Adult Stem Cells Treat Cancer

A patient with multiple myeloma has been treated with his own autologous adult stem cells, and is now cancer-free.

Since receiving a kidney transplant 15 years ago, the patient – who has chosen to remain anonymous – has had to take immuno-suppressant drugs. Upon being diagnosed with multiple myeloma a year and a half ago, the patient suddenly faced a dilemma: reduction of the immunosuppressing drugs might have allowed his body to fight the cancer, but also could have resulted in rejection of the transplanted kidney. His doctors therefore recommended that he undergo treatment with his own bone-marrow-derived autologous adult stem cells.

The procedure was performed a month ago on the 49-year-old patient. Now, a PET (positron emission tomography) scan revealed that he is free of cancer.

According to nephrologist Dr. Madan Bahadur, this patient "is the first kidney transplant patient in the world to undergo a stem cell transplant to beat multiple myeloma after ablative chemotherapy." In addition to Dr. Bahadur, the patient was also treated by hematologist Dr. Sameer Shah and oncologist Dr. Ganpati Bhat at Mumbai’s Jaslok Hospital.

According to Dr. V. Hase, chief of nephrology at Mumbai’s King Edward Memorial Hospital, "The Jaslok patient’s case is of great academic interest. Firstly, it is rare for a kidney transplant patient to develop multiple myeloma. Secondly, no transplant patient in India has undergone a stem cell transplant as a rescue mission against cancer."

As Dr. Hase further adds, in light of the fact that renal failure is a known complication of multiple myeloma, "In the Western world, multiple myeloma patients would undergo the stem cell transplant first and a renal transplant later. But in the Mumbai case, the opposite has happened."

The results of the transplant are scheduled to appear in the European journal, Nephrology Dialysis Transplant.

Federal Court Ruling Issued on Stem Cell Patent Dispute

Two researchers at the University of Piitsburgh have won a patent dispute in the Federal Circuit over a laboratory procedure by which adult stem cells derived from human adipose (fat) tissue may be differentiated into cartilage, muscle and bone cells. The Court rejected a bid by researchers at UCLA who had claimed credit as co-inventors of the process.

University of Pittsburgh researchers Drs. Adam Katz and Ramon Llull first began researching adipose-derived adult stem cells in the 1990s. Along with Dr. Marc Hedrick, who temporarily joined their laboratory at a later date, the researchers formally announced in April of 1998 that the adipose-derived stem cells could be differentiated into cartilage, muscle and bone tissue. The actual date of the discovery, however, was listed as October of 1996.

At the crux of the dispute is the fact that Dr. Hedrick temporarily joined the University of Pittsburgh laboratory under a year-long fellowship, at the completion of which he returned to UCLA where he continued to study adult stem cells of adipose origin along with his UCLA colleagues Drs. Hermann Peter Lorenz, Min Zhu, and Propser Benhaim.

Both teams of researchers at both universities then filed separate patent applications for the same laboratory methods and materials by which the stem cells are differentiated into other tissue types. Although the University of Pittsburgh had originally filed an international patent application in 2000 on which Katz, Llull, Hedrick, Lorenz, Zhu and Benhaim were all listed as co-inventors, Katz and Llull later sought to remove the names of Hedrick and the other UCLA researchers from the application.

When the UCLA researchers challenged the claim by Katz and Llull as sole inventors of the process, the district court of Pittsburgh ruled in favor of Katz and Llull, decreeing that these two researchers had invented the procedure prior to Hedrick’s fellowship. The UCLA team of researchers then appealed the decision, claiming that the research was "inconclusive" until Hedrick had been added to the team – a claim which was overruled in Washington, D.C. by the U.S. Federal Court of Appeals.

According to the presiding judge, the Honorable H. Robert Mayer, who has served as Chief Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit since his appointment as such in 2004, "Proof that the invention works to a scientific certainty is reduction to practice. Therefore, because the district court found evidence that Katz and Llull formed a definite and permanent idea of the cells’ inventive qualities, and had in fact observed them, it is immaterial that their knowledge was not scientifically certain and that the [defendant] researchers helped them gain such scientific certainty."

Law suits are not uncommon in the biotech industry, and challenges to patent and copyright law are occurring with increasing frequency every day, especially in the stem cell field. No doubt this recent ruling – in favor of the initiating scientists who had "formed a definite and permanent idea" of the outcome despite the fact that such impressions were "not scientifically certain" – will now be cited as a precedent in future legal disputes of a similar nature.

Progress Made Toward an Implantable Bone

Researchers at the Imperial College in London have made some important discoveries in the process by which different types of stem cells differentiate into bone. The findings have direct applications to the development of stem cell therapies for the treatment of various bone injuries.

Specifically, the scientists found significant differences in "bone-like" material that was grown from 3 different types of cells taken from mice. Two of those cell types – namely, osteoblasts that were derived from the skulls of the mice, and mesenchymal stem cells that were derived from the bone marrow of the mice – were found to be capable of differentiating into a tissue that resembles "native" bone in all of its features, including matrix complexity and mechanical stiffness. The third type, however, was less promising. When the scientists tried to differentiate mouse embryonic stem cells into bone, the result was a tissue that was much less stiff and not as complex as real bone in its mineral composition. Upon further analysis with high resolution electron microscopy, a nano-indenter, and laser-based Raman spectroscopy, the scientists found that only the bone tissue that was differentiated from the two types of adult stem cells actually possessed both the microscopic and the macroscopic properties of real bone.

According to Dr. Molly Stevens of the Department of Materials and the Institute of Biomedical Engineering at the Imperial College of London, "Many patients who have had bone removed because of tumors or accidents live in real pain. By repairing bone defect sites in the body with bone-like material that best mimics the properties of their real bone, we could improve their lives immeasurably. Our study provides an important insight into how different cell sources can really influence the quality of bone that we can produce. It brings us one step closer to developing materials that will have the highest chance of success when implanted into patients."

A number of researchers around the world are currently working on the task of growing small "nodules" of new bone from stem cells in the laboratory, and a number of clinical trials are already underway. Now, the results of this new study allow scientists to pinpoint more precisely which type of stem cell is the best type to be the originating source of the bone.

Veterinary Adult Stem Cell Therapies Rapidly Progressing

Cris, a 5-year-old police dog in the San Francisco Bay Area, was suddenly faced with an early retirement following a muscle injury. Similarly, the 12-year-old mare and winner of the 2006 championship in Scotland, Marsh Mayfly, was incapacitated after incurring a torn tendon during a competition. But now, both animals have returned to their productive careers after having been treated with their own adult stem cells. In fact, in Cris’s case, a sonogram revealed that the dog’s previously injured hamstring muscle had been completely restored to its normal condition a mere 8 weeks after the adult stem cell therapy was administered.

Collectively, the U.S. company Vet-Stem and the U.K. company MedCell Biosciences have treated over 5,500 horses and 1,700 dogs with their respective autologous adult stem cell therapies, for which veterinarians usually charge around $3,000 per procedure. According to Dr. Hubert Kim, orthopedic surgeon and director of the Cartilage Repair and Regeneration Center at UC-San Francisco, "The results in animals provide an exciting look forward into what human therapies might look like. It gives you a snapshot of what may be possible."

As Dr. Gregory Ferraro, director of the Center for Equine Health at UC-Davis, explains, "Stem cell therapeutics is the most exciting development that has occurred in the 38 years I’ve been a veterinarian. By treating animal disease with stem cells, we can learn to treat animals better and find new ways to help humans."

The University of California at Davis boasts an impressive veterinary adult stem cell program which was funded in part by a $2.5 million donation from Dick Randall, a former real estate executive who now owns and breeds competition horses. When Hustlers Starlight, one of Randall’s horses, suffered a ligament injury, the veterinarian recommended Vet-Stem’s services. Within 2 months after treatment, the horse was exercising with a rider once again. Since then, Randall has had 8 other horses treated with Vet-Stem’s procedure. Similarly, Tim McQuay, who operates the 200-horse facility at McQuay Stables in Tioga, Texas, has had 50 horses treated by Vet-Stem, 90% of whom have shown dramatic improvement. Not only do the autologous adult stem cells regenerate damaged tissue, but they also exhibit important immunomodulatory properties that reduce inflammation. A number of clinical trials in horses and dogs have been published in the veterinary literature and are believed to be directly translatable to human therapies. As Sean Owens, assistant director of the Regenerative Medicine Laboratory at UC-Davis, points out, "Sometimes things get driven along because the public wants it. We want to show if this is as effective as the public thinks."

According to Linda Powers of Toucan Capital in Bethesda, Maryland, which provided $2.4 million in start-up funding for Vet-Stem in 2002, "The market is gigantic. We Americans are crazy for our pets." This year Vet-Stem expects to report around $4.5 million in revenue.

Indeed, the U.S. veterinary market is one of the largest in the world, which is precisely why MedCell of the U.K. entered the U.S. market last year by opening a branch in Florida, from which its VetCell unit has treated around 2,500 horses thus far. Additionally, the company also treats between 80 and 100 dogs per month.

While Vet-Stem’s procedure takes less than 48 hours to produce a ready-to-deliver therapy from adipose-derived stem cells, MedCell’s procedure takes 3 to 4 weeks to produce a stem cell therapy from bone-marrow-derived stem cells. In either case, the results are directly translatable to humans, and MedCell has received authorization from British regulators to begin human clinical trials during the first quarter of 2010 for the use of bone-marrow-derived autologous adult stem cells in the treatment of torn Achilles tendons and rotator cuffs. Results of the clinical trial are expected to be available in time for promotion of the treatment during the 2012 Olympic Games in London.

Jan Nolta, director of the human stem cell program at the UC-Davis medical school, estimates that at least 1,000 people have participated in U.S. FDA-approved clinical trials in which adult stem cells were used as therapies for a wide variety of medical conditions which include not only orthopedic problems but also heart disease and autoimmune disorders, among others. By sharp contrast, not one person has yet received human embryonic stem cells in any clinical trials. As Robin Young, an investment analyst who follows stem cell companies, points out, "Orthopedics will be the sector of medicine where new technologies like stem cells will find their first utilization."

According to Dr. Gary Brown, the veterinarian who treated Cris the police dog as well as two other dogs, all 3 dogs "have done fantastic. We’ve got reason for hope here. We can take dogs that would go into early retirement and keep them fighting bad guys for many years."

Heart Stem Cells Activated for Healing

Scientists have discovered a new method for stimulating endogenous heart stem cells to heal damaged heart tissue. Although the study was conducted in an animal model, the results of the study have direct applications to the treatment of various heart conditions in humans.

Led by Dr. Bernhard Kuhn of Harvard Medical School, researchers at Children’s Hospital in Boston have found that the protein neuregulin1 (NRG1) can be used to stimulate endogenous heart stem cells to re-enter the cell cycle, thereby allowing the stem cells to regenerate new heart tissue.

As Dr. Kuhn explains, "To my knowledge, this is the first regenerative therapy that may be applicable in a systemic way. In principle, there is nothing to preclude this going into the clinic. Based on all the information we have, this is a promising candidate."

For example, Dr. Kuhn and his colleagues surmise that someday it might be a routine protocol for patients to receive daily infusions of NRG1 over a period of weeks. As Dr. Kuhn adds, "Contemporary heart failure treatment is directed at making the remaining cardiomyocytes function better, and improvements in outcomes are harder and harder to achieve because these therapies have become so good. But despite this, heart failure is still a fatal disease. Therapies that replace lost heart muscle cells have the potential to advance the field."

Adult stem cells are already known to reside in a number of various tissue types throughout the human body, and they are suspected of residing in all tissue types. Although an endogenous heart stem cell has been identified and is known to exist, it does not exist in large numbers throughout the heart and is therefore not usually sufficient, in and of itself, to repair damaged heart tissue following an acute event such as a heart attack. A number of studies have examined various ways of stimulating other types of stem cells that are not found in the heart to differentiate into new heart cells, but Dr. Kuhn’s study is unique in that it has demonstrated a novel approach to stimulating the endogenous heart stem cells that are already in the heart to regenerate the heart’s own tissue.

In the study, the scientists treated mice with daily injections of NRG1, beginning at one week following the laboratory-induced injury. Within 12 weeks, the mice not only exhibited improved heart function, but they were also found to have an increased number of resident heart muscle cells as well as a reduction in heart muscle scar tissue. As Dr. Kuhn explains, "Most of the related cell death had already occurred. When we began the injections, we saw replacement of a significant number of cardiomyocytes resulting in significant structural and functional improvements in the heart muscle."

In 2007 the the same team of scientists reported that the protein periostin – which is found in developing fetal heart and injured skeletal muscles – also induces cardiomyocyte production and improved heart function in rats. Instead of being injected, however, the periostin was administered via patches that were placed directly on the heart tissue. In light of this current, new study, further trials are now proposed in which periostin and NRG1 could be used together as a combined therapy. According to Dr. Kuhn, "During initial treatment, patients might receive neuregulin injections, and once they are stable and out of the ICU they might be taken to the cath lab for a periostin patch."

According to Duke University cardiologist Dr. Richard C. Becker, who is also a spokesman for the American Heart Association, "This is something that I suspect people in the field of cardiology will be very excited about, and I suspect this interest will stimulate additional research."

Adult Stem Cells Treat Gum Disease

Researchers at the University of Adelaide have been using adult stem cells to treat gum disease in preclinical animal trials, with significant success. Now, the scientists have been awarded $200,000 in funding from the Australian Stem Cell Centre to expand their research to humans.

According to Dr. Mark Bartold of the University of Adelaide, "We’ve got the proof, in principle, and can regrow a lot of bone around the teeth and restore some of the damage that has been done. As with any new technology, we’ve still got a little way to go. There’s a lot of unanswered questions and more will pop up along the way."

In the past, Dr. Bartold and his colleagues have taken adult stem cells from the jawbones of sheep and pigs, which were then cultured and re-implanted into other animals in whom gum disease had caused bone loss around their teeth. Specifically, the adult stem cells were derived from the ligament that secures the teeth into the jawbones of the animals. Now, the method will be applied to people.

According to Dr. Bartold, it has been estimated that approximately 60% of all Australians suffer from some form of gum disease, in whom it is not uncommon to see advanced stages of periodontitis. In theory, therefore, a cell-based therapy for gum diseases would have a large market in Australia.

Mice Created From Skin Cells

In a stunning announcement that has elated some people while horrifying others, two independent teams of researchers in China have announced the creation of mice from reprogrammed stem cells.

Led by Drs. Qi Zhou and Fanyi Zeng of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Shanghai Jiao Tong University, and Dr. Shaorong Gao at the National Institute of Biological Sciences in Beijing, the separate teams of researchers have each reported the successful creation of mice not from mouse embryos, but from the adult somatic (non-stem cell) skin cells of mice. The skin cells had been reprogrammed to de-differentiate into a more primitive, pluripotent state – known as iPS (induced pluripotent stem) cells – from which entire generations of mice have now been bred.

On the one hand, the announcement offers further evidence for the obsolescence of embryonic stem cell research; but on the other hand, the announcement raises new concerns about cloning and the genetic engineering of embryos. According to Dr. Robert Lanza, CEO of Advanced Cell Technology, "The implications of this are both enormously important and troublesome. It revives many of the issues raised by reproductive cloning."

Both teams of researchers employed basically the same procedure. Using retroviral vectors to deliver 4 genes, the scientists reprogrammed mouse fibroblasts to dedifferentiate into the iPS cells which were then injected into a tetraploid blastocyst – which the scientists created by fusing together 2 cells of a fertilized blastocyst. Tetraploid blastocysts contain twice the normal number of chromosomes, a peculiar feature which renders them incapable of developing normally. Instead of being able to develop into a regular embryo, tetraploids can only develop into extra-embryonic tissue such as the placenta. By choosing to inject the iPS cells into a 2-celled blastocyst, instead of into a normal blastocyst, the researchers could be certain that any resulting embryonic development would be exclusively the result of the iPS cells. Indeed, when each of the tetraploid blastocysts containing the iPS cells was transferred into the uterus of a female surrogate mouse, not only did embryonic development occur, but 20 days later live mice were born.

The first mouse to be born was black, exactly like that from which the original fibroblast had been obtained, and unlike the white mouse from which the tetraploid blastocyst had been formed. DNA tests further confirmed that the mouse – named "Xiao Xiao", or "Tiny" – was the genetic result of the iPS cells.

Dr. Zhou’s team succeeded in creating 37 iPS cell lines, three of which produced 27 live offspring – one of whom was a male who at 7 weeks of age impregnated a female who gave birth to another generation of mice. In total Dr. Zhou and his colleagues have created more than 100 first-generation mice, who in turn have by now given birth to several hundred second-generation mice, all of whom are virtually genetically identical to the original mouse from which the iPS cells had been derived. According to Dr. Zeng, who worked with Dr. Zhou, "This gives us hope for the future therapeutic interventions using patients’ own reprogrammed cells in the future."

The second group of scientists, led by Dr. Gao, created 5 iPS cell lines, one of which produced 4 embryos that survived until birth, although only one of the four lived to adulthood. Nevertheless, Dr. Gao states that such results are "proof that iPS cells are functionally equivalent to embryonic stem cells."

Indeed, this point is the astonishing conclusion of the experiments, namely, that iPS cells and embryonic stem cells are the function equivalent of each other. According to Dr. Konrad Hochedlinger of Harvard University, "This clearly says for the first time that iPS cells pass the most stringent test." As Dr. Robert Blelloch of the University of California at San Francisco adds, "It’s been a lingering concern, why these (iPS) cells couldn’t make animals." But now, he adds, "It’s further evidence that these are not some bizarre cells out there, and that they are very much like normal embryonic stem cells."

Both teams of scientists encountered some abnormalities, however, as indicated by the fact that not all of the embryos survived. According to Dr. Zeng, "We are using the mouse iPS cells to find out the answers to some basic science questions. So far we haven’t detected much tumor growth on a big, global scale. But we still have a lot to do, and a lot of animals to study so we are currently working on looking at the abnormalities in these offspring." Thus far, both teams of scientists collectively have produced more than 200 second-generation offspring and more than 100 third-generation offspring.

Both processes still remain inefficient, however, as Dr. Zhou’s team produced one mouse from 400 blastocysts, while Dr. Zeng’s team produced 22 pups from 1,500 blastocysts. But when Dr. Zeng’s group compared iPS cells that were 14, 20 and 36 days old, she and her colleagues discovered that the greatest number of live pups were born from the iPS cells that were the youngest when they were injected into blastocysts, namely, those iPS cells that were 14 days old. The oldest of Dr. Zeng’s mice is now 9 months old, while Dr. Gao’s are 2 months old.

As exciting and revolutionary as these accomplishments might be, however, the possibility for commercial as well as scientific abuse and exploitation has raised a number of concerns.

As Dr. Lanza adds, "With just a little piece of your skin, or some blood from the hospital, anyone could have your child – even an ex-girlfriend or neighbor, and there’s nothing you could do about it. Any couple could go to an IVF clinic and have a child that is half, say, Albert Einstein or perhaps Brad Pitt or Elizabeth Taylor. This isn’t rocket science. With a little practice, any IVF clinic in the world could probably figure out how to get it to work." As Dr. Lanza further adds, "Genetic modification of the resulting stem cells could be carried out by a scientist tomorrow. For instance, the technology already exists to genetically increase the muscle mass in animals by knocking out a gene known as mystatin, and could be used by a couple who wants a great child athlete."

As Dr. Jonathan D. Moreno, a bioethicist at the University of Pennsylvania, adds, "The culture wars are not over. There was a lot of celebration about the end of the ethical issues with induced pluripotent stem cells. But this is the paradigm case that shows that the old debates are rapidly being transformed into something even more complicated."

The world first learned about iPS cells in 2006 when Dr. Shinya Yamanaka of Kyoto University in Japan announced the successful creation of these cells from mouse skin. Dr. James Thomson in the U.S. then created iPS cells from human skin in 2007, and again from human blood in 2009. Although Dr. Rudolf Jaenisch of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology had tried to create an entire mouse in 2007 using the same laboratory procedure as the scientists in China, he was unsuccessful in getting beyond the late-embryo stage. As he later described, "There were two possible explanations. Either iPS cells aren’t pluripotent so it was impossible, or we just hadn’t tried hard enough. The first would have been more interesting, but I assumed it was the second explanation." Indeed, from these two independent teams of researchers in China, each of whom produced entire generations of mice from a single mouse fibroblast, the world now knows that iPS cells have virtually the same pluripotency and generative potential as embryonic stem cells. As Richard M. Doerflinger of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops points out, "Nobody has been able to find anything that embryonic stem cells can do that these (iPS) cells can’t do. This was the last remaining barrier."

Actually, there is still at least one more barrier – to the newly produced hopes and fears – which remains, and that is the reproducibility of the technique with human cells. In most countries, however, tetraploid experimentation is not allowed with human cells, so a number of questions will have to remain unaswered, at least for awhile.

And there are other technical problems which are already known. Previous studies conducted earlier this month at UCLA indicated that human iPS cells differ significantly from human embryonic stem cells in gene expression, which could have enormous implications for the translatability of iPS experiments from mice to people. According to Dr. Kathrin Plath at UCLA, "iPS cells might do things better or worse than embyronic stem cells. I don’t think we know the answer at this point." Her colleague, Dr. William Lowry, therefore adds that one cannot draw any certain conclusions about human iPS cells from experiments conducted on mouse iPS cells.

The news from China was published online today in two separate journals, Nature and Cell Stem Cell.

Human Diabetics Treated With Pig Cells

Scientists at the New Zealand company Living Cell Technologies have begun clinical trials today in which cells from newborn pigs will be used for the treatment of Type 1 diabetes. Specifically, the transplanted cells will consist of the beta islet cells from the pancreas, which are the cells that produce insulin. The experimental procedure will be tested on eight human volunteers.

A number of other scientists have expressed concern over the trials, however, pointing out that it’s too early to begin testing on humans since no preclinical animal studies were conducted. Among other risks, scientists caution that any of the numerous viruses that are endemic to pigs could "jump species" and infect the humans, therefore not only causing illness in the 8 volunteers but also potentially triggering a new retroviral pandemic.

The medical director of Living Cell Technologies, Dr. Bob Elliott, however, insists that "there is no evidence of a risk." He describes the piglets that have been selected for the study as having been recovered from 150 years of isolation on islands south of New Zealand, and therefore carry no known infectious agents. It is the unknown infectious agents, however, which have other scientists concerned.

According to Dr. Martin Wilkinson, a past chairman of the New Zealand Bioethics Council, the pig cells pose "a very small risk, low enough to be managed in human recipients. There is no conclusion that it should be banned just because of the possibility of risk." There are many other scientists who disagree, however.

Dr. Elliott has conducted two previous human clinical trials of this nature, the first with 6 patients in New Zealand in 1995 and 1996, and the other with 10 patients in Russia which began in 2007. According to Dr. Elliott, some of the subjects responded with increased insulin production, while in other subjects the implanted cells stopped producing insulin after a year, and there were still other subjects whose bodies rejected the pig cells. None of the human trials were preceded by preclinical animal studies, nor has any scientific paper been published on any of these human trials, although Dr. Elliott says that a paper is scheduled for release by the end of 2009.

Such news represents the opposite extreme of that which most countries face. At the opposite end of the spectrum from the U.S. FDA regulatory regime is a total absence of regulatory oversight. While Phase I, Phase II, and Phase III clinical trials in the U.S. typically require a decade or more of human clinical testing – and must always, without exception, be preceded by successful preclinical trials on animals – the opposite extreme is a country in which preclinical animal trials are not required at all prior to testing on humans. In the first case, patients can grow old and die while waiting around for government approval of a scientifically legitimate clinical therapy; while in the second case, patients can die young as a direct result of the experimental therapy which they have volunteered to receive. Clearly, the issue of exactly how federal government regulatory agencies should adapt their laws to keep pace with medical science is a global problem that is in urgent need of being addressed.

For New Zealand in particular, it seems as though a number of regulatory policy issues remain to be resolved. Previous attempts to form a joint oversight agency with Australia – which would have been known as the Australia New Zealand Therapeutic Products Authority – were indefinitely suspended in July of 2007 when the New Zealand State Services Minister, Annette King, announced at that time that, "The government is not proceeding at this stage with legislation that would have enabled the establishment of a joint agency with Australia to regulate therapeutic products. The (New Zealand) Government does not have the numbers in Parliament to put in place a sensible, acceptable compromise that would satisfy all parties at this time. The Australian Government has been informed of the situation and agrees that suspending negotiations on the joint authority is a sensible course of action."

At the very least, it would seem appropriate to establish some sort of regulatory oversight which requires proof of safety and efficacy in preclinical animal studies before allowing human clinical trials to commence, in which human patients unwittingly become the very first guinea pigs on whom a new and experimental procedure is tested.

Additionally, it would also seem as though the 8 individuals in New Zealand who have volunteered for the experimental pig cell therapy are unaware of other clinical trials which have already been conducted elsewhere throughout the world, and which have utilized adult stem cells from humans, not from animals, in the treatment of human Type 1 diabetes.

For example, it has been demonstrated a number of times that when mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are administered to mice whose beta cells have been damaged by the administration of the toxic compound streptozoicin, the MSCs increase insulin production in the mice. The use of adult stem cells to induce islet regeneration is also currently undergoing U.S. FDA-approved clinical trials at the University of Miami. The possibility of stimulating islet regeneration does not necessarily depend on differentiation of the adult stem cells into new islet cells but may also occur through the production of growth factors made by the stem cells and which allow endogenous pancreatic stem cells to start proliferating, thereby healing the injured area. For example, from a mouse study in which chemically-labeled bone marrow-derived MSCs were administered to mice with injured beta cells, the MSCs were actually found to stimulate the islet-activating pancreatic duct stem cell proliferation. The possibility of stimulating endogenous pancreatic duct stem cells by pharmacological means is currently under investigation by the company Novo Nordisk, who has administered a combination of EGF and gastrin to diabetic patients in Phase II clinical trials. However, given that adult stem cells produce a "symphony of growth factors" in addition to gastrin and EGF, the administration of adult stem cells seems to possess a higher possibility of success. Both from the ability of MSCs to differentiate directly into pancreatic cells as well as by their ability to activate endogenous pancreatic stem cells, from preclinical as well as clinical data available throughout the world, there is strong evidence to indicate that MSCs are therapeutic for the restoration of insulin production in the treatment of diabetes.

Furthermore, it is also known that adult stem cell therapy can at least ameliorate and in some cases even reverse the secondary pathologies that are associated with diabetes, such as the variety of complications that result from uncontrolled blood glucose levels such as peripheral vascular disease, neuropathic pain and the dysfunction of various organs such as renal failure. Peripheral vascular disease, for example, is caused by endothelial dysfunction, but it is also known that there is a constant migration of endothelial progenitors from bone marrow sources to the periphery. This migration can be measured through the quantification of the content of endothelial progenitor cells in peripheral blood, and in this manner it has been observed that patients who are diabetic and who have higher levels of circulating endothelial progenitors usually have a lower risk of coronary artery disease. The administration of adult stem cells is also known to rejuvenate old or dysfunctional endothelial cells and to increase responsiveness to vasoactive stimuli. On the other hand, neuropathy, which is a major cause of persistent, chronic pain in diabetic patients, has been reversed in patients who were treated with various adult stem cell populations. This was further documented in highly defined animal models of pain in which bone marrow stem cell administration was found to accelerate nerve healing and to reduce chronic pain. The ability of stem cells to naturally repair injured organs has similarly been described for the heart, the liver and the kidneys. Mechanistically, injured organs transmit elaborate chemical signals, such as SDF-1, which attract stem cells and induce cellular differentiation of the required tissue. Accordingly, based upon evidence such as this, adult stem cell therapy also offers the ideal treatment of secondary complications associated with diabetes.

Additionally, adult stem cells inhibit the mediators that cause insulin resistance. As previously described, one of these mediators which causes the body to resist insulin is known as TNF-alpha (tumor necrosis factor alpha). It has been demonstrated that patients with type II diabetes have abnormally high levels of TNF-alpha, and it is also known that the amount of TNF-alpha in the plasma has been shown to correlate with extensive insulin resistance. In other words, the more TNF alpha that is in a person’s blood plasma, the greater is that person’s insulin resistance. MSCs have been found to shut down TNF-alpha production, thereby shutting off inflammation. A number of studies have documented this fact, one of which was published by Aggarwal et al., in 2005 in the journal Blood, entitled, "Human mesenchymal stem cells modulate allogeneic immune cell response." So there is a great deal of evidence documenting the ability of MSCs to correct the body’s resistance to insulin, with applications to Type I as well as Type II diabetes.

Many studies have also demonstrated that adult stem cells can actually become pancreatic-like stem cells. One such study, conducted by Sun et al., was published in 2007 in the Chin Med J., entitled, "Differentiation of bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells from diabetic patients into insulin-producing cells in vitro." In this and other similar studies it was demonstrated that stem cells derived from bone marrow can produce insulin in vitro after a "glucose challenge", in which glucose is given to MSCs that have been treated to become similar to pancreatic cells. The results consistently indicate that the MSCs are in fact becoming cells which produce insulin in response to the glucose in vitro, and a number of studies also exist in vivo. One such study was conducted by Lee et al., and published in 2006 in the Proceedings of the National Academies of Science, entitled, "Multipotent stromal cells from human marrow home to and promote repair of pancreatic islets and renal glomeruli in diabetic NOD/scid mice." In this study, the investigators used the streptozoacin toxin to kill the beta cells in the pancreas of mice, and when MSCs were administered to the mice, insulin production was shown to increase. Another study was conducted by Tang et al., and published in the journal Diabetes, entitled, "In vivo and in vitro characterization of insulin-producing cells obtained from murine bone marrow." In this study, the investigators took stem cells from bone marrow, cultured them, and made cells that appeared to be the beta islet cells. Specifically, the scientists took MSCs, cultured them in glucose and added nicotinamide (the amide part of nicotinic acid, also known as vitamin B3), which is an agent that is known to assist in pancreatic regeneration. The result was the formation of a group of cells that look and behave like pancreatic beta islet cells. The phenotypic expression of these cells does not include CD34 or CD45, therefore these cells are not hematopoietic, but their genotypic expression includes genes that are specific to the pancreas, such as PDX-1, insulin, glucose transporters, etc., so these cells would appear to resemble pancreatic beta islet cells in behavior and function.

Additionally, a group of scientists in Argentina reported in 2007 that 85% of Type II diabetic patients who were treated with their own MSCs were able to stop using insulin. In this technique, stem cells were administered to each patient via a catheter which is directed through the endovascular arteries directly to the pancreatic parenchyma. The catheterization is employed via an arterial route since arteries deliver oxygenated blood to the organs of the body. The catheter is inserted through a puncture in the groin under local anesthesia, and no stitches are required. More than 70 cases of diabetes have been treated according to this technique, with some of these patients having had diabetes for as long as 30 years, and with many of them exhibiting minimal response to conventional treatment. After receiving treatment by this procedure, 90% of these patients have exhibited significant progress which has even led to the complete withdrawal of original medication in these instances. No complications have been seen in any of the patients, even 9 months after treatment. Similar techniques at other laboratories for the treatment of type II diabetes use the patient’s own stem cells which are derived from the patient’s own bone marrow. These bone marrow-derived stem cells are extracted from the patient’s hip and are then separated and expanded in the laboratory, after which time they are injected back into the patient through an arterial catheter in the groin with the use of local anesthesia, as described above.

It is therefore now known that MSCs can correct the two underlying mechanisms of diabetes, namely, the progression of insulin resistance and pancreatic cell death. In regard to the secondary complications, specifically, peripheral neuropathy and neuropathic pain, numerous case reports have documented the neurogenerative abilities of stem cells, and many animal studies have proven that stem cells can prevent neuropathic pain through a direct analgesic effect. One such study was conducted by Klass et al., and published in 2007 in the journal Anesth. Analg., entitled "Intravenous mononuclear marrow cells reverse neuropathic pain from experimental mononeuropathy." Many other clinical reports have also supported the fact that adult stem cells can help regenerate neurons. Similarly, in peripheral artery disease, endothelial dysfunction often results because patients with type II diabetes have low concentrations of circulating endothelial progenitor cells, which are the cells that make new endothelium. Circulating endothelial cells correlate with vascular health, and bone marrow stem cells are rich in endothelial precursor cells. The administration of bone marrow stem cells can therefore improve endothelial health by increasing vascular endothelial function. Another major complication of type II diabetes is kidney failure. This topic was addressed in the same study cited above, conducted by Lee et al., and published in 2006 in the Proceedings of the National Academies of Science, entitled, "Multipotent stromal cells from human marrow home to and promote repair of pancreatic islets and renal glomeruli in diabetic NOD/scid mice." In this study, the mice had been induced to become diabetic through streptozoacin, and the kidneys were examined for inflammatory macrophage infiltration. As with pancreatic tissue, the stem cells were found to home-in on and repair the damaged renal tissue.

Type II diabetes is becoming an increasingly common problem throughout the world, especially in industrialized nations. Although type I diabetes is not as common as type II diabetes, clinical studies have also shown success in treating type I diabetes with adult stem cells. In a study conducted in 2007 by J.C. Voltarelli of Brazil, fourteen patients with type I diabetes were treated with autologous bone marrow stem cells that had been mobilized into the peripheral blood circulation from which they were collected. During follow-up procedures that were conducted between 7 and 36 months, all fourteen of the patients were able to discontinue insulin use.

Adult stem cell therapy has therefore already been described numerous times throughout the medical literature as the first therapy for both type I and type II diabetes which not only alleviates the symptoms of diabetes but also actually reverses the progression of the disease by regenerating damaged tissue and restoring insulin production.

(Please see the related subsection on this website, entitled "Diabetes", listed in the "Research" section).

First Cardiac Stem Cell Infusion Performed

Physicians at the University of Louisville in Kentucky have announced the successful completion of the world’s first cardiac stem cell infusion.

The patient, 66-year-old Michael Jones, had suffered the first of two heart attacks slightly over 4 years ago, and within 4 months of the second heart attack he was diagnosed with heart failure and permanent scarring of his heart as a result of multiple blocked arteries. Because he had not yet had bypass surgery, he was a good candidate for adult stem cell therapy. In March of this year he underwent bypass surgery for his blocked arteries, during which time Dr. Mark Slaughter, chief of cardiothoracic surgery at the University of Louisville and director of the Heart Transplant and Mechanical Assist Device Program at Jewish Hospital, removed a portion of tissue from the upper chamber of his heart. The tissue was then sent to Harvard University and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, where the endogenous cardiac stem cells were isolated, expanded and returned to Louisville where doctors injected the cells directly into the scar tissue of the heart via a minimally invasive catheterization procedure that was performed on July 17. Dr. Roberto Bolli, director of the Institute for Molecular Cardiology at the University of Louisville and distinguished chair in cardiology at the Jewish Hospital Heart and Lung Institute, led the study.

Before undergoing the autologous adult stem cell therapy, Mr. Jones had a left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) – a measure of the efficiency with which blood is pumped out of the heart’s left ventricle – that was lower than 25% but which is now around 30% and continues to increase. An LVEF of approximately 58% or higher is considered normal for healthy people.

Thus far, fourteen patients have been enrolled in the FDA-approved Phase I clinical trial which has a target enrollment of 20 patients. A second patient underwent the procedure on Friday, July 24.

According to James Ramsey, president of the University of Louisville, "It is an important, historic announcement. The number one killer is heart disease, and we in Kentucky have a higher incidence than the national average." Indeed, heart failure afflicts approximately 6 million Americans throughout the U.S. although the rate is unusually high in Kentucky, where as many as 14,000 deaths per year – in a state with a population of approximately 4 million people – are attributed to cardiovascular conditions, according to the American Heart Association.

As Michael Jones himself stated at a press conference today, "I am very, very grateful and honored to be chosen as the first recipient. This really seemed natural. It just made sense to use the body to regenerate itself." Looking physically well, strong, and fully recovered from the pioneering procedure that he underwent just a few days ago, he also added, "I hope to have as normal a life as anyone. I might even start jogging again."

Stem Cell Therapies Are Not Just for the Dogs

Prior to being diagnosed with severe arthritis last year, Ezri used to compete in agility contests. But then the ten-year-old Border Collie began slowing down and showing signs of pain in her front paws. According to Ezri’s owner, Kim Galusha, "She was limping and we tried all kinds of different pain medications and arthritis treatments but nothing helped. She got to the point where all she wanted to do was sleep on the couch."

Thanks to veterinary surgeon Dr. Stephen Kerpsack, however, the dog underwent a successful autologous adult stem cell transplant. Dr. Kerpsack derived approximately 2 tablespoons of fat from Ezri’s abdominal adipose (fat) tissue, which was then mailed the the Vet-Stem laboratory in San Diego where the adult stem cells were isolated, expanded and returned within 48 hours to Dr. Kerpsack who injected the adult stem cells directly into the arthritic joints of Ezri’s front legs. Within 4 to 6 weeks, Ezri was back to her usual self. According to Kim, "You could just tell she had a real big attitude change. She wanted to play."

As Dr. Stephen Kerpsack explains, "In that fat are what are called stem cells. The stem cells have the ability to become other types of cells, which can repair tissue in the body."

As previously reported a number of times on this website, the company Vet-Stem continues to see consistently high success rates in both canine and equine clinical applications, with an 80% efficacy rate and a 100% safety rate in the animals that are treated with Vet-Stem’s autologous adult stem cell procedure. In other words, 80% of the animals treated are found to experience improvement in their condition with a reduction and often a full elimination of the need for medication, while adverse side effects have not been reported in any of the treated animals.

Companies such as Vet-Stem in the U.S. and VetCell in the U.K. have accumulated numerous documented cases of the benefits of autologous adult stem cell therapy in animals. To name just a few of the advantages, adult stem cell therapy yields faster healing and shorter recovery times than surgical treatments do, and adult stem cell therapy does not pose a risk of any side effects like medications do. Additionally, since the adult stem cells are autologous, there is no risk of immune injection. The U.K. company VetCell derives the autologous adult stem cells from the animal’s bone marrow, and to date has treated approximately 1,700 horses with an 80% success rate. By comparison, the U.S. company Vet-Stem derives the autologous adult stem cells from the animal’s adipose (fat) tissue, and to date has treated over 2,000 dogs and over 3,000 horses, also with an 80% success rate. With both companies, the procedure is quick, simple, and minimally invasive. Although the treatment is more expensive than conventional veterinary procedures, the adult stem cell treatment actually works, and noticeable improvement is seen almost immediately in all cases, not just in the 80% of cases that exhibit a complete recovery. By sharp contrast, however, conventional surgical and pharmacological therapies, which might initially be less expensive than stem cell therapy, only have a 30% success rate and therefore in the long-term are actually more expensive when repeated treatment is needed, or when improvements are not seen at all. Additionally, reinjury is significantly lower in animals who receive autologous adult stem cell therapy, due to the mechanism of action by which these stem cells activate the healing process. As Dr. David Mountford, a veterinary surgeon and chief operating officer at VetCell, explains, "After 3 years, the reinjury rate was much lower in stem-cell-treated animals: about 23% compared with the published average of 56%" for animals treated with conventional therapies.

Not only do the stem cells automatically target the injured tissue, but they also stimulate other endogenous stem cells which in turn are mobilized into action and participate in the healing and repair process. Although improvements are usually dramatic and immediate, even after the first injection, additional injections may be necessary, depending upon the age and condition of the animal. Very few animals ever need more than a total or 2 or 3 treatments, however, before they are fully restored to their natural, pain-free state of mobility – which contrasts sharply with conventional therapies such as most prescription medications which may need to be taken indefinitely, without ever producing any tangible signs of improvement and while even possibly causing further damage to the animal through dangerous side effects and other associated risks.

Ordinarily, injuries of the bones, joints, tendons and ligaments result in scarring of the tissue, which not only prevents full healing but also often leads to further injuries at a later time. Conventional medical therapies do nothing to address the problem of scar tissue directly, and surgical procedures actually make the problem worse by increasing the severity of tissue scarring which in turn merely exacerbates later complications that will inevitably result from the scar tissue, since such tissue can never be fully rehabilitated. Adult stem cell therapy, however, allows for the full and complete healing of tissue without scarring, which not only reduces the risk of re-injury of the same tissue at a later date but also restores full physical performance and function, usually very quickly and dramatically. Such is the case in humans as well as in animals. According to Dr. Robert Harman, veterinarian and founding CEO of Vet-Stem, "Our success in animals is directly translatable to humans, and we wish to share our evidence that stem cells are safe and effective." Additionally, adipose-derived stem cells have been shown in a number of studies to exhibit highly beneficial immunomodulatory properties – which reduce inflammation, among other benefits – in addition to stimulating the regeneration of cartilage and other tissue. (E.g., "Non-expanded adipose stromal vascular fraction cell therapy for multiple sclerosis", by N.H. Riordan et al., published in the Journal of Translational Medicine in April of 2009, of which Dr. Harman is a coauthor). As Dr. Harman further adds, "In the last couple of years, evidence has come out that the cells we use reduce inflammation and pain, and help lubricate the joint. About 200,000 hip replacements are done every year in humans. That’s a very good target for someone to look at cell therapy."

Vet-Stem uses exclusively adult stem cells, derived from each animal’s own tissue. Since the cells are autologous (in which the donor and recipient are the same animal), there is no risk of immune rejection. More specifically, the stem cells that are harvested in Vet-Stem’s procedure are mesenchymal stem cells, which are highly potent adult stem cells that are also found in bone marrow and umbilical cord blood. Numerous scientific and clinical studies have been published in the peer-reviewed medical literature detailing the regenerative properties of mesenchymal stem cells.

No embryonic stem cells are ever used in Vet-Stem’s therapies, since embryonic stem cells are highly problematic in the laboratory, whether they are of human or non-human origin. Among other problems, the risk of teratoma (tumor) formation disqualifies embryonic stem cells for use as a clinical therapy, even in animals. Adult stem cells, however, do not pose such risks and are therefore rapidly accumulating a consistent history of successful clinical treatments in veterinary, as well as in human, medicine.