Stem cell treatment goes from lab to operating room

Female libido hardly played any role at all while the search to keep a man’s block and tackle working was quite literally the search for the Holy Grail, El Dorado, and Free Energy look like child’s play in comparison. purchasing viagra in canada http://www.devensec.com/rules-regs/decregs306.html Express your love There are certain things relating cialis no prescription http://www.devensec.com/forms/Gas_permit_application.pdf to sexual disorder. This can help to rule out any physical causes of impotence Regardless discount cialis of age, in case a man is looking for to solve such erection issue by transforming the size of penis and making it much better. In some countries, as an illustration, the US and Canada, this could lead to time in prison. cheap viagra discount

By Miriam Falco, CNN Medical News Managing Editor
May 4, 2010 8:10 a.m. EDT

http://www.cnn.com/2010/HEALTH/05/04/stem.cells.lou.gehrigs/index.html

Atlanta, Georgia — Imagine having your back cut open, part of your spine removed, a stabilizing device that resembles a mini oil rig mounted on your back, the outer membrane of your spinal cord sliced open and experimental stem cells injected into it — all for the advancement of science because it’s not expected to benefit you.

John Cornick, 51, did just that earlier this month as part of a groundbreaking clinical trial.

Almost a year ago, Cornick was told he had ALS — better known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. The diagnosis left him “fairly devastated,” he says.

He knew the prospects were grim because there is no cure.

But John wasn’t giving up so quickly, nor was his wife, Gina.

“I knew he was a fighter from the beginning and he really wanted to do something,” Gina Cornick says. She found information about a clinical trial on online and immediately signed him up, even though she had no idea where it was being held.

ALS destroys the nerve cells in the brain and spine which control muscle movement. When the brain can no longer tell muscles to move, they eventually die, depriving the patient of the ability to move arms and legs and eventually breathe.

The goal of this phase 1 trial is to determine whether fetal stem cells can safely be injected into the spinal cord. Ultimately, researchers hope to show that these cells may slow or halt the progression of the fatal disease.

But for now, the only goal is establishing safety.

Clinical trial

The Cornicks live in North Carolina, just a few hours from Atlanta, Georgia’s Emory University, the site of the trial. It is the first FDA-approved clinical trial to inject fetal stem cells directly into the spinal cord of an adult.

Dr. Jonathan Glass, director of Emory’s ALS center, is overseeing the trial. Cornick and two previous patients in the trial are heroes, says Glass, because at this point, the trial will likely produce only information, not results.

“In reality what do these patients have? Time, families and their life and we’re putting all of these at risk,” says Glass.

Dr. Lucie Bruijn, science director of the ALS Association, says the progress being made in this clinical trial is exciting. “We’ve been able to move it forward … from animal testing now into actual patients.” The treatment had not been tried in humans before.

Glass hopes this trial will lead to a new form of treatment for people with ALS. “We’re testing multiple things: We’re testing the safety of the surgery; we’re testing the cells; we’re testing immunosuppressants[because scientists do not know whether the body will reject the cells].” They are also testing how well Cornick handles this major surgical procedure, says Glass.

“After we’re finished with the first 12 or 18 patients we will know whether this is surgery that patients can tolerate.”

As he was prepped for surgery, Cornick was hopeful but realistic. “Well, of course you’d like to get up and walk … but I know that’s not going to happen.”

Stem cells

The stem cells used in the surgery are shipped overnight from Maryland, where Neuralstem, the company funding the trial, is based. The stem cells’ source is donated tissue from the spinal cord of an 8-week old aborted fetus, which was donated to the company. The company has developed a method that enables growth of millions of stem cells from this single source of human nerve stem cells.

Before the surgery can begin, a technician at Emory has to verify that a majority of stem cells made it to Atlanta alive. At least 70 percent have to be viable. In this case three samples under the microscope showed 85 percent of the cells arrived alive.

Lead researcher Dr. Eva Feldman, a neurologist at the University of Michigan, designed the trial just four years ago. After a lot of animal testing, her team determined that using fetal nerve stems rather than human embryonic or adult stem cells (such as bone marrow stem cells) was most effective, she says.

Stem cells have the ability to turn into different cells in the body. However, human embryonic stem cells, which come from 4- or 5-day-old embryos, also been found to sometimes turn into cancer cells. Fetal stem cells, such as those used in this trial, are a few weeks older and have already taken on a specific identity — in this case nerve cells.

Feldman says the fetal stem cells used in this trial did not become any of the unwanted cell types. “That’s very, very important,” she says.

Surgery

Animal testing also proved very useful when it came to figuring out how to actually inject the stem cells. Emory University’s neurosurgeon Dr. Nicholas Boulis invented the device that holds the needle that injects the stem cells. The goal is to inject the cells without injuring the spine and causing even more paralysis. He practiced on 100 pigs before attempting the procedure on a human.

Boulis says it’s critical that the injection be done in a very slow and controlled way.

“If you inject quickly, you’re going to create pressure at the head of the needle and that can cause damage,” Boulis says. That pressure can also inflate an area in the spinal cord which could cause the stem cells to seep back out of the cord when the needle is pulled out, he says. “So by pumping [cells] in slowly you have more security that you are not going to have reflux and you’re not going to have damage.”

Dr. Jeffrey Rothstein, who heads the ALS research center at Johns Hopkins University and is not connected to this trial, said work on this method is a big achievement. “This is purely about how to surgically deliver cellular therapy to spinal cord,” he says. “It’s never been done before.”

After the spinal cord was exposed, the injections began. Cornick got five — each one contains about 100,000 stem cells.

The four-and-a-half hour surgery went smoothly, Boulis, says. “There were no surprises.”

Post-surgery

A day after surgery, Cornick was lying flat in a hospital bed, chatting and laughing with some friends from North Carolina.

One week after surgery, he says he felt amazingly well and was still hopeful the cells would do some good for him.

Two weeks later Cornick’s stitches were removed and he was able to drive home. But he will be making frequent visits back to Atlanta as Glass and his team continue to monitor him.

Neuralstem’s Chief Scientific Officer Karl Johe says after the trial’s safety board reviews all existing data, including Cornick’s results, a fourth patient can be treated with the stem cells.

“Patients Four, Five and Six will receive twice as many [stem cell] injections,” Johe says. They will get five more injections on the other side of the spinal cord compared with Cornicks’s surgery.

Cornick expects the researchers will follow his progress for a long time. He says he understands the need for people to be willing to participate in experimental research like this.

“For me it just seemed like the right thing to do. I almost felt I had an obligation to do this,” he says. “To help other people and myself.”

UM researcher to test stem cell treatment for Alzheimer’s

8:00 pm, May 2, 2010

Results from ALS trials spur optimism
By Ryan Beene And Tom Henderson

http://www.crainsdetroit.com/article/20100502/FREE/305029968/1069

Buoyed by early results of stem cell-based trials on patients with Lou Gehrig’s disease, Eva Feldman, M.D., co-director of the A. Alfred Taubman Medical Research Institute at the University of Michigan Medical School, is now taking aim at a far bigger target: Alzheimer’s disease.

In late April, Feldman began raising $1.5 million from private donors to fund animal trials for a stem cell-based treatment of Alzheimer’s, a progressive degenerative disease that severely impacts brain function and afflicts more than 5.3 million people in the U.S. It is the seventh-leading cause of death in the nation.

Animal trials are required before Feldman can begin Phase I U.S. Food and Drug Administration trials for Alzheimer’s on humans. Tests on both safety and efficacy are done first on small rodents and then, if successful, on larger mammals.

Feldman said she hopes to apply for approval in 2013 for human Alzheimer’s trials and begin them in 2014.

The investigation into an Alzheimer’s treatment piggybacks on current Phase I human trials for patients with Lou Gehrig’s disease led by Feldman that are under way at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta.

The trials test the safety of injecting neural progenitor cells, essentially stem cells that have developed beyond the embryonic phase and are predisposed to becoming nerve cells, into the spinal cords of patients with Lou Gehrig’s disease.

Feldman will continue to serve as principal investigator on that trial — the first FDA-approved trial using stem cells on Lou Gehrig’s patients in the U.S. — as she and her team begin work on Alzheimer’s trials.

Eighteen Lou Gehrig’s patients will be tested in all. The disease, known formally as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS, afflicts as many as 30,000 patients in the U.S.

Feldman sped up her timetable for taking on Alzheimer’s after seeing promising early results with three Lou Gehrig’s patients. The first patient was injected on Jan. 19. The third operation, on April 14, was filmed by CNN.

Feldman said she is prohibited from discussing whether patients report such results as increases in strength or sensation. But there have been no ill effects from the three surgeries.

Each patient is injected at five spots on the spinal cord, with about 100,000 cells per injection.

Feldman said she is excited about expanding stem cell trials to Alzheimer’s because of the far larger pool of would-be patients.

The nerves and tissues also are narrowed due to fast delivery cialis http://foea.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/FEA-2012-ANNUAL-REPORT-PDF.pdf growing age. It is a serious health concern, which can ruin your generic cialis Visit Website sexual life. 2. However, almost viagra free pill all of them have some limitation of recurrence and certain side effects to affect the female fertility to some degree. By reducing acid production in stomach this not only helps cialis generika 20mg in enlargement of the penis but also treats for lesser ejections and other related erectile issues. “Alzheimer’s is going to be easier to do than ALS,” said Feldman.

She said that the brain can be injected with far more stem cells than the spinal cord, promising greater and faster benefits, and she said the surgery is far less invasive. Instead of needing to remove bone from the back, a tiny hole is cut into the skull in a relatively safe, easy procedure.

The transition from Lou Gehrig’s to Alzheimer’s disease is a natural one because the treatment potentially addresses the same problem. The neural progenitor stem cells work by surrounding specific large nerve cells that are sick and halting further degeneration caused by the disease, Feldman said.

“In the spinal cord, these nerve cells produce the nerve tissue fibers that extend through the muscles of our body, and in the brain, the same type of nerve cell facilitates thinking processes,” Feldman said.

“The kind of stem cells we’re using have a particular proclivity to rescue cholinergic neurons, and it’s cholinergic neurons that degenerate and become diseased in Lou Gehrig’s disease and Alzheimer’s disease.”

The surgeon in the current trials is Dr. Nicholas Boulis, an associate professor at Emory University who was formerly a fellow in Feldman’s research lab at UM.

Boulis specializes in movement disorders, such as Parkinson’s and Huntington’s diseases, and performs about 300 operations a year. He also heads a gene-therapy research lab and is involved in a project that aims to use gene therapy to treat Alzheimer’s.

Boulis said he hopes, if the FDA approves human tests, to do Feldman’s Phase I Alzheimer’s operations, too.

“If Eva thinks we can make progress, I’m her man,” he said.

The Phase I Lou Gehrig’s disease trials are scheduled to finish by the end of June 2011. If they go as hoped, Phase II trials, which assess efficacy, can begin as early as January 2012. Feldman said Phase II trials could add the UM hospital as a test site in addition to Emory.

Investigating a treatment for Alzheimer’s using stem cells is an “interesting approach” and a logical next step to investigate, said Dr. Ken Maiese, professor in the departments of neurology and anatomy and cell biology at Wayne State University Medical School.

“There’s really no good treatment for Alzheimer’s, although there are many trials going on” for drugs that deal with chemicals in the brain related to Alzheimer’s, Maiese said.

But those treat the symptoms, not the underlying issue of rapid brain cell degeneration that is a hallmark of Alzheimer’s.

Maiese cautioned that the science behind a stem cell treatment still has a long way to go, as in any treatment. Going from animal to human trials involves many unknowns.

Feldman said she recently took on a new, young ALS patient, to whom she could, for the first time in her 20 years of treating patients at UM, offer some encouraging words about future treatments.

“For 20 years, there has been little hope I could offer patients. Now there is truly tangible hope. We are truly beginning to try a therapy that can allow us to help halt the progress of this dangerous disease,” she said.

“Patients ask me “what will the future hold?’ I told my new patient, things are extremely hopeful now. The future is very bright. And not just with ALS or Alzheimer’s, but with Parkinson’s and Huntington’s, too.”