Thursday, June 12, 2014

A Nearly $1 Million Award, the California Stem Cell Agency and the Revolving Door

Directors of the California stem cell agency tomorrow are scheduled to deal once again with a $900,424 proposed award to a Stanford researcher who recently hired a top staffer from the state research effort.

The award would go to Helen Blau, one of the leaders of Baxter Laboratory at Stanford. On Monday, Natalie DeWitt, who was special projects officer for former CIRM President Alan Trounson, went to work for Baxter as director of research development.

The award first came up at the directors' meeting May 29. It was recommended for board approval by Trounson and unidentified CIRM staff.

During that meeting, CIRM Director Jeff Sheehy, who is also a member of the grant review group, said that a copy of the application and the scientific critique was not provided to him at the March 24 review session. The application was submitted by Blau in January.

Sheehy and another director said the review was flawed. Sheehy noted that the Blau proposal was not approved for funding by the agency's out-of-state scientific reviewers. He said that during the closed-door review session several negative comments were made about the proposal during oral discussion. The application received a scientific score of 73, two points below the cut-off for funding. CIRM staff said, however, the proposal had merit and should be funded.

Director Sherry Lansing said it was important for the board to be open and transparent and suggested that the application be sent back to the full review group for further consideration. The 29-member board did so on a 9-0 vote. Members not voting either had conflicts of interest or were not present.

At the time of the meeting, DeWitt's then future employment by Baxter was not widely known and was not mentioned during the discussion.

Asked for comment today by the California Stem Cell Report, DeWitt said in a telephone interview that she was not involved in any way with the application. She also said she has not been involved with any of Blau's applications to CIRM or those from Garry Nolan or Peter Jackson, the other two leaders of the Baxter lab. Blau has been awarded $2.8 million by CIRM and Nolan $1.3 million. He is also a leader on a $20 million CIRM grant.

In response to questions, CIRM spokesman Kevin McCormack today said in an email that DeWitt was not involved with the $900,424 application by Blau. He said DeWitt served notice May 19. DeWitt said that sometime in late April or May that she “let a few key people (at the agency) know” that she was looking for work elsewhere and “spoke with the (CIRM) lawyers.”

DeWitt said her work at CIRM involved the $70 million Alpha Clinic proposal and the $40 million stem cell genomics award that went to a Stanford-led consortium. She said Baxter's Peter Jackson, who has some expertise in human genetic disease, is not involved in the genomics proposal. The CIRM contract on the award is yet to be signed.

DeWitt was mentioned yesterday in an article on the California Stem Cell Report dealing with “revolving door” issues involving government employees who go to work for enterprises that are linked to their former agency. The issues are likely to become of more concern to the stem cell agency in the next couple of years. The agency is scheduled to run out of money for new grants in 2017, and some employees are likely to be looking for work in the stem cell field in California, which only involves a small number of private and public enterprises.

CIRM employees are briefed on conflict-of-interest and revolving door issues, according to the agency. Its employee handbook also contains information on the subject along with a link to a state Fair Political Practices Commission document further explaining revolving door rules.

It says state officials are barred from taking part in decisions that directly relate to a prospective employer. The document says,
“The ban of influencing prospective employment prohibits any public official from making, participating in making, or influencing a governmental decision that directly relates to a prospective employer while negotiating or after reaching an employment arrangement.”
It continues,
 “The ban on influencing prospective employment is triggered by negotiating or having an arrangement regarding prospective employment. While submitting a résumé or an application to a prospective employer does not trigger the ban, the following contacts will trigger the ban:
  • “An interview with an employer or his or her agent.
  • “Discussing an offer of employment with an employer or his or her agent.
  • “Accepting an offer of employment
In response to a question, McCormack said,
“Very few people, Natalie included, tell their employer that they are looking for work so I have no idea when she started looking.”
McCormack did not respond to a request for the names of the CIRM staff involved in making the recommendation to approve the $900,424 Blau award.

At tomorrow's teleconference meeting, the CIRM board is scheduled to act on a proposal to have the Blau application re-examined by a subset of the grant review group -- not the full group. Interested parties can either take part in the meeting or listen in from a number of sites in Northern and Southern California and elsewhere. Specific locations can be found on the agenda

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Stem Cells and Revolving Doors: The California Experience

The phrase “revolving door” is not one that rolls off the tongues of most Americans. But it is shorthand for an issue that concerns both Elon Musk of Tesla and SpaceX fame as well as taxi drivers in New York City.

It is also a matter of importance to the $3 billion California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM) and other state agencies.

Natalie DeWitt
CIRM photo
The issue surfaced this week with the departure of a high level staffer at the San Francisco-based agency -- Natalie DeWitt, special projects officer for its former president, Alan Trounson. DeWitt's final day at the agency was last Friday. She began her new job on Monday at Baxter Laboratory at Stanford University.

Garry Nolan, Helen Blau, Peter Jackson
Baxter Laboratory photo
Baxter is run by Stanford scientists Helen Blau, Garry Nolan and Peter Jackson. Blau has received $2.8 million from the stem cell agency. Nolan has received $1.3 million. He is also a leader (co-PI) on a $20 million award in the agency's signature disease team effort.

No one is alleging that DeWitt or others have done anything wrong. She has a fulsome resume and a record of accomplishment.

Her departure from CIRM and employment at Baxter, nonetheless, does bring to the fore revolving door employment issues that now are a matter of greater concern for the agency than they were five years ago. The agency is scheduled to run out of funds for new awards in less than three years. Some of its employees are undoubtedly going to be looking for future employment in California's small, stem cell research community. It would be natural for agency employees to want to capitalize on their unique experience at CIRM. That is what gaining professional experience is all about.

But there are legal and ethical constraints. To prevent improper influence on governmental actions, the state of California has laws dealing with revolving door employment. Briefly summarized, state law says that certain former state employees and consultants can be banned from attempting to influence their former agency, either for one year or permanently. Current state officials also can be barred from taking part in decisions that directly relate to a prospective employer.

The California Stem Cell Report this week queried CIRM about its revolving door policies. Kevin McCormack, senior director of public communications, replied,
“These are issues that we are encouraged to be mindful of from the day we are hired to the day we leave. Once we accept the job we are given an 'employee handbook' (see below) which includes information about the state policy on what is appropriate behavior. As state employees, we have to periodically go through ethics training, and this covers what is and is not acceptable behavior in these instances. We are also encouraged to consult our in-house lawyers for guidance or to get advice from the state ethics agency on how the rules might apply to a particular situation.”

Revolving door problems are not new to either state or national government. They have long dogged such agencies as the Department of Defense. That's what Musk complained about via Twitter in a matter involving his space exploration firm, SpaceX. According to Bloomberg News, Musk tweeted last month about how competitors of his space company hired an Air Force official allegedly as part of a move to secure a chunk of a $68 billion Pentagon satellite project. And in New York City, questions also rose last month concerning the employment of a former top city taxi regulator by the noted ride-sharing company Uber, a competitor in the city's big taxi business.

DeWitt, who was paid $199,000 in 2013, worked for the stem cell agency from September 2011 until this month.  She played a key role in the $70 million Alpha Clinic proposal championed by Trounson. She was also deeply involved in the $40 million stem cell genomics award that went to a Stanford consortium last January following a controversial review process. She and Trounson co-authored an article in Nature Biotechnology promoting the genomics plan.

DeWitt, who has a Ph.D. in cell and molecular biology from the University of Wisconsin, was a senior editor at Nature from 2001 to 2010. Seven months after joining CIRM, she co-founded a firm called AccendoEditing. According to her Linked In profile, the firm works with clients to “to present scientific manuscripts and grants in a clear and engaging fashion.” It also “provides insights into the review process.”

DeWitt was one of the organizers of a conference last September at the University of Oxford dealing with cancer and stem cells. Her new bosses, Blau and Nolan, were scheduled speakers along with Stanford's noted stem cell scientist Irv Weissman.

At the Baxter Laboratory, DeWitt is its director of research development. Asked last Friday about leaving CIRM, she replied via email,
“The reason I'm moving on is simply that what I consider a fantastic opportunity presented itself to me.”

She has not responded to a query Monday about her views on the subject of revolving door issues.

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Stanford's $40 Million Stem Cell Genomics Award Still Hanging Fire

More than four months after a Stanford-led consortium won a $40 million stem cell genomics award, the California stem cell agency has not yet concluded a formal contract with the researchers.

The award was approved Jan. 29 by the agency's board following a process that Stanford's competitors said was marred by unfairness, apparent preferential treatment and manipulation of scientific scores.

The award is aimed at creating medical treatments tailored to a patient's genetic makeup and making the state a world leader in stem cell genomics.

In response to a query from the California Stem Cell Report, Kevin McCormack, senior director for communications, said that the contract with the consortium remains unsigned. He said, however, that the agency is hopeful that final details will be worked out soon.

Monday, June 09, 2014

WARF Triumphs in Latest Chapter of hESC Patent Challenge

A California-based effort to ease patent restrictions on the research use of human embryonic stem cells last week suffered a severe blow when a federal court of appeals ruled in favor of a Wisconsin organization known as WARF.

At the heart of the matter is the question of who profits from stem cell research along with whether the patents stifle scientific research.

The ruling came Wednesday in a legal action brought by Consumer Watchdog of Santa Monica. The effort was supported by the former president of California stem cell agency, Alan Trounson, and Jeanne Loring, head of the stem cell program at Scripps in La Jolla, Ca. Doug Melton and Chad Cowan, both of Harvard, also backed the challenge.

The lawsuit was filed in a case involving the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF) and involved work by Jamie Thomson of the University of Wisconsin and of UC Santa Barbara. Consumer Watchdog said that Thomson deserved credit for being first to isolate and maintain human embryonic stem cells. But the organization said that “his achievement was not the result of his having created a patentable invention.” Consumer Watchdog's brief said that the work involved was “obvious.” One of the main reasons for Thomson’s achievement, the organization said was that “he had access to human embryos and financial support that other researchers did not have.”

A federal court of appeals in Washington, D.C., said Consumer Watchdog had no standing to sue to overturn WARF patents.

The court said that because Consumer Watchdog “has not identified a particularized, concrete interest in the patentability" of the work or shown “any injury in fact...it lacks standing to appeal” earlier decisions in favor of WARF.

It is unclear what the next step is in the eight-year-old dispute. John M. Simpson, the stem cell spokesman for the Consumer Watchdog, said,
"We are reviewing the decision and considering our options.  It's important to remember that because of our challenge WARF's claims were substantially narrowed as the patent went through the PTO (patent office) process."

WARF has not responded to a request for comment from the California Stem Cell Report.


Consumer Watchdog is represented in the matter by the Public Patent Foundation of New York, which successfully argued before the U.S. Supreme Court last year that genes cannot be patented because they occur naturally in nature.  

Here is a link to legal documents and other material in the case.  Last week's decision can be found below. 

Friday, June 06, 2014

California's $70 Million Alpha Stem Cell Clinic Project Runs Into Roadblock

The California stem cell agency's $70 million Alpha Clinic plan has hit a stumbling block in the drive to make the Golden State the“go-to” location worldwide for stem cell treatments.

The agency reported today that it has encountered difficulties in lining up the necessary expertise to make the decisions on the complex applications, which are now awaiting judgment. The closed-door review session was originally scheduled for this month.

The delay surfaced when the California Stem Cell Report asked the agency about the reviews of the applications. In a brief response, Kevin McCormack, senior director for communications for the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), said,
“It's being rescheduled because it is just taking a little longer than anticipated to get the caliber of experts needed to review something as complex as this.”

McCormack said the new review session would probably be held in the fall. The agency expects to have 15 experts from outside of the state to examine the applications in addition to eight members of the agency board. 

The Alpha clinic proposal attracted applications from eight, unidentified, major California institutions earlier this year. The intention is to create one-stop locations for stem cell treatments that would lure patients and scientists from around the world.

The plan is a much-touted initiative by former CIRM President Alan Trounson, who resigned to rejoin his family in Australia. Randy Mills, the former CEO of Osiris Therapeutics, replaced Trounson six days ago. Trounson has been pushing Alpha Clinics since 2011. Just last month, he extolled the proposal before hundreds of regenerative medicine specialists at a Berkeley conference sponsored by the Regenerative Medicine Foundation.

Trounson said that the clinics would serve as a “proving ground” to develop business models, to build and share data and to create a strategy that would help convince insurance companies and Medicare to pay for the treatments.

He said that existing clinical research centers are not able to provide all the resources necessary for development and application of stem cell treatments. He said developing clinical expertise in a “random, spontaneous way doesn't work in the best interests of the patient.”

Trounson, who is renown for his IVF work, said the existing structure of the IVF industry in the United States is evidence of the weakness of an unstructured approach.

Agency spokesman McCormack did not answer a question about whether applicants would be given a chance to modify their proposals in the wake of the delay. One of the aspects of the RFA involves applicants providing some sort of matching funds or equivalent support to leverage the funds provided by the state of California. More time could mean that applicants could round up more matching cash.

The delay also could possibly endanger existing commitments of support and affect employment arrangements as well as building schedules.  

Thursday, June 05, 2014

Stem Cell Parsimony: California's New Stem Cell CEO Has Sharp Budget Knife

In his first major public act, the new president of the $3 billion California stem cell agency this week whacked away at its proposed operational budget for the coming fiscal year, cutting $200,000 here and $20,000 there.

When he was done, Randy Mills offered up a $17.3 million budget that reflected basically the same level of spending as this year. It could be even less given inflation and the vagaries of estimating expenditures for the current fiscal year.

Current spending is estimated to hit $17.4 million by June 30, the end of the fiscal year. But that estimate is a month old and is likely to change somewhat. The budget proposed in early May by former CIRM President Alan Trounson hit $17.9 million, a 9.5 percent increase over estimated expenditures for this year.

Mills' tight budget sent a parsimonious message to the agency staff and the agency's governing board. It also gave him more maneuvering room in upcoming years. The agency is limited by law to spending no more than 6 percent of its grant awards on administrative expenses. A possibility exists that it could run out of operational funds if it does not carefully watch its spending. Some members of the board have expressed concern in the past that the capped amount is too small for effective management and oversight of the agency's large portfolio of awards.

The new CEO's budget also reflects the first time that the agency has not seen a significant year-to-year increase in its proposed spending compared to actual spending. 

Mills, former CEO of Osiris Therapeutics of Maryland, did not make across-the-board cuts in Trounson's initial CIRM budget. Rather Mills surgically excised the cash, including $50,000 from his own office.

In terms of agency activities, the category of “reviews, meetings and workshops” took the biggest hit. Mills sliced $333,000 from what once was a total of $2.5 million. A meeting for the 600 CIRM grantees was eliminated along with $100,000 worth of meetings with outside advisors on the agency's complex disease team projects. Other outside contracting was lopped by $160,000. But even relatively small items were hit. A plan to spend $5,000 for a sponsorship at a personalized medicine conference fell by the way. Plans for training in the finance department were trimmed by $2,120.

Mills' budget will now go to the full board in a telephonic meeting on June 13 for what is expected to be routine approval. A number of public locations are available where interested parties can listen and comment. The specific locations can be found on the meeting agenda.

Friday, May 30, 2014

Sparse News Coverage This Morning of California Stem Cell Agency Action

LA JOLLA, Ca. -- Media coverage of the resurrection of the Geron's landmark human embryonic stem cell trial was light today in the wake of a $14.3 million award by the California stem cell agency to support its continuation.

The San Diego U-T and the San Francisco Business Times both carried stories but none others appeared this morning in a Google search.

Bradley Fikes of the San Diego newspaper attended yesterday's CIRM board meeting here. He wrote,
"A potentially groundbreaking trial to treat spinal cord injuries with tissue grown from human embryonic stem cells will resume, after being funded by the California's stem cell agency."

Both he and Ron Leuty of the San Francisco Business Times also noted the award to Sangamo BioSciences of Richmond, CaLeuty wrote,
"Sangamo BioSciences Inc. (NASDAQ: SGMO) of Richmond will split a $5.6 million California Institute for Regenerative Medicine award with Dr. John Zaia of the Beckman Research Institute at the City of Hope near Los Angeles to take blood stem cells from HIV patients and cut and replace a gene that is key to the spread of the AIDS virus."

Asteris issued a press release this morning that said,
“We are preparing to initiate the dose escalation Phase 1/2a clinical trial of AST-OPC1 in patients with cervical injuries in 6-9 months subject to FDA clearance,” stated Edward Wirth III M.D., Ph.D., Asterias’ Chief Translational Officer. “Achievements in this CIRM-supported program could also help accelerate further development of AST-OPC1 in other neurodegenerative diseases such as stroke and multiple sclerosis. We are currently evaluating the function of AST-OPC1 in nonclinical models of these diseases.”
“This award provides significant non-dilutive funding to accelerate the development of AST-OPC1 for patients with spinal cord injury. Given the lack of any approved therapies for spinal cord injury and the high level of disability, substantial costs of care, and shorter life expectancy of injured individuals, AST-OPC1 has the potential to address a substantial unmet medical need in this condition,” stated Katharine Spink, Ph.D., Asterias’ Chief Operating Officer."

BioTime's stock price was up 22 cents this morning at the time of this writing to $2.95. It has risen from $2.42 on May 22 when the California Stem Cell Report first carriednews of the California stem cell agency award.

Sangamo has not yet issued a press release, but its stock price was at $13.68 this morning, up 16 cents.

Thursday, May 29, 2014

CIRM Press Release on Today's Meeting and the Asterias Award

LA JOLLA, Ca. -- Here is a link to the press release from the California stem cell agency on today's meeting of its board of governors, which has just concluded.

California Stem Cell Agency Approves $14 Million for Landmark hESC Clinical Trial


Above is a CIRM video involving one of the participants in the original Geron trial.

LA JOLLA, Ca.  – The state of California today pumped $14.3 million into an historic clinical trial for a stem cell therapy that was once abandoned because it was deemed too risky financially by the firm that devised the treatment.

The action came when the governing board of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM) approved the award to Asterias Therapeutics of Menlo Park, Ca., a subsidiary of BioTime, Inc., of Alameda, Ca. The firms purchased the spinal cord injury treatment along with the human embryonic stem cell assets of Geron Corp., also of Menlo Park, in 2013.

The scientists who reviewed the Asterias application said the therapy could have a “highly significant impact” on the spinal cord injury, which afflicts more than 200,000 people nationwide. According to a CIRM review summary, the reviewers said a successful result from the trial would be a “high visibility achievement for the entire field of stem cell-based/regenerative medicine.”

The Geron clinical trial was the first ever in the United States for a therapy based on human embryonic stem cells, an area of research roiled by controversy. Some persons believe that deriving such cells is tantamount to killing a human being.

Geron submitted nearly 28,000 pages of material to the FDA in its years-long bid to start the trial, which began in 2010. However, in November 2011, the company stunned the stem cell world by giving up on the trial, citing business reasons.

The action also shocked the stem cell agency, which less than four months earlier had signed an agreement loaning the company $25 million. The agency's governing board gave the go-ahead on the loan during a process that involved major departures from its normal procedures. Geron repaid the loan with interest.

Approval of the funds for Asterias was not unexpected. The California Stem Cell Report carried an item on the matter May 22.

Today, Jonathan Thomas, chairman of the CIRM board, said in a statement,
“This new investment means we have a chance to build on the lessons we learned first time around. If this therapy can achieve even very modest improvements for patients, it could have an enormous impact on the quality of their life, and the lives of their families."
CIRM's scientific grant reviewers, all of whom are from out-of-state, gave the Asteria application a score of 76 out of 100 during their closed-door review of the proposal. Asterias, which currently has 17 employees including some from Geron, said in its application,
“Initial clinical safety testing was conducted in five subjects with neurologically complete thoracic injuries. No safety concerns have been observed after following these five subjects for more than two years. The current project proposes to extend testing to subjects with neurologically complete cervical injuries, the intended population for further clinical development, and the population considered most likely to benefit from the therapy.

“Initial safety testing will be performed in three subjects at a low dose level, with subsequent groups of five subjects at higher doses bracketing the range believed most likely to result in functional improvements. Subjects will be monitored both for evidence of safety issues and for signs of neurological improvement using a variety of neurological, imaging and laboratory assessments.”

Asterias' application continued,
“By completion of the (Phase 1/2a) project, we expect to have accumulated sufficient safety and dosing data to support initiation of an expanded efficacy study of a single selected dose in the intended clinical target population.”

The complete application is not available. CIRM released only selected excerpts on its Web site. See here for the text of the CIRM review summary.

While reviewers praised the bulk of the proposal they also raised concerns. They “questioned the strength of the preclinical efficacy data.” They “expressed concern regarding the manufacturing plan and strategy to support future development, which they viewed as risky.” They also said the budget “may be high.”

BioTime, which is headed by the founder of Geron, Michael West, is a publicly traded firm. Its stock price closed at $2.73 yesterday. Its 52-week price range runs from $2.21 to $4.82.

Here is a link to the CIRM press release on the grant. 

Text of the CIRM Review Summary of the Asterias hESC Clinical Trial Proposal

Here is a copy of the summary of the review of Asterias application 
for funding for its hESC clinical trial involving spinal cord injury. 






Lunch Break for California Stem Cell Directors

LA JOLLA, Ca. -- Directors of the California stem cell agency have adjourned for lunch. Later this afternoon, they are scheduled to approve a $14.3 million award to Asterias Therapeutics for an historic hESC trial.

Researchers Seek to Overturn Negative Decisions by California Stem Cell Agency

LA JOLLA, Ca. -- Three rejected applicants for millions of dollars from the California stem cell agency have appealed negative reviewer decisions in the agency's business-friendly strategic partner program.

The agency's staff rejected two of the appeals but is sending one back to reviewers.

Names of the applicants and the amounts sought were withheld by the agency. The agency also withheld the contents of the appeal letters, material that was, until recently, was routinely disclosed.

California Spending $16.2 Million to Lure Stem Cell Scientists

LA JOLLA, Ca.  -- Directors of the California stem cell agency this morning approved $16.2 million to recruit three star researchers to UCLA, UC Berkeley and the Gladstone Institutes in San Francisco.

The move came on a 6-2-1 vote by the 29-member board. Most of the directors were disqualified from voting because of conflicts of interest.

The recipients are Todd McDevitt of the Georgia Institute of Technology, who is being recruited by Gladstone; Xavier Darzacq of the Ecole Normale Superlieure in Paris, who is being sought by UC Berkeley, and John Chute of Duke, who is being recruited by UCLA. Chute is the second researcher from Duke to be lured to California with the help of a CIRM grant.

Appeals by UC San Francisco and UC Davis were rejected by the board.

The vote on the awards followed an unsuccessful effort to scrap the entire recruitment program.

California Stem Cell Researcher Recruitment Program Narrowly Survives

LA JOLLA, Ca. -- Directors of the $3 billion California stem cell agency this morning rejected an attempt to reject proposals to spend $16.2  million to recruit star scientists to the Golden State.

The move failed on a 4-5 vote on the 29-member board. Most members of the board were disqualified because of conflicts of interests. The major beneficiaries of the program all have representatives on the CIRM.

Names of the researchers and the recruiting institutions were not disclosed.

The motion was made by Francisco Prieto and seconded by Steve Juelsgaard. Prieto said the grants are "not the best place to for the (agency) to put its money right now."

The discussion of the matter is continuing following the vote.



UC San Francisco and UC Davis Seek Millions for Recruitment of Scientists

LA JOLLA, Ca. -- The University of California at Davis and the University of California at San Francisco are both appealing rejection of multimillion dollar proposals that would help them recruit highly regarded scientists to California.

The proposals were turned down by reviewers for the California stem cell agency.  However, appeal letters were submitted to the board by Arnold Kriegstein, director of the stem cell program at UC San Francisco, and Thomas Vail, chairman of the Department of Orthopedic Surgery at the same institution.

The appeal letter from UC Davis was signed by Frederick Meyers, vice dean of its medical school; Jan Nolta, head of the school's stem cell program, and Diana Farmer, chair of the Department of Surgery.

The letters were not available online at the time of this writing.

Samuelson Resigns from California Stem Cell Agency Board

LA JOLLA, Ca. -- Longtime CIRM Director Joan Samuelson has resigned from her position on the governing board of the $3 billion California stem cell agency, it was announced this morning.

Samuelson has served on the board since its inception in 2004 and has been a strong advocate for potential treatments for Parkinson's Disease. Samuelson also has Parkinson's Disease and has not been able to attend a number of recent meetings.

The vacancy will be filled by State Controller John Chiang, who is soliciting applications and recommendations.

California Stem Cell Directors Open Meeting This Moning

LA JOLLA, Ca. -- Directors of the $3 billion California stem cell agency opened their meeting today at 9:09 a.m. PDT.  It is the first meeting for Randy Mills, the new president of the research program. Alan Trounson, his predecessor, was not at the meeting when it began although he is still an advisor to the agency.

CIRM Chairman Jonathan Thomas welcomed Mills, declaring that he was "passionate about patients."

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Check This Web Site Tomorrow for Results of the California Stem Cell Agency Meeting

The California Stem Cell Report will provide live, gavel-to-gavel coverage of tomorrow's session of the governing board of the $3 billion California stem cell agency from the meeting location in La Jolla, Ca.

On the agenda is a $14.3 million award to Asterias Therapeutics to continue the hESC clinical trial begun by Geron. Directors are scheduled to receive an update on CIRM finances. The agency is scheduled to run out of money for new awards in 2017 and is attempting to find new sources of funding.

For those who want to listen to the daylong meeting on the Internet, instructions can be found on the meeting agenda. A live teleconference location is also available in San Francisco. The address can be found also on the agenda.

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Results Heralded in Asterias hESC Clinical Trial

Two prominent stem cell patient advocates are hailing as a “giant leap forward” the initial results of a clinical trial involving a human embryonic stem cell therapy for spinal cord injuries.

Their remarks came in the wake of last week's announcement by Asterias Therapeutics of Menlo Park, Ca., that the trial had cleared its first safety hurdle. Asterias picked up the trial from Geron, which began it in 2010. Asterias and its parent, BioTime of Alameda, Ca., purchased Geron's stem cell assets after Geron abandoned the trial in 2011.

Asked for comment on the Asterias announcement, Roman Reed of Fremont, Ca., who was honored for his advocacy work in 2013 by the Genetics Policy Institute, said,
“Having started this groundbreaking research with Roman's Law funding of pioneer Dr. Hans Keirstead, I am extremely excited about the possibility of a paralysis treatment.
“My goal is paralysis cure. This research brings that dream closer to fruition for all of my paralyzed brethren. Onward & Upwards!”

Then California Gov. Schwarzenegger (left) with Don Reed
(center) and Roman Reed at 2007 stem cell agency press
 conference
AP photo
His father, Don Reed, also of Fremont and whose advocacy work along with Roman's led to passage of California's Roman Reed Spinal Cord Injury Research Act, said the search for a spinal injury stem cell therapy dates back some years.

 A major moment came, the elder Reed said “with the famous paralyzed  'rats-that-walked-again'” feature on '60 Minutes,' which made Christopher Reeve say, 'Oh, to be a rat today!' Today, the dream he embodied is a giant leap closer.”

Reeve was an actor who was famous for his screen portrayal of Superman and was paralyzed as the result of a horse-riding accident. He died Oct. 10, 2004, about one month before the California voters created the state's $3 billion stem cell agency.

Roman Reed, who is a candidate for the California state Senate in next week's election, is paralyzed as the result of a football injury to his spine in 1994. He coined the California stem cell agency's motto, “Turning stem cells into cures.”

Asterias is expected to receive a $14.3 million award from the California stem cell agency on Thursday to help continue the trial.

Asterias-Geron hESC Trial and Funding Reported in The Scientist

The Scientist magazine today picked up on the item on the California Stem Cell Report that said that Asterias Therapeutics would receive $14.3 million to continue the human embryonic stem cell trial that was abandoned by Geron.

The Scientist article by Jef Akst was headlined, Geron hESC Trial to Resume? Nearly three years after Geron shuttered its stem cell program, BioTime receives funding to relaunch a Phase 1 trial for spinal cord injury.”

The brief piece largely cited information contained in our May 22 item. Akst also said that Asterias, a subsidiary of Biotime, and the California stem cell agency, which is expected to provide the cash, declined to comment.

Asterias also has reported successful results from the first phase of the trial. 

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