Tuesday, May 31, 2011

ViaCyte progresses toward trials in stem cell diabetes treatment

The Los Angeles Times provides us with an update on ViaCyte, a San Diego-based company that is looking to make the insulin shot a relic of the past for Type 1 diabetes patients. It hopes to replace the shot with implants filled with insulin-producing pancreatic cells. And the company has its own special recipe to make immature pancreatic cells out of embryonic stem cells.

FierceBiotechResearch first took a look at ViaCyte a little less than a year ago. ViaCyte tells the LA Times that it has successfully "cured" diabetes in hundreds of fortunate mice and is ready to give it all a go on humans by 2013 in trials pushed along in part by $26 million in grants and loans from California's Institute of Regenerative Medicine (CIRM). One problem--among many--with stem cell treatments is the body's immune system rejecting them. ViaCyte says it has attacked this problem by keeping the warring parties separated with a thin membrane envelope that allows sugar in and insulin out. The cells remain safely wrapped in the envelope and away from immune-system cells.

"The safety factor is pretty high," Alan Trounson, president of CIRM, says, as quoted by the LA Times. Essentially, says company director Eugene Brandon, ViaCyte is "creating a replacement pancreas."

The article points out that ViaCyte is in the middle of a patent dispute over part of the stem cell procedure with Geron Corp. of Menlo Park, CA. Still, the company says, the trials will go forward irrespective of the outcome of the litigation.

- read the full story in the Los Angeles Times

Related Articles:
New stem cell strategy cures diabetes in mice
ViaCyte wins kudos for ESC program to treat diabetes

Stem Cells type I diabetes ViaCyte


--Ankur

Friday, May 13, 2011

Daniel Kraft is the man: Future of medicine under the microscope - CNET News

iPierian fires top execs, shifts focus - FierceBiotech

Schepens grows retinas, recovers vision using adult stem cells - Mass High Tech Business News

Liver repaired with stem cells taken from skin and blood - Telegraph

Advances in tissue engineering hold great promise for pediatric urology - - ModernMedicine

Thursday, May 12, 2011

REGENERATIVE MEDICINE ACT OF 2011 INTRODUCED IN HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES w/ support fr/ A.R.M.

http://www.marketwire.com/press-release/regenerative-medicine-act-2011-introduced-house-representatives-with-support-from-alliance-1513980.htm

Shire in the hunt for promising new stem cell tech

The UK's Shire has been making a series of small-$3 million to $5 million-investments in stem cell developers as the CEO continues to hunt for viable new business opportunities. "The science is there," said Angus Russell, "the challenge is finding something you can turn into a business." Russell makes clear that he's taking a distinctly unsentimental approach to stem cell research, noting that he only wants to acquire technology that insurers will be willing to pay for. Report

Shire Pharmaceuticals Stem cells


--Ankur