Posts Tagged ‘colostem’

Significant Milestone Reached for Adult Stem Cell Therapies

Saturday, April 2nd, 2011

International Stem Cell Society Tracks 750 Adult Stem Cell Patient Cases Significant milestone reached for field and promise of adult stem cell therapies.

Portland, OR, April 02, 2011 –(PR.com)

The International Cellular Medicine Society has accomplished a significant milestone through its Stem Cell Patient Treatment Registry. Today the Society announced that the ICMS Treatment Registry has reached over 750 patient cases being tracked. As a nonprofit organization dedicated to ensuring patient safety, facilitating physician education, and providing peer oversight, this level of oversight and transparency is a significant landmark for the for the field and promise of cell based medicine. “Patient safety is the foundation of the ICMS,” said Ricardo Rodriguez, MD, a director of the ICMS and co-chair of the Medical Advisory Board. “Through best practice standards, clinic accreditation and now this sizeable pool of patient outcome and complication data, the ICMS has established itself as the premiere organization in advancing adult stem cell treatments that are based on the principals of good patient care.” Participation in the Treatment Registry is reserved for those clinics that meet the Society’s minimum standards and been reviewed by the ICMS Institutional Review Board. The 750 patients have all received autologous adult stem cell treatments and have been tracked in the ICMS Treatment Registry, a secure, web-based data collection system that tracks patient-reported outcomes and complications from patient surveys and interviews at 3, 6, and 12 months, and 2, 3, 4, 5, 10 and 20 years after the treatment. The rate of complication from these treatments has been less than 2%, and no severe adverse events have been reported.

“To have this number of patients and have a rate of complications this low speaks to the safety profile of self-donated cells,” said David Audley, the Executive Director of the ICMS.

While the ICMS has collected tremendous amounts of data, the organization is adamant about maintaining the privacy of the patients and the confidentiality of the treatment protocols. The data stored in the Registry, including the processes by which the cells are collected and administered, as well as specific patient outcomes, are secure, private and available only to the clinic, the patient and select reviewers of the ICMS. These reviewers, in turn, only access Registry data to evaluate protocols and audit patient outcomes, and are bound by strict confidentiality and nondisclosure agreements. Individual members of the ICMS have no access to either patient data or the confidential processes that clinics utilize to treat patients. The ICMS does not publish outcomes from specific clinics. The ICMS does, however, publish all unadjudicated complaints and findings resulting from investigations on reported severe adverse events. The ICMS expects the number of patients tracked to increase rapidly and significantly with the recent launch of its Stem Cell Clinic Accreditation Program. As the field of cell based medicine continues to advance and the number of clinics offering stem cell treatments around the world grows, the need for the services of the ICMS as trusted and independent authority to collect patient data and evaluate clinics will expand. More information about the ICMS Registry and Clinic Accreditation Program can be found on the ICMS Website.  See details below.

About the International Cellular Medicine Society.  The ICMS is a physician guided international 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to patient safety and the protection of the practice of medicine and physician education through the production of global guidelines for the practice of cell based medicine. The society maintains three websites, www.cellmedicinesociety.org, focused on adult stem cell education and awareness for physicians and researchers; www.stemcellwatch.com, a portal for patient education and the collection of complaints against stem cells clinics; and www.cellregistry.org, a re-implantation registry to track the long term outcomes of adult stem cell based procedures and therapies.

Stem Cell Spray Heals Burns

Sunday, November 28th, 2010

 

 
Stem Cell Spray Heals Burns 
 
November 26th, 2010 @ 11:25pm
By Ed Yeates.    Video Courtesy of KSL.com

SALT LAKE CITY — A spray solution of a patient’s own stem cells is healing their severe burns. So far, early experiments under a University of Utah pilot project are showing some remarkable results.

What was once a serious burn on Kaye Adkins foot is healing nicely now because of a topical spray. With diabetes as a complication, the small but open wound had not healed after weeks of failed treatments.

Dr. Amalia Cochran with the university’s Burn Care Center says, “With a wound that is open for several months, as this patient suffered prior to seeing us in our burn clinic, we worry about a pretty heavy bacterial load there.”

But enter the evolutionary world of regenerative medicine, using almost a bedside stem cell technique that takes only about 15 minutes. With red cells removed, a concentrate of platelets and progenitor cells is combined with calcium and thrombin. The final mixture looks almost like Jello.

“I woke up and saw them with this big thin, looked like a needle, and I said you’re going to put that in my foot? And they said NO, we’re going to spray,” Adkins said.

Though her own skin graft had failed before, the topical spray was used during a second graft. It “took” and healed. “I had never heard of anything like that. It was just amazing,” Adkins said.

Adkins burn is healing and so is her heart. Coincidentally, stem cells were used during her bypass surgery five weeks ago to hasten healing for that procedure as well. While hundreds of heart patients have had stem cell treatments, burn patients are still few in numbers.

Cardiothoracic surgeon Amit Patel and burn care surgeon Amalia Cochran are experimenting on small burns for now. But down the road, both are hoping for large scale clinical trials on patients with much larger burns.

Patel asks, “Can we accelerate healing or improve healing. Then it’s the quality of healing. And then, we hopefully advance to decreasing the scarring process completely.”

“It’s my hope that in my career,” Cochran adds, “stem cells will completely revolutionize how we’re able to take care of patients. Not just with small burns that are challenging to heal, but with massive burn injuries as well.”

The military is keeping a close eye on the Utah project. The future for treating burns on soldiers could stagger the imagination even more. Patel says “regrowing your own skin in a bioreactor is very realistic and that’s not five years away even. We start with a biological band aid and hope to end up with basically synthetic skin that’s still derived from your own cells.”

In this dream of regenerative medicine, Patel believes we can only imagine a day when sheets of pristine skin might be available to any patient off the shelf.