Wednesday, September 02, 2015

Moderate Media Coverage of California's New, $32 Million Stem Cell Bank

The California stem cell agency this week scored moderately well in media coverage of the announcement of its $32 million stem cell bank, the world’s largest such public effort.

Most of the coverage was based in California but, of course, all of the stories can be read globally. The San Francisco Chronicle, The Sacramento Bee and a chain of newspapers in the Bay Area carried articles, among others.

Missing was coverage from major national outlets, such as the New York Times. Also absent was coverage by television news outlets, according to a search this morning on Google. A spokesman for the agency said the Buck Institute, which houses the bank, has restrictions on video coverage.

Ron Leuty of the San Francisco Business Times called the bank opening a “big win” for the $3 billion agency.  

A story by Stephanie ONeill of  KPCC  carried a factoid missing from all other stories – the cost of the cells from the bank in Marin County, north of San Francisco. O'Neill reported,
"The cost of each vial will range from $750 for researchers affiliated with nonprofit research organizations to $1,500 for those who work  for-profit companies, says (California) Institute for Regenerative Medicine spokesman Kevin McCormack."
The Bee story reported much larger figures, which the stem cell agency today said are incorrect.

Jeff Buchanan, who is based in Wisconsin for xconomy, wrote a story with a headline that reflected his focus on the Wisconsin firm involved,
“Cellular Dynamics Launches ‘World’s Largest’ Public Stem Cell Bank”
Buchanan also wrote that the company’s executive vice president, Chris Parker, said that the bank offers more than other banks. Buchanan reported,
“’The diseases, the demographic information that’s associated with them, the clinical data, the genetic and genomic data available—that’s what’s really making these lines valuable,’ (Parker) says. Donors gave consent for their tissue samples to ‘be used for a variety of research purposes,’ giving investigators considerable latitude, says Parker.”
Here are links to the other stories that turned up in the Google search this morning: San Francisco Chronicle, San Jose Mercury News and other papers in its chain, KGO, California Healthline, Philadelpha Business Journal and Latino Health.

Tuesday, September 01, 2015

$32 Million Project: California Opens Largest Public Stem Cell Bank in World

Stem cell storage tanks at new stem cell bank -- Coriell photo
Highlights
300 different stem cell lines
3,000 donors
Coriell, CDI operating, supplying
Stanford, UCLA, UCSF and UCSD involved

Thanks to the taxpayers of California, the Golden State is now home to the largest publicly available stem cell bank in the world.

The state’s $3 billion stem cell agency this morning announced that the bank, located in Marin County north of San Francisco, is open for business.

The project is backed by $32.3 million from the California Institute of Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), as the agency is formally known.

In a news release this morning, CIRM said the bank is “offering the first 300 different stem cell lines for researchers interested in gaining a deeper understanding of, and developing treatments for 11 common diseases and disorders.”

The agency said the bank, housed at the Buck Institute in Novato, is collecting samples from as many as 3,000 donors. CIRM said,
“Those samples will then be turned into high quality stem cell lines – known as induced pluripotent stem cells or iPSCs – which are available to researchers throughout California and the rest of the world.” 
CIRM Chairman Jonathan Thomas said,
“We believe the bank will be an extraordinarily important resource in helping advance the use of stem cell tools for the study of diseases and finding new ways to treat them.” 
As of this writing, the announcement had received coverage on the San Francisco SFgate Web site and on other sites in the San Francisco Bay Area that are owned a news media chain and another site in Pennsylvania.  The coverage is likely to grow throughout the day, which is important to the agency. It is hard-pressed to generate news coverage for its achievements. 

The bank was funded by awards from California in 2013 and is operated by the non-profit Coriell Institute of Camden, N.J.  Generation of the cells is performed by Cellular Dynamics International, Inc., of Madison, Wisc.

CDI was formed by stem cell pioneer research Jamie Thomson of the University of Wisconsin. It was sold to Fujifilm of Japan earlier this year for $307 million at double its stock price.

Also involved in securing the initial adult cells are researchers at UC San Diego, Stanford, UC San Francisco and UCLA.

Here are links to the press releases at Coriell and CDI. Here is a link to a summary of the CIRM banking initiative and a link to a progress report on the effort. Below is a list of participants and amounts of awards. Click on it to see it in a larger format.

Monday, August 31, 2015

Sunlight on California's Stem Cell Loan Effort; Info Missing on Changes in $127 Million Research Programs

Highlights
Some details on loan changes
New Alpha clinic center proposed; no details
Unspecified changes upcoming in $93 million award programs

A little sunshine popped up over the weekend on a bit of fiscal alchemy at the $3 billion California stem cell agency, and a little clarity emerged.

The matter involves the agency’s loan program, which affects multi-million awards to businesses. The awards are called loans but are forgiven if no viable product emerges.

The matter surfaced as a result of a cryptic agenda item for Thursday’s meeting of the agency’s directors’ Intellectual Property Subcommittee. Here is what happened:

About a week ago, the agency posted the agenda for the meeting. The agenda contained a 24-word line that said that it was going to change its policies “to permit existing loan recipient whose loan has been forgiven to convert its award to a grant.”

The need for change and its financial impact on the agency was not discussed. The specific language being changed was not spelled out. The timetable for the changes was not specified. Nor was it discussed whether the move was desired by any recipients of the agency’s largess.

Given the opaque nature of the agenda item, the California Stem Cell Report carried an item Friday morning that said,
“In just four business days, the $3 billion California stem cell agency is going to perform a bit of financial alchemy. But like most alchemists, its methods are less than transparent.” 
Much later that day or possibly early Saturday, the agency posted a brief memo and regulatory language that provided a better look at the loan rule changes, which could have an impact on royalties the state might receive on a successful stem cell therapy.

Based on what is now on the agency’s Web site, the proposal would clarify what happens if a loan-financed therapy is dropped and then revived, leading to actual revenue. Under existing rules, such a situation could trigger an ambiguous financial burden that would have to show on the company books. And business executives and investors do not like ambiguous financial burdens. 

The memo from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), as the agency is formally known, said,
“To provide clarity regarding future obligations, CIRM proposes giving existing loan recipients whose loan has been forgiven by CIRM the option to convert their loan to a grant and forego reinstatement of a forgiven loan. In this way, loan recipients will be automatically governed by the revenue sharing (and other) principles of the agency’s intellectual property regulations in the event future revenue streams are realized. This will be particularly important in the event future revenues are realized after CIRM has exhausted its funding.” 
The directors’ subcommittee is likely to approve the change on Thursday. It would then go to the full board at its Sept. 24 in San Diego for action before it enters the state’s regulatory process, which will open it to further public comment.

The Thursday meeting will also take up changes in the “loan election policy” for this year’s $100 million clinical award program. Details on that are still not available as of this morning, but one assumption would be that they are an extension of the proposed loan changes to that particular program.

The weekend’s memo on the loan changes was dated  Aug. 20.  One can only assume that it was lingering on some CIRM executive’s desk for eight days until it was made available to the public, researchers and likely affected businesses.  

Problems with timely posting of agenda material are not new to the agency. In the more distant past, they were significant but have diminished. That is, until this case and others earlier this year.

The agency also has another directors’ subcommittee coming up in just five business days. The session involves two significant, multimillion dollar programs. One proposal calls for creation of an “Alpha Clinics Accelerating Center” in connection with the $34 million Alpha clinics effort.
The other proposal before the Science Subcommittee deals with unspecified changes in the agency’s upcoming, $93 million “discovery and translational” award rounds.

This morning, no additional details were available on those two matters.

The Science Subcommittee teleconference session on Sept. 8 will be based in San Francisco. Interested parties can weigh in at public locations in Irvine, La Jolla, Los Angeles and Duarte. Addresses are on the agenda.

The meeting Thursday of the Intellectual Property Subcommittee is also a teleconference session based in San Francisco. Public locations are available in San Diego, Hawaii, Woodside and Redwood City with two in San Francisco.

The only public access to these meetings is at their physical locations. No participation is available via the Internet.  However, comments may be submitted in advance or later by emailing them to mbonneville@cirm.ca.gov.

Friday, August 28, 2015

The California Stem Cell Agency and its Mysteries of Fiscal Alchemy

In just four business days, the $3 billion California stem cell agency is going to perform a bit of financial alchemy. But like most alchemists, its methods are less than transparent.

The case in point involves a session of the intellectual property subcommittee of the agency’s board of directors. The committee is scheduled to meet next Thursday to deal with an unknown amount of cash that the agency has given to an unidentified recipient.

According to the very limited information on the meeting agenda, the cash was once a loan. But that loan has been forgiven by the agency. Now the plan is to turn that forgiven loan into a grant.

Why? How much money is involved? What is the rationale? What is the benefit to the people of California, if any? It is all something of a mystery.

Also on the agenda are unspecified changes in the “loan election policy” for clinical awards, a program that is budgeted for $100 million this year. Again, no rationale or explanation is publicly available as of this morning.

One of the favorite words of agency’s president, Randy Mills, is clarity. He reminds folks regularly that the agency should have clarity in what it does.

Mills has indeed improved the clarity of the organization in his one-year tenure at the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, as the agency is formally known. He has brought analytic and presentation skills that have opened new insights into how the organization spends the taxpayers’ billions.  The result has been an improvement in the way the agency operates.

But in this case, the agency is falling short. Its rules call for notifying the public about meetings 10 calendar days in advance of the sessions. However, cryptic agendas that raise more questions than answers do not add up to clarity. Instead, they are opaque and can generate suspicions about the conduct of the agency on the part of the public and interested parties.

Trust in government – and the stem cell agency is part of our government – is at all-time lows. It behooves the California stem cell agency to do what it can avoid feeding that distrust and to make its operations as transparent and open as possible.

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

California Stem Cell Agency Up to State Snuff on Cyberspace Security

Highlights
Most state departments deficient
Agency says it's okay
Foreign stem cell collaborations

The California state auditor this week warned that a host of state agencies are poorly secured and vulnerable to intrusion, but the California stem cell agency is apparently not now one of the miscreants.

In a report released yesterday, State Auditor Elaine Howe said that 73 of the 77 state departments answering a recent security standards survey said that they were not in compliance with security standards.

A story by Jon Ortiz and Jim Miller in The Sacramento Bee said that most departments “have not planned for interruptions or disasters” and five departments audited more closely all had “security deficiencies.”

The Bee story said state departments’ databanks are “stuffed with Social Security numbers, medical records, tax return data and other sensitive information.”

The $3 billion California stem cell agency is one of those departments filled with sensitive data, including proprietary information that is submitted as part of applications for the billions that the agency is handing out.

Responding to a query today from the California Stem Cell Report, Kevin McCormack, senior director of communications for the agency, said that the agency was surveyed by the auditor and now meets state standards. He said,
“We were one of those 77 departments.  We did not have security deficiencies as such – in that we put confidential information at risk – but some aspects of our site were not in full compliance with the state standards, for example not having a link to all previous privacy policies and the dates they were in effect. So we put together a plan of action on how to correct the problems, that plan was approved by the state and those changes have been implemented.”
McCormack continued,
“The question of proprietary information was one of the things we had to address, namely showing all the protections we have in place in our Grants Management System which is the only place that any kind of proprietary information is kept. Because that system already requires separate log in and password protections those met the state standards without any changes being necessary.” 
The agency has awarded tens of millions of dollars to a variety of businesses. It also has relationships with researchers in a number of countries, including China

Periodically news surfaces about Internet theft of business information by Chinese interests, including in the world of biotech and pharmaceuticals (See here, here and here.)

China is also widely believed to have ambitious stem cell research aspirations, although current specifics are scarce.  In May, however, Reuters skimmed off a quick look at Chinese biotech. Earlier this month, China announced regulations aimed at both clearing the way for human research and regulating rogue stem cell clinics. (See here also.)

The California research involving a Chinese collaborator does not allow the collaborator password access to the stem cell agency’s grant management system, McCormack said.
“None of the collaborative funding partners, foreign or domestic, can access our (grant management system). We explicitly make clear in the rules for these collaborations that we take care of the California portion of the funding and their respective agency/government/institution, etc., takes care of their portion. The California researchers would have access to our (system)  through a protected log in and password but not their collaborative funding partner.” 
The collaboration involving the China research is connected to a $1.5 million grant to Holger Willenbring, associate director of the UCSF Liver Center, who has received a total of $4.7 million from the stem cell agency. 

The latest progress report on his research on the agency’s Web site said,
“The objective of this project is to establish the feasibility of liver cell therapy with human induced hepatocyte-like cells (iHeps). As proposed we established the feasibility of generating iHeps from several expandable, potentially autologous human cell types. We identified transcription factors effective in inducing hepatocyte differentiation as well as further maturation of these cells. We also identified small molecules and culture conditions (extracellular matrix composition and stiffness) that promote proliferation and hepatocyte-specific differentiation. The next steps are to investigate the genomic integrity and therapeutic efficacy of these cells.”
Here is a link to 2014 information about Willenberg’s research.

Monday, August 24, 2015

A Tale of Two Stem Cell Stories, Plus Reading the Entrails of the Media

Last week, two interesting stories popped up involving California’s $3 billion stem cell research effort.

One of the stories dealt with a matter that could affect as many as 27 million people. The other involved less than 100.

One story involved creation of important linkages that could help speed up the transformation of stem cells into cures. The other concerned little more than a change of address. 

The story about the change of address was displayed on the front page of the largest circulation newspaper in Northern California, the San Francisco Chronicle, and appeared in many other outlets. (See here and here.) Not a word was reported in the mainstream media about the development that could affect the 27 million people afflicted with arthritis in this country.(See here and here.)

For many persons, such disparities in news are puzzling and frustrating, not to mention disturbing. Sort of like trying to find meaning by reading the entrails of animals. 

Stem cell research is exceedingly important, the reasoning goes, and how can those dolts in the press ignore it? More specifically, the situation poses a continuing challenge for California’s stem cell agency, which has a hard time breaking into ink except when it moves its headquarters a few miles from San Francisco to Oakland.

So how do editors and reporters make the decisions that lead to such disparities? The first thing to remember is that -- like of all us -- the news media are most comfortable doing the things they have always done. The treatment of these two stories follows a pattern that has been established over many decades.  Newsies like “horse race” stories – ones with clear winners and losers. In this case, San Francisco "lost" the headquarters of the stem cell agency and Oakland "won" it.

The move also fit with an ongoing news theme – skyrocketing office space costs in San Francisco – coupled with high housing costs and the current conflict between the impact of high tech on the city vs. the desire to return to a past that is perceived by many as more benign.

Additionally, the stem cell agency headquarters story is fundamentally local as opposed to the arthritis research, which is not solely about the San Francisco Bay Area.

The tale was easy to report. It did not require weeks of digging or lengthy interviews to understand the science. The story was basically handed to the news media as a result of the Aug. 17 item on the California Stem Cell Report, although the move has been around publicly at least since July 23.

At our request, one longtime observer of the California stem scene, who must remain anonymous, elaborated on the situation. 
“Well, you write a blog that catches the eye of a reporter/editor. It concerns a state agency that was lured to the city to help kick start biotech, to be a lynch pin, if you like, for a new regional research base. Ten years after arriving the agency is a victim of its own success, or the city’s success, or just the economy (choose your story line here), so you have a story about a state agency moving, a city that is experiencing soaring rents losing businesses like this, and another neighboring city that stands to benefit. You can then focus on the biotech angle - 'is the city doing enough to keep businesses here' - or the people angle or any angle except the only one that really matters, the science.
 “That results in a front page article on the local newspaper – they love to put local stories on the front because it is more attractive to potential readers, and put all the national/international wire stories inside – which then leads other local news outlets to follow along. Why the delay? Because most media outlets don’t have specialist reporters anymore so they rely on some other news outlet, usually newspapers, to dig up something interesting, and they can then follow along. Radio first usually, they are rapid responders and can get stories on the air very quickly, followed by other online media and then TV.”  
We should add that the treatment of the two stories has lessons that apply to dealing with the media generally.  If researchers want to get their stories out – as they should – the first thing to consider is the needs of the media. Work into the existing framework. Don’t try to create a new one. That may take longer than getting a stem cell treatment approved by the FDA.

Find a compelling angle, one that can be summarized in a couple of sentences. Speak English. Avoid jargon and technical-speak. Talking about a “chondrogenic drug candidate targeting resident mesenchymal stem cells” will never make the front page. Talking about a relatively simple therapy, the first of its kind for arthritis, has a much better chance.

Don’t expect to find relatively well-informed science reporters at news outlets. The few that once existed are mostly gone. Be a guide for editors and reporters and help them along by providing material that answers all their basic questions.

Finally, lower your expectations. The financial crunch on the news media means less space for science stories and fewer reporters to write them. But don’t be discouraged. A good story, properly presented can find a home at some point in the media. But it may not be tomorrow.

Sunday, August 23, 2015

The StemExpress Controversy and Collateral Damage

Back in July, after the Planned Parenthood, anti-abortion controversy erupted and entangled a California firm, one Internet headline read,
“Fetus Miner’s Friends in High Places”
The site that posted the headline was the American Conservative. The item referred to Charlotte Ivanic, the older sister of Cate Dyer, CEO of StemExpress LLC of Placerville. It is the stem cell and human tissue firm that was named in the videos involving Planned Parenthood.

In July, Ivanic was the highly regarded top health policy aide to House Speaker John Boehner, who denounced Planned Parenthood and approved House committee investigations into Planned Parenthood and StemExpress.

Dyer once said that her sister is “one of her biggest inspirations.”

Now she is gone from public service. She left on Aug. 5 and has become a Capitol Hill lobbyist. In a press release, Boehner said, 
“Charlotte has spearheaded some of our most significant accomplishments on behalf of the American people. She is one of the best I’ve seen at bringing people together to find common ground, and she leaves Boehnerland with the deepest respect — and best wishes — of her peers as well as lawmakers from both parties.” 
The news about her resignation was slow to ripple out. It was only yesterday that one anti-abortion Web site caught up with the news. Fireandreamitchell.com had this to say, 
“It took three weeks for Charlotte Ivancic to resign from John Boehner’s staff after the videos went public. This yet again shows that John Boehner is just a progressive like liberal Democrats. Why else would he have a leftist like Charlotte Ivancic on his staff in the first place? John Boehner is not only mentally unstable but a progressive hack too. Boehner has to go, NOW!”

Friday, August 21, 2015

StemExpress: Anti-Abortion Activists Telling "Long Series of Lies"

A beleaguered California company caught in the national, anti-abortion controversy involving Planned Parenthood late today said its foes were engaged in a “long series of lies.”

The company, StemExpress LLC of Placerville, made the charge in a statement that included the unedited portions of the latest anti-abortion video along with a transcript of what was said.
(If you would like the video, please email djensen@californiastemcellreport.com. It is a large file.)

The firm said,
David Daleiden and the Center for Medical Progress today released their latest heavily edited, highly-deceptive video in which they claim StemExpress “admitted” to receiving fully intact fetuses from Planned Parenthood….
“During the video, the parties refer to 'cases,' which is a term of art referring to livers in this conversation. CMP’s accusations that this conversation somehow refers to 'intact fetuses,' which were never mentioned at any point during the entirety of the illegally recorded conversation, are false.
“StemExpress has never requested, received or provided to a researcher an “intact fetus.” CMP’s and Daleiden’s claims to the contrary are unequivocally false.”
The statement and release of the transcript reflected a more aggressive posture on the part of StemExpress, which has lost business as a result of the activists’ efforts. Its employees have also been threatened with violence.

Here is the full text of the StemExpress statement.
“StemExpress today released the following concerning CMP’s 8th video:
“David Daleiden and the Center for Medical Progress today released their latest heavily edited, highly-deceptive video in which they claim StemExpress ‘admitted’ to receiving fully intact fetuses from Planned Parenthood. Accompanying this document is a link to the unedited part of that video where this supposed admission discussion occurred, as well as a transcript of what was actually said.
“As anyone can see and read, the entire discussion was in fact about ‘intact livers.’ Livers are among the most urgently needed of medical tissues by scientists and medical researchers working to cure cancer, diabetes and Alzheimer’s disease.
“During the video, the parties refer to ‘cases,’ which is a term of art referring to livers in this conversation. CMP’s accusations that this conversation somehow refers to ‘intact fetuses,’ which were never mentioned at any point during the entirety of the illegally recorded conversation, are false.
“StemExpress has never requested, received or provided to a researcher an ‘intact fetus.’ CMP’s and Daleiden’s claims to the contrary are unequivocally false.
“Earlier today, a court found that this footage was likely obtained in violation of California criminal law prohibiting the illegal recording of private conversations. In a different court later this afternoon, Daleiden and his CMP co-defendants invoked the 5th Amendment rather than answer questions about their ongoing illegal activities in a related case in federal court. The release of today’s video and CMP’s claims about it are just another in a long series of lies.”

California's StemExpress Loses Bid to Block Anti-Abortion Videos; Appeal Being Considered

A Los Angeles judge today rejected a bid by a California stem cell/human tissue firm to halt the release of an anti-abortion video that the firm said is harming its business and endangering the lives of its employee.

The firm, StemExpress LLC of Placerville, said, however, it is considering appealing the ruling.

Brian Melley of The Associated Press wrote,
“Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Joanne O'Donnell rejected efforts by StemExpress to block the videos, though she said the company likely will prevail in its lawsuit claiming its privacy was violated by an anti-abortion activist posing as a biomedical company employee.”
Melley continued,
“StemExpress won a temporary restraining order last month, but O'Donnell said Friday that the center's First Amendment rights to release the videos trumped the company's right to block them under their privacy claims.
“The judge said she couldn't tell who was telling the truth about how confidential the May meeting was, but she said the fact (David) Daleiden concealed his identity and secretly recorded the conversation made his account less believable.
“O'Donnell rejected the center's argument that the secret recordings were legal under an exemption that allows such subterfuge if someone believes they are gathering evidence of a crime.
"'Defendants' apparent ideological conviction that fetal tissue procurement is a violent felony does not, without more (evidence), rise to the level of a 'reasonable belief,' O'Donnell wrote.”

California Firm Says Anti-abortion Activists Misleading Courts, Endangering its Employees

A California stemcell/human tissue company this morning renewed its efforts to halt distribution of a video by anti-abortion activists that it says will endanger its employees and damage its business.

The firm, StemExpress LLC of Placerville, said in court filings that it was only seeking to stop the distribution of the video, not the information contained within it.

It said that the activists, the Center for Medical Progress of Irvine, Ca.,  and David Daleiden, have misled the judge in the case. The firm said the activists want to distribute the video to “inflame” the public against the company and provoke a “hostile reaction.” The company has already received death threats against its president.

StemExpress also said its request for a preliminary injunction does not violate the First Amendment of the Constitution.

The firm argued that such orders have been upheld in other cases “where anti-abortion protesters were constitutionally enjoined not in what they wanted to say, but how, where, and when they wanted to say it.  Such injunctions are simply not subject to strict constitutional scrutiny.”

The activists have argued that they did not violate state law barring recording the conversations without the permission of all parties because the discussions involved a crime -- “harvesting and killing live babies for resale.”

StemExpress noted that the activists did not report any alleged crimes to authorities during a two-year investigation.

The court filing said the activists’ belief that StemExpress is
“…‘harvesting and killing live babies for resale’ is neither objectively reasonable nor credible from a subjective standpoint.  First, abortion before viability is not murder in California…. While defendants may wish that abortions were illegal and constitute murder, that is simply not the law.  This alone precludes defendants’ purported ‘defense’ of their illegal conduct.  Second, defendants have no evidence that would even remotely support the claim that plaintiffs participated in any abortion procedure involving a viable fetus.  To state the obvious, StemExpress does not perform abortions.  And contrary to Daleiden’s hearsay statements, StemExpress has never received a living, fully-intact fetus from an abortion clinic.”
Here is the full text of this morning's filing.

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Correction

The arthritis spending item yesterday incorrectly stated that the California stem cell agency was spending $17 million on arthritis research. The correct figure is $19.5 million.  The lower figure was based on erroneous numbers on the agency's "arthritis fact sheet," which did not include a $2.3 million award to Schultz in March.

Solid Hook-Up: California Stem Cell Agency and Calibr Connection

Highlights
Creating pathway to clinic
The Calibr approach
Problematic pharma-academic ties
As of today, the California stem cell agency has a $4 million hook into a San Diego research enterprise that also has ties to a glittering array of partners, ranging from Merck to Bristol-Myers Squibb

The connections fit with the state stem cell agency’s new goal of creating a clear pathway from the basic research bench to the use of stem cell cures in clinics for millions of people.

The signal event came routinely and quickly this morning when directors of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), as the agency is formally known, approved a $1.7 million award.
The cash is going to the California Institute for Biomedical Research (Calibr) and its director, Peter Schultz.

The funds will be used for pushing into clinical trials a treatment that would -- for the first time -- modify the progress of osteoarthritis, which afflicts 27 million Americans. The therapy could also be used to treat damaged cartilage in knees and elbows.

CIRM has now invested $10 million in Schultz, a reknown chemist and biotech entrepreneuer. Six million of that went for research that was performed at Scripps. All of the funds involve the proposed arthritis therapy. Including today’s award to Schultz and funds to other researchers, the agency has now handed out $19.5 million to find a therapy for arthritis.

Schultz founded Calibr three years ago with up to $90 million, promised over seven years by Merck. The Big Pharma firm has first refusal rights on treatments developed by Calibr. If Merck passes, then other enterprises can make an offer. Calibr has additional partnerships, including a $28.9 million, five-year relationship with the Gates Foundation.

Peter Schultz, catching a big one
Schultz says “our mission is a little bit arrogant.” In a lengthy piece in March by Bradley Fikes of San Diego Union-Tribune, Schultz said Calibr has “a very broad spectrum of interest and we hope to have a significant impact on a number of diseases."

Fikes wrote,  
"'There are a lot of discoveries being made in life science, and many of these discoveries are made in academic institutions and basic research institutions,’ Schultz said. ‘The process of translating those discoveries into new medicines has become somewhat difficult.’
“These institutions have trouble collaborating with big pharma because of differences in culture and regulatory challenges of for-profit and not-for-profit collaboration.
"'That's left the universities try to do drug discovery themselves,’ Schultz said. ‘The problem there is they don't have the knowledge, experience or even the processes to do drug discovery, which is a lot different than a cottage industry approach to basic research."
Fikes continued,
“Meanwhile, big pharma is becoming more risk-averse, looking for validated drug targets and in-licensing compounds. That makes pharma collaboration with basic research centers even more problematical, Schultz said.
"’We have to come up with other ways to really facilitate and accelerate the translation of new research into new medicines,’ Schultz said. ‘Universities are trying to set up their own drug discovery units. Scripps has done that in Florida, Vanderbilt, we see Cornell, Rockefeller and Sloan-Kettering teaming up to do that. They're building something from scratch, and usually without having the experience of having been there and done that. And in some cases what they wind up doing is hiring a lot of people from pharma industry and recreating a pharma-like process.’"
Calibr has 110 employees, Fikes reported, including 60 postdocs. Its annual operating budget for 50 projects totals $25 million. Calibr is still busy hiring with seven positions open on its Web site as of this afternoon.

California Stem Cell Agency Awards $1.7 Million to Help Treat Arthritis

Directors of the California stem cell agency, as expected, this morning approved $1.7 million to help push an arthritis treatment into clinical trials. The funds went to Peter Schultz, director of the California Institute for Biomedical Research. We will have more details later today.

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

California Spending More than $19 Million on Search for Stem Cell Arthritis Therapy

Stem cell agency summary of Peter Schultz proposal
Highlights
First in class therapy
Avoids risks, costs
Uses drug-like kartogenin
The California stem cell agency tomorrow is set to boost its spending on arthritis to $19.5 million with a new grant to a San Diego researcher who is preparing a clinical trial for his possible therapy.

The agency’s governing board is all but certain to approve a $1.7 million award to Peter Schultz of the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla on top of the $6 million he has already received.

Meeting behind closed doors, the agency’s blue-ribbon scientific reviewers earlier this summer approved the application on a 12-0 vote. The agency board almost never overturns a positive decision by its reviewers.

The review summary said the proposed therapy would be “first in class regenerative medicine” for osteoarthritis as well as cartilage injury. Currently no disease-modifying drugs are approved for clinical treatment of arthritis, which afflicts 27 million people in the United States. The award is to assist in preparation for a federally approved clinical trial. 

Peter Schultz -- Scripps photo
Schultz, who has close ties to Merck and who is also director of the California Institute for Biomedical Research, laid out some details of his approach in an earlier progress report to the stem cell agency.

He said,
“Because limited joints are affected in most (osteoarthritis) patients, intra-articular drug injection is an attractive treatment approach that allows high local drug concentration with limited systemic exposure. Targeting resident stem cells pharmacologically also avoids the risks and costs associated with cell-based approaches.”
 Schultz continued,
“Cartilage contains resident mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) that can be differentiated in vitro to form chondrocytes. This observation suggests that intra-articular injection of a small molecule that promotes chondrogenesis in vivo will preserve and regenerate cartilage in OA-affected joints. Using an image-based screen, we identified a drug-like small molecule, kartogenin (KGN), that promotes efficient and selective chondrocyte differentiation from MSCs in vitro. Intra-articular injection of KGN also shows beneficial effects in surgery-induced acute and enzyme-induced chronic cartilage injury models in rodents, as well as positive effects in incapacitance pain models.”
The agency has already pumped in around $17 million for arthritis research, including funds given earlier to Schultz.

As usual, the award tomorrow involves an institution that has a representative on the agency board. About 88 percent of the money that the agency has handed out since 2005 -- $1.9 billion -- has gone to institutions that have ties to agency directors, according to calculations by the California Stem Cell Report.

The stem cell agency does not identify the winning applicants for awards until after the board acts. However, based on information on the agency's Web site, the California Stem Cell Report was able to verify that Schultz was the applicant up for approval tomorrow.

Tomorrow’s teleconference meeting is scheduled for only one hour beginning at 9 a.m.. The main session will be in San Francisco, which has another location there as well. Other locations where the public can participate include Irvine, San Diego, Napa, Redwood City, two in Sacramento, Los Gatos, San Francisco, Elk Grove, Beverly Hills, Fresno, Los Angeles, Cambridge, Ma., and Ballard, Ca., in Santa Barbara County. Specific addresses can be found on the agenda.


The public can also make comments  on any issue during the board session.

(Editor's note: The figures on CIRM's total spending for arthritis have been increased from an earlier version of this story. The previous figures were based on erroneous numbers on the agency's "arthritis fact sheet," which did not include a $2.3 million award to Schultz in March.)

'Terrorized' -- The LA Times on the StemExpress Story

Highlights
Juggling threats to business
Realistic response by StemExpress

The Los Angeles Times today said anti-abortion activists have  “terrorized and harassed” a small California stem cell/human tissue firm in a heated, national campaign that threatens important medical research.

Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Michael Hiltzik took on the issue in a column published this morning.

The piece began:
“Last week a small California company that provides human blood, cells and tissues to research scientists bailed on one of its partners, Planned Parenthood.
“Placerville, Ca.-based StemExpress, which had worked with Planned Parenthood to distribute fetal cells and tissues following abortions at the organization's clinics -- with the full consent of the patients undergoing the procedure -- ended its relationship with the healthcare provider ‘due to the increased questions that have arisen over the past few weeks.’ “These aren't questions about the legality or ethics of Planned Parenthood's activities, which haven't been legitimately challenged. They're questions about whether the organization's activities can survive a full-scale political onslaught.”
The headline on the article read:
“A terrorized and harassed corporate partner abandons Planned Parenthood”
 Hiltzik continued,
“StemExpress isn't terminating its relationship with Planned Parenthood because it thinks the relationship led it to do anything wrong. The firm doesn't think Planned Parenthood has done anything wrong, either. We know this because the company says so in a lawsuit it filed last month against the Center for Medical Progress. That's the anti-abortion group that has been releasing edited undercover videos of meetings it conducted, apparently under false pretenses, with Planned Parenthood officials and others.”
He wrote,
“One might think of StemExpress' action as cowardly. But it's more fair to regard it as realistic. In any controversy involving private enterprise, corporate self-interest is the soft underbelly for attack, because economic interest almost always trumps moral steadfastness; the smaller the company the less its defenses against bad publicity, no matter how ill-informed.”
Hiltzik said,
“Among the most disturbing aspects of this affair is its effect on the legal and often necessary use of fetal tissue in biological research. It's true that advances in science have made this less important than it used to be, but it's also true that it's still needed in work toward cures of muscular dystrophy, diabetes, degenerative eye disease and other conditions. CMP's campaign threatens this whole line of inquiry, because any business or nonprofit that serves these researchers will have to ask whether it's worth trying to resist political pressure or the threat to employees' safety.”
For more on StemExpress' problems, see here.

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Headquarters Move by California Stem Cell Agency 'Disappointing' to San Francisco

The San Francisco Chronicle today picked up the story about how “a simple state agency” is moving its $3 billion operation east from San Francisco across the Bay to Oakland.

The newspaper carried the article by Victoria Colliver on its front page, one of the few times that news about the state stem cell agency has made such a splash in its hometown paper during the last 10 years. The story followed yesterday's piece on the California Stem Cell Report, which carried the first published details about the move.

Most of what the Chronicle reported was familiar to our readers but Colliver also had this from Kevin McCormack, senior director for communications for the agency.
“The lease is up now, and this is now one of the hardest real estate markets in the country. We’re a simple state agency, and we don’t have that kind of money. ... San Francisco is just unaffordable to us.”
McCormack said it would have cost the agency $1.5 million to pay for the equivalent space (20,000 square feet) that it now has in San Francisco. Instead, it found a home in Oakland with 17,000 square feet for $697,560 a year.  The agency has about 55 employees.

Colliver’s story began by saying that the stem cell agency is “the latest victim of San Francisco’s ski-high rents.”

The Chronicle quoted Todd Rufo, head of economic development for San Francisco, as saying, “…(W)e’re disappointed to see them go….”

No coverage has yet surfaced in Oakland area media outlets, according to a Google search this morning.

Monday, August 17, 2015

Legal Setback for California Stem Cell Business Snared in Abortion Flap

A California stem cell/human tissue firm appears to be losing its battle to halt damaging videos that have entangled it in an emotional national controversy about abortion, the Washington Post reported today.

An opinion piece by UCLA law professor Eugene Volokh said that the Los Angeles judge in the case “seems to have been persuaded” by the anti-abortion activists to refrain from blocking further distribution of the videos involving StemExpress LLC of Placerville.

Quoting from the judge’s tentative ruling last week, Volokh noted that the First Amendment issues in the case apparently are carrying the day even if the activists violated state law in making the surreptitious videos. The Washington Post piece provided a link to the response by the Center for Medical Progress, an Irvine organization behind the videos. ­­­­­

California Stem Cell Agency Saying So Long to San Francisco

The new HQ location for the California stem cell agency
The city of Oakland does not have the same snap and sizzle as San Francisco, but it will soon have something that the famed city-by-the-bay will not have – the headquarters of an internationally known, $3 billion, stem cell research agency.

California’s taxpayer-financed program, which is arguably the largest, single source of stem cell research funding in the world, is leaving San Francisco this fall and moving across the bay to the sunnier and cheaper climes of Oakland.

The reason is that the agency is no longer the beneficiary of free space in San Francisco and can’t afford to pay sky-high rent to stay there.

Red bubble shows location of new CIRM HQ -- Google map
The new address for the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), as the agency is formally known, will be 1999 Harrison St. in Oakland.  CIRM will be housed on the 15th and 16th floors of a granite-clad building overlooking Lake Merritt in the downtown area.

In San Francisco, the agency’s neighbors included Happy Donuts, which also sold Louisiana fried chicken, and the San Francisco Giants baseball park.  In Oakland, its neighbors will include the FBI and Cerexa, Inc., a biotech firm owned by Forest Laboratories of New York. If CIRM workers are missing Happy Donuts fare, Oakland's famous Chicken&Waffles restaurant is only 15 minutes away on the bus.

The stem cell agency enjoyed its rent free location as the result of a bidding war in 2005 among cities in California to acquire the agency headquarters. San Francisco offered a package that it calculated at $18­­­­­­­ million. It also helped San Francisco that Bob Klein, the first chairman of the agency, lived on the San Francisco peninsula.

The agency and its auditor estimate that CIRM saved $12 million in rent and related benefits during the 10 years it has been in San Francisco. That money, however, will ultimately be spent on research or agency expenses.

That includes the rent for the new digs that will run $697,560 annually. The base rate for the 17,097 square feet is $3.40 a foot. The agency will have 14,411 square feet on the 16th floor of the 27-story building and 2,686 on the 15th. 

In response to a query, Kevin McCormack, CIRM’s senior director for communications, said,
“The term for the 16th floor is five years; the term on the 15th floor is three years, with an option to extend by two years to be coterminous with the term on the 16th floor.  This will provide CIRM with the flexibility to reduce its space and rent burden, depending upon the circumstances.”
The agency is expected to run out of cash for new awards in less than five years but will have ongoing functions related to its existing awards.

Costs for tenant improvements are still being calculated along with costs for the move.

Under the San Francisco lease, the owner provided free parking, a significant benefit for the agency employees, which number about 55.  Parking can run to $15 to $20 a day in the agency's current neighborhood, according to sanfrancisco.bestparking.com.

In Oakland, employees will have to pay for their own parking, but the agency is looking into government assistance programs. The location is near a BART station, a mass transit overhead rail system that runs through much of the San Francisco Bay Area.

Over the years, Oakland has presented a changing face to the public. In World War II, it was part of what was described as a “second gold rush” as the result of defense plant operations. In 1966 , the city was the headquarters of the Black Panthers, whose co-founder, Huey Newton, attended high school there. Today Oakland is involved in a wave of gentrification that has created tension­­ within the community.

It may be fitting for the agency to return to what is known as the East Bay area in California. Its first, temporary headquarter was located in Emeryville, just three miles up the road from its new space. 

Friday, August 14, 2015

Text of StemExpress Statement on Cutting Ties to Planned Parenthood

Here is the text of the full statement from StemExpress as provided to the California Stem Cell Report by a spokesman for the firm. 
"StemExpress statement Regarding Termination of Agreements With Planned Parenthood
"StemExpress at its core is a small life sciences company committed to accelerating research, advancing medicine, and saving lives. We partner with organizations also seeking to help researchers find solutions to some of life's most significant medical conditions and diseases. Our commitment to quality defines us and is demanded by our customers in the research community. 
"We value our various partnerships but, due to the increased questions that have arisen over the past few weeks, we feel it prudent to terminate activities with Planned Parenthood. While we value our business relationship with Planned Parenthood, that work represents a small percentage of our overall business activity and we must focus our limited resources on resolving these inquiries.
"StemExpress works tirelessly to accelerate the speed of helping patients globally: 7.6 million people die of cancer each year, another 7.4 million of heart disease, over 4.6 million from lung cancer, AIDS and diabetes and every 12 minutes another name is added to the national transplant waiting list. These numbers drive our work and the research community. StemExpress looks forward to the swift resolution of all inquiries and audits so we can focus our full attention on helping the medical and research community improve and save lives."

California's StemExpress Cuts Links with Planned Parenthood in Anti-Abortion Flap

A California stem cell/human tissue firm has severed its ties with Planned Parenthood in the wake of a national, anti-abortion controversy, the Politico Web site reported late today.

Politico writer Jennifer Haberkorn cited a statement from StemExpress LLC of Placerville, which said,
“We value our various partnerships but, due to the increased questions that have arisen over the past few weeks, we feel it prudent to terminate activities with Planned Parenthood. While we value our business relationship with Planned Parenthood, that work represents a small percentage of our overall business activity and we must focus our limited resources on resolving these inquiries.”
The statement has not been posted on the company’s Web site as of this writing.  (Shortly after this item was published, a spokesman released the text of its statement, which can be found here.)

The company has said in court that it has suffered damage and its executives have been threatened with violence as a result of Internet videos that were made surreptitiously by anti-abortion activists. The activists used fake names and a fake company to gain access to Planned Parenthood officials. StemExpress was identified as one of the purchasers of fetal tissue from Planned Parenthood.

Investigations into the company and Planned Parenthood have been launched by the Senate and the House. The issue has come up in the 2016 presidential race. The U.S. Department of Justice and the California attorney general are looking into whether privacy laws were violated by the anti-abortion activists.

The company has been vilified on the Internet. The latest posting involved a video of a former employee of StemExpress, Holly O’Donnell, who said that “she once saw another technician appear to obtain fetal tissue without a patient’s consent,” Politico reported. StemExpress “unequivocally” denied the claim two days ago.

“Like all of their previous material, (the) video by (the activists) is deceptively edited and falsely worded to suggest impropriety or illegality where none exists. (Their) continued efforts to malign StemExpress—a life-sciences company that predominantly supplies adult cells, blood and tissue to the nation’s leading researchers—will only serve to slow the pace of life-saving medical research aimed at curing disease and extending quality of life for millions of Americans.”
Earlier this week, the activists lost a bid to overturn a temporary restraining order against them. StemExpress said they also “refused to produce witnesses for depositions or respond to document requests previously ordered” by the Los Angeles superior court.

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