Spinal Cure Australia

/ Home / News

Donations

Help us get people out of their wheelchairs and back on their feet

Donate through Westpac PayWay

or PayPal

Subscribe

Keep up to date with current research and SpinalCure activities by subscribing to our monthly e-newsletter.







Twitter: for the latest...

Historic Trial to Treat Spinal Injury with Stem Cells

The recent announcement that stem cell treatment of spinal injury was finally moving from experimentation on rats to an actual human trial is the news that many people affected by spinal cord injury have been waiting for.

This article written by Andy Coghlan from the New Scientist website details this exciting development.

Patients with spinal cord injuries will be the first humans to receive repair cells derived from embryonic stem cells. The first ever clinical trial using stem cells derived from embryonic stem cells (ESCs) has received the go-ahead from the US Food and Drug Administration.

Geron Corporation, a company based in Menlo Park, California, hopes to mend the spines of patients paralysed from the chest down by injecting injury sites with stem cells that restore connections and repair damage.

“This marks the beginning of what is potentially a new chapter in medical therapeutics, one that reaches beyond pills to a new level of healing: the restoration of organ and tissue function achieved by the injection of healthy replacement cells,” said the company’s president, Tom Okarma.

“My hat is off to Geron – this is what we’ve all been waiting for,” says Robert Lanza, chief scientist at Advanced Cell Technology, a stem cell company in Worcester, Massachusetts. “It’s been over a decade since embryonic stem cells were discovered, and this sends a message that we’re ready at last to start helping people.”

The trial had been “on clinical hold” for years over concerns that the cells could form tumours, but the FDA is now satisfied that this risk is low enough to allow the trial to proceed.

New political climate
Ethical concerns have also dogged the trial, because obtaining the cell lines involved destruction of embryos. The previous US president, George Bush, had obstructed research using such cells for eight years to appease his conservative supporters.

However, the new president, Barack Obama, promised in his inaugural address to “restore science to its rightful place”, so approval of the trial could be an early sign that he will lift all the Bush restrictions on stem-cell research, first imposed in
2001.

Hundreds of trials are already under way around the world with stem cells derived from adult or fetal tissue, but these cells are limited in the types of tissue they can turn into and repair.

The spine repair trial could open up a new era in medicine because embryonic stem cells are the only type that generate all 200 or so tissues of the body.

Revolutionary treatments
ESCs can’t be used directly, because they can form cancers called teratomas. But they can be used in the lab to generate potentially inexhaustible supplies of all other types of cell that might be needed for repair.

The type to be used in the trial are neural stem cells called oligodendrocyte progenitor cells. These support other neurons in the brain and nerves by supplying growth factors and by producing the myelin sheaths that protect neurons from damage.

In previous research with these cells, Geron showed that they could improve the mobility of rats whose hind legs had been made immobile by spinal injuries.

The treated rats could walk better and post-mortems showed that the injected cells had multiplied in the injury site and restored lost connections. The hope now is that the same will happen in people.

Geron says that the main objective is to prove the cells are safe, especially given the FDA’s earlier misgivings over the cancer risk. But for one year after treatment, the company will also look closely for any recovery of function and movement in the lower body lost through the injury. In all, the patients will be monitored for 15 years.

If the cells appear safe, it could open the floodgates for a host of other trials using cells originally derived from ESCs.