal 2012, it issued $146.5 million for embryonic stem cell research and $504 million for non-embryonic projects; both were record-breaking amounts for the agency.

Link to video:

Source:   www.washingtontimes.com

Stem Cells Save Grandad’s Life

Friday, February 14th, 2014

Source:  www.mirror.co.uk

David Pyne saved by stem cells

A grandad given just months to live has beaten leukaemia – after getting stem cells from two babies’ umbilical cords.

The move was the “only option” to save David Pyne, 60, after all other treatments failed. He was one of the first to have the procedure.

He said of the stem cell transplant: “To think two newborns saved an old man’s life is just marvellous and it’s given me more time with my own grandchildren.”

The dad-of-four was diagnosed with cancer in August 2012 and had chemotherapy and blood transfusions.

He desperately needed a stem cell donor but a match could not be found and he was given just 12 to 18 months to live.

But then he was offered cells from the umbilical cords of one baby in America and another in France.

He said: “Things were looking pretty grim until I got the news about the possibility of an umbilical cord stem cell transplant.

“The team found two separate umbilical cord donors that were a good match.

“I felt elated.

“It was something to hope for, like a lifeline was being thrown to you. I grabbed it with both hands and hoped for the best.”

The grandad-of-seven, of Wythenshawe, Manchester, was treated in September at The Christie Hospital in the city.

He spent six weeks there and is now in remission.

Dr Mike Dennis, director of The Christie’s transplant unit, said: “Umbilical cord blood is very rich in stem cells, which being so immature have phenomenal regenerative powers.

“These were a great alternative source of cells for David, in fact the only option, as after a worldwide search he had no other donor.”

Patients with leukaemia need stem cells to replace damaged ones.

The blood in the umbilical cord is so immature the recipient can accept the cells more easily.

Cure-giving blood is flushed away

Hundreds of patients could have vital treatment if more stem cells were harvested from newborns.

Although a growing number of mums are donating placenta and umbilical cord blood, around 65,000 litres are thrown away every year.

Doctors say 80% of transplant requests could be met if 50,000 units of cord blood were saved.

Source:   www.mirror.co.uk