Geron's abandoned clinical trial for a
spinal cord therapy based on human embryonic stem cells appears to be
back on again but at a different company and with $14.3 million in
help from the California stem cell agency.
An eagle-eyed anonymous reader of the
California Stem Cell Report pointed out the upcoming award to
Asterias Biotherapeutics/Biotime, which purchased the stem cell
operations of Geron Corp. Geron ditched the trial in November 2011
for what it said were financial reasons.
Here is what the reader said in a
comment posted on the “Trounson" item that appeared recently on this blog.
“The Strategic Partnership III Award reviews are in: Asterias Biotherapeutics / BioTime will get $14 million to restart spinal cord injury trial with GRNOPC1.”
The reference is to an item on the agenda for the May 29 meeting of the governing board of the $3
billion agency.
The exact title of the application is
“A Phase I/IIa Dose Escalation Safety Study of [REDACTED] in
Patients with Cervical Sensorimotor Complete Spinal Cord Injury.”
The information provided by the
anonymous reader goes beyond what is currently available on the CIRM
Web site, and he or she seems to have special knowledge of the nature
of the application. That includes the names of the applicants,
normally kept secret by CIRM, and the nature of the material involved
in the proposal, GRNOPC1.
The staff recommendation is virtually
certain to be approved by the CIRM governing board, which rarely
rejects such positions.
Another $9.8 million proposal for a
spinal cord therapy project was rejected by the staff. The
applicants, however, may make an appeal directly to the board on May
29.
CIRM was also involved with the original Geron
proposal, which was the first clinical trial for a therapy based on
human embryonic stem cells. The stem cell agency loaned the company $25 million only
three months before Geron bailed out on the project. It was an
unpleasant surprise for the agency and shock to many patients. Geron
paid back the loan with interest.
Asterias was headed by Tom Okarma, once
the CEO of Geron, and BioTime is headed by Michael West, who founded
Geron many years ago.
Our thanks to the anonymous reader for pointing out the information on the award.
(The day following publication of this item, Asterias reported clearing the first safety hurdle on the trial.)
(Okarma left Asterias in April. An earlier version of this item said Okarma was still head of the company.)
Our thanks to the anonymous reader for pointing out the information on the award.
(The day following publication of this item, Asterias reported clearing the first safety hurdle on the trial.)
(Okarma left Asterias in April. An earlier version of this item said Okarma was still head of the company.)