Monthly Archives: March 2017

Stem cell procedure could be next wave in sports medicine – The Boston Globe

Posted: March 20, 2017 at 5:42 pm


The Boston Globe
Stem cell procedure could be next wave in sports medicine
The Boston Globe
FORT MYERS, Fla. With a painful shot in October that left him unable to bend his prized arm for days, Red Sox lefthander Drew Pomeranz joined what he and others hope is a transformative development in sports medicine. At the conclusion of the 2016 ...

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Beware the hype on stem-cell breakthroughs – The Globe and Mail

Posted: March 20, 2017 at 5:42 pm

Health science gets a lot of attention in the popular press. People love hearing about breakthroughs, paradigm shifts and emerging cures. The problem is, these stories are almost always misleading.

While optimistic miscalculations of the state of biomedical research may seem as if it were a harmless distraction, there is a growing body of evidence that suggests it can be the source of real social harm. It can drive unrealistic expectations, affect the public utilization of health-care resources and even shape a less-than-ideal research agenda. It can also help to legitimize the marketing of unproven therapies.

This week, the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) reported on three individuals who went blind after receiving an unproven stem cell treatment at a Florida clinic. The patients paid thousands of dollars for what they thought was a clinical trial on the use of stem cells to treat macular degeneration.

The primary fault, both legally and morally, for the marketing and use of unproven stem-cell therapies lies with the providers who are involved with the practice. We need national regulators (e.g., Health Canada, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration) and the bodies that oversee the relevant health-care professionals (e.g., the colleges that regulate physicians) to take a more active role a point noted by Dr. George Daley in an essay accompanying the NEJM case report.

Indeed, it is hard to blame patients for being drawn to providers that present optimistic portrayals of benefit. We live in confusing times. It is becoming increasingly difficult to tease out the real science from the bad and the fake health news from a genuinely exciting scientific advance. Not only is the science twisted by multiple systemic forces publication pressures, overenthusiastic news releases, commercial interests and media spin misinformation is being broadcast on a growing number of communication platforms. Social media, for example, have allowed for the rapid dissemination of false promises and creation of confirmation bubbles in which like-minded believers can trade anecdotes of success. And studies have shown clinics exploit platforms such as Twitter to create buzz about and demand for unproven therapies.

For the general public, here is a good rule of thumb: Doubt every claim that suggests a significant breakthrough. Doubt everything. This may sound a tad cynical, but if you adopt this approach you will be pleasantly surprised when something actually pans out. More important, this nothing-ever-works-as-promised strategy will be correct 99 per cent of the time.

For patients seeking a treatment, be cautious of any clinic offering a therapy that seems too good to be true, because virtually every time it will be too good to be true.

Consider stem-cell research. Think of all the hype, the headlines about near-future applications and the pronouncement about revolutionary regenerative therapies. This hand waving has been going on for almost two decades. So much so that the phrase stem cells has morphed into cultural marker for cutting edge. But despite all this unrelenting, upbeat noise, there are very few stem-cell therapies that are currently ready for clinical application. Daley, who is a renowned stem-cell researcher and the current dean of Harvard Medical School, concludes there are just a handful: those used for the blood-related ailments and for the skin (epithelium) conditions. The International Society for Stem Cell Research agrees with Daley and notes the list of diseases for which stem-cell treatments have been shown to be beneficial is still very short.

Dont get me wrong; I believe stem-cell research remains a fantastically promising area of science. But true medical breakthroughs are rare. Incredibly rare. In fact, if a study claims a large effect size, which is often the case in stories about breakthroughs, there is a good chance the results will be overturned by subsequent work. In a well-known 2003 analysis, it was found that out of 101 studies published between 1979 and 1983 in top science journals and framed as clinically promising interventions, only one was used extensively for the licensed indications (yes, about 99 per cent of the peer-reviewed predictions were wrong). The authors concluded that even the most promising findings of basic research take a long time to translate into clinical experimentation, and adoption in clinical practice is rare.

Yes, we need regulators to crack down on the marketing of unproven stem-cell therapies. As demonstrated by these recent reports of treatment-induced blindness, these clinics can cause serious harm. But we also need to do our best to curb the science noise that helps to legitimize the false claims made by the purveyors of stem-cell products. Scientists, clinicians, policy makers and journalists should do their best to counter misinformation in all its forms.

More good science, less science-y noise.

Timothy Caulfield is Canada Research Chair in Health Law and Policy at the University of Alberta, a Trudeau Fellow and author of Is Gwyneth Paltrow Wrong About Everything?

This story first appeared in Healthy Debate, an online publication guided by health-care professionals and patients that covers health policy and evidence-based medicine in Canada.

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Borrowing from nature: UW-Madison scientists use plants to grow stem cells – Chippewa Herald

Posted: March 20, 2017 at 5:42 pm

To grow clusters of human stem cells that mimic organs in the lab and might be used someday in tissue implants, Bill Murphy, a UW-Madison professor of biomedical engineering, creates tiny scaffolds made of plastic or rubber.

The three-dimensional scaffolds must support the cells and feed them, help them organize and allow them to communicate.

One spring day in 2014, Murphy looked out his office window near UW Hospital, onto the universitys Lakeshore Nature Preserve, and saw a structure that does those very things naturally: plants specifically, cellulose, the main component of the cell walls of green plants.

Now, Murphy and Gianluca Fontana, a UW-Madison post-doctoral fellow with help from Olbrich Botanical Gardens have grown skin, brain, bone marrow and blood vessel cells on cellulose from plants such as parsley, spinach, vanilla and bamboo.

Plants could be an alternative to artificial scaffolds for growing stem cells, the researchers reported Monday in the journal Advanced Healthcare Materials.

Rather than having to manufacture these devices using high-tech approaches, we could literally pick them off of a tree, said Murphy, co-director of the UW-Madison Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine Center.

The strength, porosity and large surface area of plants could prove superior to making scaffolds using current methods, such as 3-D printing and injection molding, Murphy said.

Plants have a huge capacity to grow cell populations, he said. They can deliver fluids very efficiently to their leaves ... At the microscale, theyre very well organized.

In addition, there are many plants to chose from. After Murphys inspirational gaze out the window, he and Fontana tested plants as scaffolds for stem cells using varieties they could easily obtain: parsley, spinach, jewelweed, water horsetail, summer lilac and, from the UW Arboretum, softstem bulrush.

Then Fontana asked John Wirth, Olbrich's conservatory curator, about other species that might work. Wirth invited Fontana to walk through the tropical greenhouse and take samples back to his lab.

I had never had a request like this before; it made me look at plant material in a different way, Wirth said. I think its a fantastic way of using these pieces of living tissue, to grow human tissue.

Olbrich plants that proved useful include vanilla, bamboo, wasabi, elephant ear, zebra plant and various orchids.

To use plants as scaffolds, the scientists strip away all of the cells, leaving husks of cellulose. Since human cells have no affinity for plants, they add peptides as biological fasteners.

Theyre like grappling hooks for the cells to attach to the plant, Murphy said.

To determine if plant scaffolds could really replace those made of plastic or rubber, the researchers hope to test the cellulose models in animal studies this year.

A major goal of tissue engineering is to develop implants that could regenerate tissue in people to repair bone or muscle damage after traumatic injuries, for example.

It is likely the human body wouldn't reject tissue implants formed on plant scaffolds because the plant cells would be removed, Murphy said.

Were crossing kingdoms, he said. But were optimistic that these materials would be well-tolerated.

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Stem cell therapy is safe for stroke patients, study shows – Science Daily

Posted: March 20, 2017 at 5:41 pm


Science Daily
Stem cell therapy is safe for stroke patients, study shows
Science Daily
It was those longer-term results, particularly in the small number of patients who got therapy early, that suggested the cell therapy group might be more likely to continue to recover, with reduced disability and fewer infections one year out than the ...
Cancer Stem Cell Therapy Market Share, Trends, Opportunities & Forecast 2017-2022Medgadget (blog)

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Stem cell therapy is safe for stroke patients, study shows - Science Daily

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Cell Therapy — Achieving Success on the Road to … – Marketwired – Marketwired (press release)

Posted: March 20, 2017 at 5:41 pm

TORONTO, ON--(Marketwired - March 20, 2017) - During an informative session on Wednesday, April 5, 2016, industry experts from Fisher BioServices, Kristen Franklin, Client Services Manager and Amy Hendricks, Project Manager will review some of the key components to consider when developing a strategy to minimize risk, manage cost, and ultimately deliver a product to market.

The success of developing a cellular therapy rests on the ability to deliver a viable, potent product. This positive end-result is directly attributable to the strategy in place and the supporting processes. A reliable cell therapy development strategy is imperative to ensuring your therapeutic materials remain viable from the point of collection, through manufacture, to the final clinical site delivery.

Key Learning Objectives:

For more information or to register for this complimentary event, visit: Cell Therapy - Achieving Success on the Road to Commercialization

Xtalks, powered by Honeycomb Worldwide Inc., is a leading provider of educational webinars to the global Life Sciences community. Every year thousands of industry practitioners (from pharmaceutical & biotech companies, private & academic research institutions, healthcare centers, etc.) turn to Xtalks for access to quality content. Xtalks helps Life Science professionals stay current with industry developments, trends and regulations. Xtalks webinars also provide perspectives on key issues from top industry thought leaders and service providers.

To learn more about Xtalks visit http://xtalks.comFor information about hosting a webinar visit http://xtalks.com/sponsorship.ashx

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Cell Therapy -- Achieving Success on the Road to ... - Marketwired - Marketwired (press release)

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Stem cells seem speedier in space – Phys.Org

Posted: March 20, 2017 at 5:41 pm

March 20, 2017 by Melissa Gaskill Cultured stem cells. Credit: BioServe Inc., University of Colorado

Growing significant numbers of human stem cells in a short time could lead to new treatments for stroke and other diseases. Scientists are sending stem cells to the International Space Station to test whether these cells proliferate faster in microgravity without suffering any side effects.

Therapeutic uses require hundreds of millions of stem cells and currently no efficient way exists to produce such quantities. Previous research suggests that microgravity could help, and the space station is home to the nation's only national lab in microgravity.

Some types of stem cells grow faster in simulated microgravity, according to Abba Zubair, a researcher at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Florida. Zubair is principal investigator for the Microgravity Expanded Stem Cells investigation, which is cultivating human stem cells aboard the space station for use in clinical trials back on Earth. He holds a doctor of medicine degree in transfusion medicine and cell therapy and a doctorate of philosophy in tumor immunology.

Human stem cells are cells that have not yet specialized in function and can divide into a spectrum of cell types, rejuvenating and repairing tissue throughout a person's lifetime. Stem cells in every organ of the body, including skin and bones, maintain those organs and repair tissue by dividing and differentiating into specialized cells.

Harvesting a person's stem cells and growing enough of them for use in therapies has proven difficult, though. Researchers have successfully grown mesenchymal stem cells, found in bone marrow, but growing sufficient quantities takes weeks. That could be too late for treatment of some conditions.

"Stem cells are inherently designed to remain at a constant number," Zubair explains. "We need to grow them faster, but without changing their characteristics."

The first phase of the investigation, he adds, is answering the question: "Do stem cells grow faster in space and can we grow them in such a manner that they are safe to use in patients?"

Investigators will examine the space-grown cells in an effort to understand the mechanism behind microgravity's effects on them. The long-term goal is to learn how to mimic those effects and develop a safe and reliable way to produce stem cells in the quantities needed.

The second phase will involve testing clinical application of the cells in patients. Zubair has been studying treatment of stroke patients with lab-grown stem cells and plans to compare those results with use of the space-grown stem cells.

"What is unique about this investigation is that we are not only looking at the biology of the cells and how they grow, but focusing on application, how we can use them to treat patients," he says.

The investigation expands existing knowledge of how microgravity affects stem cell growth and differentiation as well as advances future studies on how to produce large numbers of stem cells for treating stroke and other conditions.

The faster that happens, the better for those who could benefit from stem cell therapies.

Explore further: Study shows adipose stem cells may be the cell of choice for therapeutic applications

An international team of researchers, funded by Morris Animal Foundation, has shown that adipose (fat) stem cells might be the preferred stem cell type for use in canine therapeutic applications, including orthopedic diseases ...

Abba Zubair, M.D., Ph.D, believes that cells grown in the International Space Station (ISS) could help patients recover from a stroke, and that it may even be possible to generate human tissues and organs in space. He just ...

Consider it one physician's giant leap for mankind. Today, the latest rocket launch from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, included a payload of several samples of donated adult stem cells from a research ...

NASA and the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (CASIS) are enabling research aboard the International Space Station that could lead to new stem cell-based therapies for medical conditions faced on Earth and in ...

A study performed on the NASA Space Shuttle Discovery showed that exposure of mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs) to microgravity inhibited their ability to differentiate and generate most cell lineages, needed for the development ...

Stem cells hold great promise for transforming medical care related to a diverse range of conditions, but the cells often lose some of their therapeutic potential when scientists try to grow and expand them in the laboratory. ...

As children, we learned about our solar system's planets by certain characteristicsJupiter is the largest, Saturn has rings, Mercury is closest to the sun. Mars is red, but it's possible that one of our closest neighbors ...

(Phys.org)Astronomers have inspected a mysterious isolated star cluster complex designated SH2 in the galaxy NGC 1316 (also known as Fornax A). The results of their study, which were published Mar. 1 in a paper on arXiv.org, ...

Growing significant numbers of human stem cells in a short time could lead to new treatments for stroke and other diseases. Scientists are sending stem cells to the International Space Station to test whether these cells ...

Astronomers studying Mars first noted the presence of yellow clouds on its surface in the 1870's. Today these windblown dust storms on Mars are well known, and can span local, regional or even global in scale. Storms can ...

A SpaceX reusable cargo ship splashed down in the Pacific Ocean safely on Sunday, ending a mission to supply astronauts on the International Space Station, the company said.

Johns Hopkins University scientist Kirby Runyon wants to make one thing clear: Regardless of what one prestigious scientific organization says to the contrary, Pluto is a planet. So is Europa, commonly known as a moon of ...

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Novel Diabetes Drugs May Protect Heart (AZN, LLY) – Investopedia

Posted: March 20, 2017 at 5:41 pm


Investopedia
Novel Diabetes Drugs May Protect Heart (AZN, LLY)
Investopedia
A new class of drugs called SGLT-2 inhibitors has demonstrated significant reduction of risks associated with death and hospitalization for heart failure in diabetes patients, compared to other therapies. The data was presented at the American College ...
Newer type 2 diabetes drugs show heart protective quality in studyReuters
Diabetes meds from AZ, J&J and Lilly sharply cut death rates in real-world analysisFiercePharma
Real world study shows cardiovascular benefit to SGLT-2 drugsBioPharma Dive
Proactive Investors UK -Diabetes.co.uk -iNVEZZ
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Cellular jetlag seems to favor the development of diabetes – Science Daily

Posted: March 20, 2017 at 5:41 pm


Science Daily
Cellular jetlag seems to favor the development of diabetes
Science Daily
With type 2 diabetes affecting younger and younger people in the western world, researchers work on understanding how lifestyle changes in recent decades contribute to this ever-expanding epidemic, in the view of finding news strategies to curb it ...

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SGMC Diabetes Management Center Hosting Free Grocery Store Tour Monday Night – ValdostaToday.com

Posted: March 20, 2017 at 5:41 pm


ValdostaToday.com
SGMC Diabetes Management Center Hosting Free Grocery Store Tour Monday Night
ValdostaToday.com
VALDOSTA Approximately 1,121,495 people in Georgia, or 14.2% of the adult population, have diabetes, according to the American Diabetes Association. Every year an estimated 60,000 people in Georgia are diagnosed with diabetes. Staying healthy ...
Diabetes support group heads to the grocery store for lessonWALB-TV

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State-of-art new clinic – and vets – The Dickinson Press

Posted: March 19, 2017 at 4:42 pm

West was part of a team a few years ago at Kansas State University that used maggots. The maggots ate the dead flesh out of a horse's hoof. With that and stem cells and surgery, they saved a severely lame mare from euthanasia.

And then there's West River's other veterinarian from the millennial generationJenna Innes, 31, who has been practicing at West River for about two years.

Innes recalled examining an extremely thin dog that couldn't put on weight. Its owner told Innes they had tried to find help elsewhere but the problem hadn't been successfully diagnosed and making it worse, people, suspecting the owner of animal neglect, had even reported the situation to authorities.

It was Innes who was able to figure out what was wrong an odd pancreatic disorder and successfully treated it. The dog is now teetering on being too pudgy, Innes said.

Innes and West, the clinic's two newest and youngest vets, "bring youth and energy, new technologies and information," said Dr. Ethan Andress, who has practiced at the clinic for about 17 years.

"They are two very talented veterinarians that have an energy and passion for what they do...the next generation to take over the clinic," Andress said.

In addition, they and the clinic's other three vets get to practice in a new state-of-the-art facility with such equipment as a digital x-ray machine and in-house blood machines that give immediate results for most tests.

An open house to celebrate the clinic's one-year anniversary is set for April 21.

The new clinic, at 203 Highway 12 E., is located across town from the old clinic, which is now being used for boarding and storage, West said.

West, whose strongest interest is equine medicine, said the clinic is seeing a doubling in recent years on time spent providing equine services.

West also has started Ferrier Days at the clinic bringing in ferrier Casey Kalenze from Bowman to provide services. While there, horses can also get other services deworming, vaccinations, exams.

"It's a convenience, saves (the horse owners) mileage," West said.

She's also considering adding alternative treatments such as acupuncture and chiropractic help.

Innes, who grew up on a sheep and cattle ranch, has a general practice, but because of her background has become the go-to vet for the clinic's sheep and goat clients.

"I get phone calls from all across the state," she said.

Innes, who grew up in Wyoming on the family ranch, said her family knew tough times.

"We were pretty broke," said Innes, who was age 12 when her dad died.

So she said she knows how hard it is sometimes financially to call a vet in to help.

The West River veterinarians say they are aware that many pet owners and livestock producers have a limited budget.

"We do as much as we can...We can come up with creative solutions," West said. "We can do a lot of good even within a limited budget.

Innes said she knows personally the impact of one sick animal: "I remember how much that one cow can affect the family. That's a person's livelihood."

Innes said she wanted to be a veterinarian from the moment she knew what the word meant.

"I always wanted to save animals...I always wished I could help," Innes said.

She said she remembers regularly bringing homeless animals home and caring for them, sometimes in secret locations, unbeknownst to the family.

"My parents kind of got used to it," she said.

Innes, a graduate of Auburn University's vet school in Alabama, said she made it through the extremely rigorous program not because she's a genius, but because, "I'm a really hard worker."

She said she kind of lives by something she read once: "If you're lucky enough to find a way of life you love, you have to find the courage to live it."

Innes, who wanted to come back close to home to practice, convinced a vet at West River to be her preceptor for her vet school's required two-month work clinic she had to complete.

The clinic would end up offering her a position.

Now she cares for everything from sheep, goats, cattle, dogs, to sugar gliders and ferrets. She once had to break the news to someone who thought they had bought two male guinea pigs that the one getting "fat" was definitely not male.

West grew up in Menoken in a rodeo family.

West said her parents recall that since she was tiny she was forever talking about becoming a veterinarian.

"I loved working with and helping animals...especially liked working with horses," West said in a recent interview.

As an undergraduate pursuing a microbiology degree at North Dakota State University, she and her quarter horse, Henry, competed on the school's rodeo club in team roping, and she maintained her violin playing by performing with a group at nearby Concordia College in Minnesota.

Later at Kansas State University's vet school, she worked toward an expertise in equine medicine and surgery.

She said she always planned to come back to North Dakota, but worked in Iowa for a time while her husband, a chemical engineer, had a position there.

He has since left that career, getting back into ranching at his grandparents' place north of Hettinger where the couple and their daughter, age 1, now live.

West said it was during vet school that she became familiar with the West River clinic. For needed college credits she worked at West River for a two-week unpaid externship. When one of the vets, Dr. Donald Safratowich retired, she was contacted about taking his place.

While a main focus is doctoring horses, she also works on every other type animal that walks in or is carried in: About every week they get animals that have been hit by cars or tractors and a lot by ATVS, she said.

Going out in the field, West and Innes have experienced hesitancy from some livestock producers when they show up.

"They'll ask, 'Where's one of the guys?'" Said West, who is 5 foot 3 inches tall.

But she said after they observe her at work, the outcomes, everything's fine.

"You do one job for them and they see you really know what you're doing and it's not an issue any longer," she said.

Innes said clients who are reluctant to accept a female vet are her favorite clients.

"I love clients like that. I make it my goal to win them over...prove myself," Innes said.

Innes said she has natural advantages like her small hands. She said ranchers have express how they wished they could do what she does.

With her small hands and arms she has an easier time getting in to help the mama cows, plus she has the tools and various techniques to make the job easier.

"More than nine times out of 10 they'll (the ranchers) end up saying, 'You're OK,' " Innes said.

But she said she also understands their attitudes: "My grandfather was an old-school rancher."

She said one thing that surprised her about being a veterinarian was the "compassion fatigue." She said from growing up on a ranch she knows it's expected that animals die, sometimes. It's understood and dealt with.

But when she as a vet can't save an animal like a past case, a dog that after five hours of surgery couldn't be saved that's tough.

"We care so much... I don't know if people realize how much we can take home," she said.

Innes said clinic's veterinarians are more than happy to and do take phone calls and questions from the general public about anything, from vaccination questions to whatever.

Innes said she is so proud to work at this state-of-the-art facility a 12,300-square-foot building on nine acres and hopes people will come to the open house April 21 to see it.

"We have some of the best medical equipment," she said.

And it's a team effort.

She said the veterinarians decided to have one group office in the new building instead of individual offices for each vet. That way, they sit together and discuss cases as a group. Sometimes, an x-ray is analyzed by more than one set of eyes.

"You get your money's worth...five vets for the price of one," Innes said.

Actually, 5.5 vets, because the retiree still comes in to help, she said.

The clinic's other vets besides Innes, West and Andress are Lisa Henderson, Bleaux Johnson and part-time help from longtime veterinarian Dr. Donald Safratowich, who is retired, sort of.

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