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Published byElmer Perry Modified over 9 years ago
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Stem cells and gene therapy to repair the damaged heart: will it work and is it right? John Martin Professor of Cardiovascular Medicine University College London
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Small molecules Industry funded Heavily regulated Mechanisms understood Extensive toxicology performed Intellectual property obvious Industry total control
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Gene therapy Venture capital funded Heavily regulated Mechanism understood Very extensive toxicology Intellectual property less obvious but possible Control shared - biotech/academia
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Stem cell therapy Difficult to fund Less regulated Mechanisms not understood Little toxicology Intellectual property difficult Academia can control
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Gene therapy trials failed 1.because of lack of understanding of basic biological problems 2.lack of safety 3.and small, uncontrolled trials
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Collar; Pig
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TRINAM: EMEA orphan drug status FDA orphan drug status and fast track status Ark Therapeutics October 2005 Patient Safety and Dose Escalation study Low dose successfully completed
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Gene Therapy Problems 1.Gene can disseminate to whole body 2.Can we get enough where we want it? Solution 1.Local gene therapy 2.Use a reservoir
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Embryonic stem cells Bone marrow stem cells Resident stem cells The whole body Specialised tissue (e.g. heart, blood vessels) Repair of the organ (e.g. in heart, repairs heart)
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Use of autologous cells in large randomised control trials in patients with: – Acute myocardial infarction – Late presentation myocardial infarction – Heart failure (both ischaemic and dilated) Use of autologous cells in small clinical mechanistic studies Studies to test use of cytokines
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Stem Cell Research Plan at Barts and UCL 3 protocols approved by ethics committee Ischaemic Heart Failure Dilated Cardiomyopathy Acute myocardial infarction (Total recruitment of 700 patients)
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Committed MK-progenitor cell Multipotent progenitor cell Platelet-shedding mature MKs Immature MK GENE TRANSFER (green protein) Gene transfer to stem cell Thrombopoiesis of haematopoietic progenitors Expression of introduced gene in cells originated from stem cells
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