FDA green lights stem-cell clinical trial for Lou Gehrig’s disease

NATURE PUBLICATIONS

FDA green lights stem-cell clinical trial for Lou Gehrig’s disease 

September 22, 2009

http://blogs.nature.com/news/thegreatbeyond/2009/09/fda_green_lights_stemcell_clin.html

Monya Baker

The Maryland company NeuralStem has the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s permission to test its spinal cord stem cells in twelve patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The approval comes a month after the FDA placed Geron’s planned clinical trial on hold for a second time. NeuralStem’s trial had also previously been placed on hold by the FDA in February before receiving the go-ahead in September.

Though both trials involve placing cells into the spinal cord, NeuralStem’s product is made of cultured neural stem cells derived from a single 8-week fetus; Geron’s product, intended to treat spinal cord injury, is derived from embryonic stem cells that have been differentiated into precursors of neuron-support cells.

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ALS has not funded NeuralStem’s work directly, Briujn says, but has advised the company and funded academic scientists who’ve been involved with the company.

NeuralStem’s chief scientific officer Karl Johe says tests of large animal models show that the transplanted cells exert a neuroprotective effect over motor neurons, but it’s not entirely clear how. Earlier this year, Neuralstem and collaborators published results in a rat model of ALS showing that transplanted cells could develop into interneurons that formed synapses with the rats’ motor neurons.

However, Johe emphasized that the upcoming trial will assess safety rather than efficacy. The first few patients selected for the procedure will be those who are no longer able to walk. Because the injected cells protect rather than replace motor neurons, these sicker patients are less likely to benefit from treatment, but they are less able to lose function if something goes wrong. Cells will be injected only on one side of the spinal cord in order to minimize the number of injections into the spinal cord. Only one patient will be injected each month, so that researchers can monitor for effects over a longer period. Eventually, Johe says, the goal is to be able to inject cells in both lower and upper regions of the spinal cord in healthier patients, and see if the injections can keep motor neurons healthy.

The trial is expected to take place at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia. Though the FDA is allowing the trial to go forward, the university’s patient-safety board will also need to approve the trial before it can proceed. Johe declined to say when that would be but said discussions were well underway.

Other companies using neural cells include ReNeuron, which received permission from UK authorities this January to start clinical trials for stroke. Its cell product is made from genetically modified cultures of neural stem cells, also of fetal origin.

StemCells Inc is conducting trials in Batten’s disease, a neurodegenerative disease that strikes children, and recently received approval for a clinical trial for a similar disease. It also uses neural stem cells from material originally derived from fetuses and has recently published results showing that its cell product delayed some symptoms of the disease by about three weeks.

As with human embryonic stem cells, the patent situation for neural stem cells is contentious. In a pair of dueling press releases this May, NeuralStem and Stem Cells Inc both claimed key intellectual property on these cells.