Today's meeting of the Citizens Financial Accountability and Oversight Committee began about five to 10 minutes ago. Members are hearing presentation of routine audit results already aired publicly by the California stem cell agency.
At 9:18 a.m., the meeting achieved a quorum. That enables it to take official action. A new member was sworn in this morning. However, his name was not audible on the audiocast of the meeting. The California Stem Cell Report has asked for information on the appointee.
With more than 3.0 million page views and more than 5,000 items, this blog provides news and commentary on public policy, business and economic issues related to the $3 billion California stem cell agency. David Jensen, a retired California newsman, has published this blog since January 2005. His email address is djensen@californiastemcellreport.com.
Thursday, October 01, 2015
California's Stem Cell Oversight Meeting to Begin Shortly; Directions for Listening Online
Today's 9 a.m. meeting of the oversight committee for the California stem cell agency is available online -- listen only -- using the following information. The slides for the meeting are available here.
Public call-in number (listen only): (800) 260-0718
Access Code: 369689
Listen to the meeting online:
https://im.csgsystems.com/cgi- bin/confCast
Conference ID: 369689
Wednesday, September 30, 2015
Connecting With the Public and Stem Cell Stakeholders: A New and Inexpensive Tool
For years the California stem cell agency has given the
public access to the meetings of its governing board via a one-way audiocast
over the Internet and by phone.
But patients, advocates, scientists and business folks have
not had the opportunity to comment and make suggestions re the doings of the
29-member board of directors through the same method. The public could only
listen unless they were on the scene.
However, that could change if the $3 billion stem cell
enterprise follows the lead of the state Treasurer John Chiang. This summer he
began opening up meetings of the many important boards in his office to live, two-way, teleconference connections with the public.
Chiang also uses the same sort of service and company as used by the stem cell agency. But he has added an inexpensive touch that genuinely
opens up the meetings to the public.
We recently stumbled across Chiang's press release on the move, which may well be unique in California state government. We queried
Drew Mendelson, a spokesman in the treasurer’s office, for more details.
Mendelson said,
“Participants on the phone are in listen only mode, but when the meeting chair calls for public comments, callers can press a set of numbers to indicate they want to speak. The conference call is monitored online by (treasurer’s) staff and the call monitor must click on the caller in the queue to allow the person to speak.”
“Under our state contract with AT&T, we determined that an hour long meeting with 10 callers would cost less than $15. The cost increases significantly if you have AT&T provide conference monitoring services. We chose to monitor the calls ourselves. What we are using is a basic conference call service with an online component where the monitor sees the list of callers to know how many people are on the line and when someone indicates they want to speak.”
Mendelson said that the move was generated by Chiang's desire to enhance public access and his “desire to increase public participation in and increase awareness of
the many boards, commissions and authorities" that he chairs.
On-the-scene public participation in CIRM meetings is slim.
One of the reasons is that the sessions often require travel and overnight
stays that pose barriers for many persons, particularly patients and their
advocates. The agency would make it easier for its stakeholders and enhance its
reputation for openness and transparency by instituting this inexpensive
practice. It also fits with the goal of Randy Mills, the president of the
agency, to provide more clarity in what the agency does.
Tuesday, September 29, 2015
Oversight Panel of California Stem Cell Agency Schedules First Meeting in 21 Months
The only governmental body specifically charged with
oversight of the $3 billion California stem cell agency, an enterprise that operates beyond normal state controls, announced yesterday that it would meet in just three
days.
The session of the oversight panel comes 21 months after the last meeting of the Citizens Financial and Accountability Oversight Committee(CFOAC). The panel is required by state law to meet annually. Its last meeting in January 2014 saw the agency criticized harshly by one of the members of the oversight panel.
The committee is chaired by the state controller, who
currently is Betty Yee. At the time of the last meeting, the controller was
John Chiang, who is now state treasurer.
The agenda for this Thursday's meeting contains no items that
would seem to be controversial, only a review of a routine audit and a
presentation by the agency itself.
In January of 2014, Jim Lott, one of the members of CFAOC, made it clear at some length that he was not pleased with the agency's performance. He said in part:
“What can we say we've done to advance to a cure or to cures? It's fine that we've got all -- we've contributed to all. What can you say that we've actually done? We don't really have any -- I'm going to just say this because it's a bias and I know it's a bias. We don't have any tangible specific and measurable results that I can point to.”
The $3 billion state stem cell agency is exempt from the usual state budgetary controls. It receives its funds directly from bond
proceeds without intervention by the governor or the legislature. The agency’s
independence was authorized by voters when they created the agency in 2004
through a ballot initiative that altered the state constitution.
Two sites are available for the public to observe and
participate. One is in Emeryville in the San Francisco area and the other is in
Los Angles. Addresses can be found on the agenda. The public can also listen to an audiocast of the proceedings. Directions are also on the agenda.
Friday, September 25, 2015
Building a 'Beautiful Machine:' California's Last $900 Million for Stem Cell Research
Intense, passionate, zealous – some of the words that could
have applied yesterday to the CEO of a California enterprise devoted to
the dispassionate world of scientific research.
Randy Mills, president of $3 billion California stem cell
agency, started with what could have been a mind-numbing overview of a revision
of the agency’s strategic plan – a subject that draws yawns from many.
Randy Mills at an earlier strategic plan event in La Jolla. San Diego UT photo |
Plus he was not talking directly to his key audience – the directors
of the governing board of the stem cell agency, who were listening to him from
18 different teleconference locations.
Mills eased into his presentation, backed by 30 pages of PowerPoint slides. He was speaking by phone from room 3803 in the Sanford
Consortium in La Jolla, a facility partially financed with $43 million in agency funds.
His pace and fire escalated as talked about transforming the
agency and fabricating a “great, beautiful machine.”
He told the directors,
“We have created very beautiful pieces – but they have existed as pieces”
Now is the time, he said, for California to create a “giant
engine that will accelerate the research in a way that exists nowhere else in
the world” – a “giant coordinated stem
cell machine.”
Mills said the California Institute for Regenerative
Medicine (CIRM), as the agency is formally known, is “by far the largest
regenerative institute in the world.” At
the same time, it “needs to be better appreciated.” He promised to generate a “dramatic
increase” in awareness of the agency.
Mills, who has been with the agency for about 16 months,
skimmed over the numbers: $2 billion out the door, $900 million left for
research awards, $400 million to go to clinical research, 50 new clinical
trials.
Mills has already increased the speed of funding for clinical
programs, dropping the time from years to months. But he wants to do more for
what is called the translational stage – bringing developments out of basic research into clinical phases in three
years instead of eight.
Mills’ efforts yesterday were limited by time, however. The meeting
was scheduled for only 90 minutes and the board had other business as well.
Individual board members had brief comments, including Jeff Sheehy,
a communications manager from UC San Francisco. He raised questions about Mills’
plan to clear out obstacles at the FDA. Sheehy wanted to know more about how
much it would cost and how it would be pursued.
Another asked whether there was a
sufficient research base in California to achieve all that Mills proposed, a
risk that Mills had identified in his PowerPoint slides. Yes, Mills said, it
could be that CIRM will not be able to do 50 new clinical trials.
Mills’ report was a midpoint update on how the agency
plans to spend its final $900 million in what could well be its last strategic
plan.
The proposal will be examined once again by the Science
Subcommittee of the agency’s governing board in November before it goes to the full
board in December for approval.
The plan is likely to have a major impact on stem cell
research in California and on the lives of hundreds of researchers. Only one scientist
was present to comment yesterday at the meeting, Jeanne Loring of the Scripps
Institute. She told Mills that his presentation was “terrific,” which sparked
applause from about 20 patient advocates in the room at the Sanford Consortium.
As for the fate of the agency after 2020, when funds for new
awards run out, CIRM Chairman Jonathan Thomas said that would be discussed at the December board meeting.
But as Mills noted,
“We don’t have a lot of time left.”
The agency is open for more comment from the public. Mills
said suggestions, criticism, etc., can be sent to kmccormack@cirm.ca.gov.
Those directly affected by CIRM spending – or who want to be
affected by it -- would be well advised to listen to Mills’ presentation on a
recording of the teleconference meeting. The recording can be found on the
audiocast link on the meeting agenda, beginning at about 38 minutes into the
meeting.
Thursday, September 24, 2015
Stock of California Firm Jumps 17 Percent on News of Golden State Award
Google chart |
ImmunoCellular Therapeutics’ stock price shot up 17 percent
today in the wake of formal approval of a $20 million award from the California
stem cell agency for a clinical trial involving a rare brain cancer.
The price has been climbing since last week when the
California Stem Cell Report first disclosed that the company was set to secure
the funding for the phase three clinical trial, the last step before widespread commercialization.
In an interview today, Andrew Gengos, president of the
Calabasas, Ca., firm, confirmed that the trial is expected to cost $40 million to $50 million.
The company has said it will add $34.4 million to the $20 million from the
California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), as the agency is
formally known.
Gengos said the five-year trial is expected to get underway
in November with the enrollment of the first patients. He said it will probably
start in the United States with expansion to Canada and Europe. About 400
patients are expected to participate.
ImmunoCellular has not had any revenues since 2010.
Asked about the source of the $34 million, Gengos said the company had $31
million on hand at the end of June with no debt. He added that the company can
access additional cash through the sale of more stock.
In reponse to a question, Gengos said he first became aware
of the possibility of funding the clinical trial with the help of CIRM as the
result of a conversation with a colleague at the J.P. Morgan health care conference
in San Francisco last January.
Gengos followed up by asking an ImmunoCellular co-worker to look
into the process. As the result, the company made its initial application which
CIRM sent back with suggestions for improvement. In the second review,
reviewers voted 9-0 to fund the project.
Gengos told the CIRM board today that the trial would take
five years to complete.
“Frankly, this time period is outside the interest of most public market investors in terms of their investment horizon and therefore, in their eyes, handicaps our project compared to other projects that can execute in a shorter time frame.
“The result is that investment capital is hard to come by for these types of promising and highly innovative therapies when the investment horizon is long, and a small company without product revenues is at the helm.”
Gengos continued,
“I do not think it is an overstatement to say that without CIRM’s support, this program would not go forward. California’s innovative biotechnology community needs institutions like CIRM. Clearly – we need CIRM. Brain cancer patients need CIRM.”
Here is the text of the company’s press release today.
Here is the text of Gengos statement to the CIRM board.
Coming Up
We expect to post a piece tomorrow on the impassioned presentation today by Randy Mills, CEO of the California stem cell agency, of his proposed strategic plan for the $3 billion research engterprise. He envisions a "great machine" that will set a new standard for the world stem cell community. Look for the article tomorrow.
Faster Action Approved in California on Stem Cell Therapy for Parkinson's
To cheers and applause, directors of the $3 billion California stem cell agency this morning moved to speed action on a much-lobbied effort to fund research on a therapy for Parkinson's disease.
Randy Mills, president of the agency, said the action would mean that a request for applications would be posted within the next seven days instead of sometime next spring.
He spoke from the Sanford Consortium in La Jolla during a teleconference meeting with 18 locations. Parkinson's advocates at his site cheered and applauded the news.
A giddy Jenifer Raub, one of the leaders of the Summit4StemCells group, told agency directors,
The San Diego Parkinson's group is backing research by Jeanne Loring, head of stem cell research at the Scripps Institute in La Jolla. (See here and here.)
The unanimous vote by the board gave Mills more flexibility in scheduling upcoming rounds of awards involving basic and translational research. Loring's research fits in the translational area. The basic research round will now apparently be put off until next spring.
Randy Mills, president of the agency, said the action would mean that a request for applications would be posted within the next seven days instead of sometime next spring.
He spoke from the Sanford Consortium in La Jolla during a teleconference meeting with 18 locations. Parkinson's advocates at his site cheered and applauded the news.
A giddy Jenifer Raub, one of the leaders of the Summit4StemCells group, told agency directors,
"I feel like a kid at Christmas."It was a feeling echoed by other members of the group, which had protested the delay at a CIRM board meeting in July and also earlier this month. About 17 were in attendance at Mills' location this morning.
The San Diego Parkinson's group is backing research by Jeanne Loring, head of stem cell research at the Scripps Institute in La Jolla. (See here and here.)
The unanimous vote by the board gave Mills more flexibility in scheduling upcoming rounds of awards involving basic and translational research. Loring's research fits in the translational area. The basic research round will now apparently be put off until next spring.
Labels:
Grant-making,
parkinsons,
patient advocates,
translational
California Stem Cell Meeting Concludes: More Upcoming on Parkinson's Research, Creation of a 'Stem Cell Machine' and ImmunoCellular
Directors of the California stem cell agency concluded their meeting today at 11:43 a.m. They gave the go-ahead to speedier action on funding for Parkinson's disease research and heard an impassioned presentation from President Randy Mills on his plan to create a "great machine" that will "change regenerative medicine in the world." We will have more on both subjects later along with an interview with the president of ImmunoCellular Therapeutics, which received a $20 million award today.
California Stem Cell Agency Backs Calabasas Firm with $20 Million in Search for Brain Cancer Therapy
Directors of the California stem cell agency today unanimously approved a
$20 million award to help boost into the marketplace a therapy for a rare brain
cancer known as glioblastoma.
The funds will go to ImmunoCellular Ltd, a tiny, publicly
traded firm based in the Los Angeles suburb of Calabasas, which has close ties
to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.
Andrew Gengos, president of the firm, told the directors,
Andrew Gengos, president of the firm, told the directors,
"Without (the agency's) support this program would not go forward. Brain cancer patients need CIRM."It is the second, phase three clinical trial for the agency, formally known as the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM). The $3 billion research enterprise is pushing to develop a commercial therapy before funds for new awards run out in about four years. (See here for the CIRM press release on the award.)
CIRM is also proposing to award $400 million over the next four years to support clinical level research and participate in 65 clinical trials.
The ImmunoCellular trial is expected to produce preliminary
results by the end of 2019. The trial will
involve 414 patients and begin recruiting in November of this year. (See here for recruitment and other information.)
Despite some caveats, the agency’s blue ribbon reviewers
concluded that the proposed therapy “could become a new standard of care and
extend survival of glioblastoma patients.” Other firms, however, are competing
in the field, the reviewers noted. Earlier this year, reviewers approved the award during closed door proceedings on a 9-0 vote, an action that virtually assured formal approval today.
Immunocellular’s closing stock price has risen 13 percent
since the California Stem Cell Report disclosed on Sept. 17 that the firm was
set to receive the $20 million award. Today, the stock opened at 48 cents. At
the time of this writing today it stood at 52 cents.
Information presented to the CIRM board today did not
indicate potential cost of therapy to consumers. Nor did the information discuss
the financial condition of the company other than to state that it would
provide $34.4 million in co-funding. There was little discussion this morning of the application by the CIRM board.
The company’s filings with the Security and Exchange
Commission show that the firm has reported no revenues since 2010 and a loss of
$9.4 million in 2014. It reported that it had $23.2 million in cash or cash
equivalents in 2014. In February of this year, it reported raising $14.6
million from Roth Capital Partners, LLC.
Sabby Healthcare Master Fund, Ltd. and Sabby Volatility
Warrant Master Fund, Ltd., both registered in the Cayman Islands, hold 9.22
percent of the company’s stock, according to company documents.
Capital Ventures International, another Cayman Island firm,
owns 5.54 percent. John S. Yu, chairman and chief scientific officer of the
ImmunoCellular and a neurosurgeon at Cedars-Sinai, owns 6.65 percent. The CIRM governing board has one member from Cedars-Sinai who was not permitted to vote on the award.
ImmunoCellular has six fulltime employees, Gengos said today.
The public summary of the review said,
“In the initial review of this application, reviewers were enthusiastic as glioblastoma represents a serious unmet medical need. Additionally, the applicant presented strong preclinical and clinical data to support the proposed Ph3 registration trial and there was a reasonable plan to obtain regulatory approval of the proposed therapeutic. However, reviewers had feasibility concerns regarding the applicant’s ability to enroll the trial and maintain the reagent supply chain to support manufacturing of the product.
“Reviewers also had concerns with the trial design, which centered around selection of the patient population targeted in the registration trial and the lack of immune monitoring proposed in the trial. The applicant was provided the opportunity to address these concerns in a revised application, and their responses and modifications to the proposal reassured reviewers that the applicant could enroll and conduct the Ph3 trial as proposed and that, if endpoints are met, the trial design could support licensing approval by FDA.”
New Reviewers Appointed by California Stem Cell Agency
The governing board of the California stem cell agency this morning approved the consent calendar on the meeting's agenda. Those are matters that have no controversy. Today they included appointments of new scientific grant reviewers.
Directors of California Stem Cell Agency Open Meeting
Today's meeting of the California stem agency began this morning at 10:04 a.m. PDT with the pledge of allegiance and a roll call.
Wednesday, September 23, 2015
A $6 Billion Question: Affordability of California's Stem Cell Therapies
Imagine this headline popping up on the Internet and in the
New York Times in about four years:
“$6 Billion for ‘Price Gouging' Stem Cell Therapy”
The possibility of such a news story is not all that
fanciful -- given the growing tension and anger over exorbitant drug prices being
set by a variety of Big Pharma firms. The likelihood of such a report and its
impact is a matter for careful consideration by the 29 directors of the $3
billion California stem cell agency.
They are presiding over an effort that will cost the Golden
State’s taxpayers roughly $6 billion by 2020. Nominally, the agency is giving out $3 billion in research
awards. However, the cost is approximately doubled because the state is
borrowing money to finance the research, a move approved by voters in 2004.
No therapies for widespread use have yet emerged from the
agency, formally known as the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine
(CIRM). But the agency is pushing hard. It could have a therapy on the market
within four years. The question is whether it will be something that is
perceived as affordable or something available only to the wealthy few.
CIRM is now expecting to be involved in 65 clinical trials
by 2020. One of those trials is currently in phase three, which puts the proposed treatment on the cusp of commercialization.
A second phase three trial – with a $20 million taxpayer investment -- is all but certain to be approved tomorrow during the CIRM directors meeting.
The session also includes a strategic discussion about how the agency will
spend its last $890 million – for basic research, clinical trials,
infrastructure and so forth.
Not on the table, however, is what those therapies are
likely to cost consumers. The spending plan does not address the question of whether a
publicly financed agency should back development of therapies that could cost,
for example, $512,000. (See here and here.) Or whether it should focus on more affordable
treatments.
The issue of high cost of drug therapies has roiled the
medical community and the public for some years. The matter has now moved to a higher level and is not likely to vanish during the next five years, as it
has in the past. It is tied to the income inequality debate and the upsurge in
patient advocacy. (See here and here.)
The issue surfaced this week in the presidential campaign.
Democratic aspirant Hillary Clinton used words like “gouging” and “outrageous,”
causing biotech stock prices to drop. Republican presidential candidates used
the problem to attack Obamacare. Folks in the scientific community said they
were “shocked.”
This afternoon, a Google search on the term “high drug
prices” turned up 33.7 million results. “Outrage,” “huge spike,” “4,000 percent”
and “insanely high” were some of the words in the headlines.
The affordability question is not new to the California stem
cell agency. It popped up in the ballot campaign that created the agency in
2004 but has largely died down in recent years. (See here, here and here.)
It could surface again in the California legislature and elsewhere as
lawmakers see a public desire to curb perceived greedy pharmaceutical companies that prey on the weak and afflicted.
It is not a prospect that would be pleasant for the
California stem cell agency. And it would put a major damper on efforts to continue funding of the
agency from both public and private sources.
As they consider their strategic direction, the CIRM directors
of the agency may be well advised to move earlier rather than later on the
question of high prices and affordability. As Ben Franklin’s medical homily goes,
"An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure."
Labels:
affordability,
costs,
ICOC,
overview,
strategic plan
Dismayed San Diego Parkinson's Group Receives More Media Coverage
Jenifer Raub, Bill Maddox and Cassandra Peters (left to right), members of the Summit4StemCells group. San Diego UT photo |
The San Diego Union Tribune this week spotlighted a
Parkinson’s patient group that is pushing the $3 billion California agency to
speed up financing on research that the group says is promising.
Reporter Bradley Fikes provided the update on the activities
of the group, Summit4StemCells, and its dismay about the slow funding by the
stem cell agency.
Earlier this month, the group was perturbed by the
cancellation of the scheduled, face-to-face meeting in San Diego tomorrow. It was changed to
a teleconference meeting that is set for only 90 minutes. However, the group is
expected to make its views known by teleconference from the Sanford Consortium in
La Jolla, where agency President Randy Mills will be based.
The face-to-face session was cancelled, the agency said, because it was
expected to be brief and because of the expense involved in bringing together
the 29 members of the governing board and some agency staff. Mills told Fikes that many of the board
members would not have been able to attend in San Diego, but the meeting would
have cost about $30,000 to stage.
Tune in Here Tomorrow for All the Stem Cell Action in California
The California Stem Cell Report will provide most of what
you need to know live from tomorrow’s meeting of California’s stem cell
research agency, which is set to award $20 million to a tiny Calabasas, Ca.,firm.
During the 90-minute, teleconference session, the
agency’s governing board is also set to discuss the pros and cons of a $890 million spending plan that will take the agency to its termination date.
The California Stem Cell Report will monitor the session via
the Internet and bring readers updates and more as warranted by action
during the session.
Those interested in participating in the meeting and
offering suggestions and criticism can do so from 18 locations throughout the
state, but also in Atlanta. Here are the other teleconference sites and number
of sites in each location: San Franisco (3), Los Angeles (3), La Jolla (2),
Stanford, Davis, Napa, South San Francisco, Sacramento, Fresno, Berkeley, Los
Gatos and Irvine. Specific addresses can be found on the agenda.
Randy Mills, president of the agency, will be addressing the board from La Jolla at
the Sanford Consortium, an enterprise heavily financed by the stem cell agency.
For those who want to listen in via the audiocast,
directions are also on the agenda. The PowerPoint presentations being used are
available via Webex. To get something close to a complete understanding of what
is going on, readers should log into both the audiocast and Webex. Comments during the meeting can also be emailed to the board via mbonneville@cirm.ca.gov or kmccormack@cirm.ca.gov.
A reminder: Agenda items are not necessarily taken in
numerical order.
Tuesday, September 22, 2015
Nearly $1 Billion California Stem Cell Plan: 50 Clinical Trials, Therapy Cost to Consumers Not Addressed
The CIRM view of the dynamics of stem cell research over the next five years |
Highlights
$575 million for clinical, translational
FDA big impediment
Patients want greater voice
Therapy cost to consumers not mentioned
The California stem cell agency will spend the bulk of its
remaining $890 million for more advanced research, including as many as 50 new clinical trials, according to a plan released today.
Randy Mills, president of the $3 billion state research
effort, is expected to discuss the proposal Thursday during a teleconference
meeting of the agency’s governing board. The public can participate from 18 locations, including one in Atlanta.
The figures represent projected spending by CIRM. |
Mills expects to spend $400 million on clinical ventures and
about $175 million on translational research, the effort to transform basic
discoveries into potential clinical use. Basic research would receive about $180 million
between now and 2020. That’s when money for new awards would run out under
Mills’ plan, which did not address the fate of the agency beyond that date.
The proposal was unveiled in part this week as a discussion
item on the agenda for a meeting that comes in less than two days. The information
was offered in a 30-page PowerPoint presentation with no supporting
documents.
The plan also offered an overview of past activities of
the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), as the agency is
formally known.
Mills indicated that he had received input from 217 “stakeholders”
as part of developing the proposal. The number referred to the persons who responded anonymously to an online survey.
One of his conclusions from the input: Patient advocates “want
a more active role.” He also reported,
“Many of CIRM’s programs are still not widely known to all potential partners.”
Seventy percent of the stakeholders viewed the FDA “as the
biggest impediment to the development of stem cell therapies.” Mills said his plan
would “drive implementation of a new FDA paradigm.”
Mills also identified five key risks. They were:
- “There may be an insufficient number of meritorious therapeutic candidates to reach our goals.
- “There may be insufficient interest from qualified applicants to participate in key competitions.
- “The current limited funding of the agency could affect the ability to retain or attract personnel.
- “Investors may be uninterested in stem cell therapies.
- “The FDA may be unwilling to improve the regulatory environment.
By the end of this week, the agency will be involved in 15 clinical trials. The goal of taking part in 50 new trials does not include
those efforts.
Basic research (termed discovery by CIRM) is scheduled for
$15 million this year and $50 million in both 2017 and 2018.
Missing from Mills’ presentation is a discussion of the cost
to consumers of potential therapies backed by the agency or whether the
agency might want to focus on less costly efforts. That question was an early
one for the agency. In 2006, the Consumer Watchdog group said,
“Cures and treatments must be priced so all Californians can afford and benefit from them, not just a wealthy few.”
The issue is back in the news again with national stories
highlighting huge drug costs and price increases. Reuters reported today,
“Americans are paying way over the odds for some modern cancer drugs, with pharmaceutical companies charging up to 600 times what the medicines cost to make, according to an independent academic study.”
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, who supports CIRM efforts, said this
week she intended to eliminate “excessive profiteering” in the drug industry,
triggering a sell-off in drug stocks.
Another strategic issue involves whether the agency should make choices between research that directly involves only a few thousand people versus research that would directly affect millions. Also missing is an overview of the agency’s move away from research involving human embryonic
stem cells(hESC), the controversial human tissue that is freighted with moral
and ethical questions. As of February, the agency reported that about 240 of its 667 awards involved hESC.
The desire to fund research involving human embryonic stem cells
was the motivating force behind creation of the agency in 2004 through a ballot initiative. The $36 million campaign used former President Bush's restrictions on federal funding
for hESC research to build support. Bush's action had stirred an outcry among scientists and many patient
advocates. Biotech companies also shied away from publicly backing hESC
research because of the controversial issues.
Mills’ strategic plan is well along the way to completion
and may well be approved by the board later this year with few significant changes. The
public can weigh in, however, with comments on the proposal during the Thursday
meeting from the 18 teleconference locations. The addresses can be found on the agenda.
Comments, criticism and suggestions for the CIRM board can
be emailed to Kmccormack@cirm.ca.gov.
The strategic plan revision is set for discussion only this
week. Presumably board approval could occur at meetings in October, November or
December, the next non-teleconference session.
(Editor's note: An earlier version of this item said 20 teleconference locations were available.)
(Editor's note: An earlier version of this item said 20 teleconference locations were available.)
Sunday, September 20, 2015
Parkinson's and the California Stem Cell Agency: Advocates Cite 'Overwhelming' Need to Air Unhappiness
The California stem cell agency has posted a letter online from
Parkinson’s patient advocates that says that an emotional outpouring at a July stem cell meeting grew out of an “overwhelming” need to protest agency delays in funding
research.
The letter was signed by Sherrie Gould and Jenifer Raub, leaders
of Summit4StemCell, a San Diego group, and was sent to the agency's board. Gould and
Raub wrote about the July 23 meeting of the board during which the patients protested after they learned that no funding
for the research they were backing would be available until about 2017. (See here for full text of the protest.)
The link to the Aug. 2 letter is part of the agenda for this
Thursday’s teleconference meeting of the directors of the $3 billion research
effort. It said,
“Our group at Summit4StemCell (has) been regularly attending the CIRM meetings for the past 18 months. Out of respect for Jeanne Loring PhD, we have typically shown up in ‘silent solidarity’ but this meeting was different and many of us had an opportunity to speak publicly about our project, our progress and our desperate need for funding.
“The outpouring on Thursday (July 23) was spontaneous and unexpected. We at Summit feel strongly that we communicate with all board members that our presence at any of the CIRM board meeting is not orchestrated by Jeanne Loring, Dr. Melissa Houser (of the Scripps Clinic) or anyone from the Loring lab.
“We are a passionate group of dedicated Californians that believe strongly in the probability of success of this research using pluripotent stem cell technology. Dr. Loring has always counseled respect and brevity. We believe she would prefer that we be the face of the issue and not the strident voice.
“When confronted with the possibility that there could be no help (or hope) for over a year, the need to speak and be heard was overwhelming. We sincerely believe that you and the board heard us and will do all you can to find an exception or some way to help.”
The reference to Loring, who is head of the stem cell
program at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, has to do with the Summit group’s
support of her research. It also seems to be linked to an anonymous comment filed
on the California Stem Cell Report’s account of the July protest.
The writer indicated that Loring had submitted an
application earlier that was scored unfavorably by the agency, based on a
conversation that the writer had overheard at the Oakland meeting. In response,
Loring said no such conversation took place. She said an earlier application in
another round did not meet CIRM criteria and was withdrawn. The agency does not
publicly comment on such grant review processes, which are conducted in secret.
It also does not release the names of unsuccessful applicants. (See Loring's and the writer's complete comments at the end of this item.)
Summit4StemCell is also not happy with teleconference
nature of this week’s meeting. Earlier this month, they said their voice was “diminished”
because of the inability to speak to the governing board face-to-face.
The California Stem Cell Report item on the teleconference/Parkinson’s
flap is the most widely read post this month, exceeding the readership of the item
dealing with the agency’s announcement concerning its $32 million stem cell bank.
Labels:
cirm 2.0,
Grant-making,
mills,
openness,
parkinsons,
patient advocates
Text of Parkinson's Protest at July Meeting of California Stem Cell Board
Here is the text of remarks made by Parkinson’s patients at
the July 23 meeting of the governing board of the California stem cell agency.
We should note that the words do not convey the impassioned feelings that were
expressed. The comments come from the agency’s transcript of the meeting.
I'm Ron Evans. I'm an ophthalmologist from Placerville, and my wife has Parkinson’s disease. Specifically I was noticing in an earlier talk, I think Dr. Mills presented some of the funding schedules, and for 20 -- well, for this year and up to, I think, 2016, they had zero dollars slated to fund translational projects. Is there a reason why there's a delay in that and not moving of that $40 million forward?
(Randy) Mills (president of the stem cell agency, CIRM): Yes. So the funding for the $40 million here is on a -- starting as soon as it's approved by the board today. The numbers I put up on that slide were for the fiscal year 2016. So our fiscal year started July 1st and will end June 30th of next year. Between now and June 30th of next year, we will -- this program will be started, but we won't be through an entire cycle. Meaning we have to issue the program announcement, then there has to be time to complete the applications, and the applications come in and they go through the review process, and then after the review process, they come back to the board and the board approves them. We will not have gone through all of that cycle yet by June 30th. So the actual first awards that will come out of this will be in fiscal year 2017.
Evans: so essentially there has to be a certain legal process that it goes through before the funds are available or procedural if legal is not a good term.
Mills: Correct.
Evans: And maybe an amendment someone might even think of is the president, if he sees an exceptional project, could seek to sidestep that or make an exception. Thank you.
(Agency) Chairman Jonathan Thomas: other comments from members of the public? Please state your name.
Roos: My name is Ben Roos. I'm a young onset Parkinson’s at age 31. I think I want to see some action. I understand the procedures and policies, but this is a billion dollars of money that I voted for and the public voted for, and I’d like to see translation put into effect ASAP. And I’ve waited 15 years. I'm tired of waiting. This is a golden opportunity. I think you guys should -- the people at Scripps (Research Institute) here have a program which is under way. Ten million, for example, would help them get into the next stage of translation. And I would give it to them this year, not in 2016. Also I would urge my fellow Parkies to speak up. This translation thing is where the rubber hits the road. So we've all come a long way. Speak up.
(applause.)
Hoover: Chris Hoover. I'm a Parkinson's patient. I've addressed the board twice before, but the last one was with Dr. (Jeanne) Loring (head of the Scripps stem cell program) at the Claremont (Hotel), and we were the only ones there because There was a rainstorm of the year. We call that divine intervention. But I think what I want to do is summarize. We kind of feel like we're a round peg in a square hole. We came to you and we had our discovery stage pretty much done by ourselves. We've raised the money, we've done the research, and we’ve got the science. So clearly we're in the translational stage, and that's where we're at. They suggested that we pull our old application because where we're at didn't fit the old CIRM and that it would fit the new CIRM 2.0 better. I was here almost every meeting, and CIRM talked about doing a 60-day turnaround on applications under the 2.0. So I’m not hearing anything about that now. We're talking now June of the following year. And that's kind of -- we've been waiting a while here. We've attended every meeting. So I’m wondering if there's any way, when you approve the translational, that we can speed that process up. And my question is what happened to the 60-day turnaround that you talked about initially with the 2.0 presentation.
Chairman Thomas: Dr. Mills.
Mills: So the 60-day funding decision is for the clinical stage programs, which includes the last part of translational and the enabling Studies that are done. There would be no way to do it for the high volume applications though.
Hoover: Where do we fit in your process because we didn't to come to you in the discovery stage? We're where we are now. Our science is done. We're need funding to get FDA approval. I guess my question to the board is: Is there any way to accelerate the process? Then you'd have us out of your hair. Thank you.
Chairman Thomas: Mr. (Jeff) Sheehy(a patient advocate, CIRM board member).
Sheehy: I think that's a question for Dr. Loring. I'm not sure where you would be in the science in terms -- we had our train analogy. I don’t know. I don't know what pieces need to be done and how that fits.
Hoover: I guess what I meant was when can we get our application in? We just want our application in to get reviewed. That's what we're looking to do. And we've been at this for about a year. Thanks.
Loring: So, Jeff, what's the question?
Sheehy: You don't qualify for the preclinical that's currently open?
Loring: It's not open now. There isn’t another round open right now. I'm sorry. I'm confused. There's no RFA (request for application) that I know of that is open right now that would be appropriate for us. If there is, I’ll apply it.
Sheehy: So there's not an RFA. So you’re really in the middle of the translation stage.
Loring: That's right. We are. We call it preclinical, but it really is translation as you define it.
Chairman Thomas: additional public comment?
Raub: I’m Ray Raub. My wife has Parkinson's, and we've been involved with Dr. (Melissa) Houser and Sherrie (Gould). At any rate, here's where we are. And if there's an exception that can be made, here's why we need it. We have scraped together almost $2 million. We've done it ourselves. We've done it on the backs of our friends. We don't have a lot of those left. They don't answer the phone anymore when we call because they know why we're calling. But we've done this and we've gotten awfully far. We've accelerated what we're doing. We're trying to get through the FDA. We've got functioning sets of dopaminergic neurons. We're ready to put them into a lot of the people that you've heard from today. We won't be able to do it without your help. We're tapped. And we've accelerated what we’ve been trying to get through the FDA. We've probably got about three months more of funding left. We need help, and we can't wait till the end of the fiscal year 2016, till next year. We'll find a way to do it. If you can't help, we'll find a way somehow. Anything you can do. And as I said, if there was ever a situation when exception was warranted, I swear this is it. Thanks.
(Marie) Duliege (CIRM board member): I just want to clarify. First of all, I just want to say how moved we are with all of your coming and your testimony about what you are going through and what you've done on your side to accelerate the process. But I want just to clarify one simple thing that I didn't get clear answer. Is there currently an opportunity to apply for a grant for the research that Dr. Loring is trying to do, or is there not? It's a very simple answer. In which court is the ball?
Mills: For translational activities, that's what we're voting on now.
Duliege: I’d like for everybody. Is there an opportunity for Dr. Loring to apply for a grant for the research that she's trying to do?
Mills: If we approve this, then there will be a program announcement issued, and that's what this funding is for.
Duliege: Thank you very much.
Chairman Thomas: Additional comments from members of the public?
Radunsky: My name is Mike Radunsky, and I’m involved in Dr. Loring's program. You've heard from me several times. And I feel a little bit like the counsel members' statements are a way to say, well, we gave you a chance to apply, but you’re telling us that we have to wait another year before the funding comes in. That's what we saw, a big zero in the 2016 funding. And there were three digits in all the columns for everything else. And the fact that it's going to take nine months to review a grant that we've been discussing with you for a long period of time is a little bit onerous. I think, again, as Ray Raub asked, if there's ever a time for an exception, this is it. I have two small children that I’m taking care of with Parkinson’s disease. And if I don't find something that's going to help me with this, I don't know if I'm going to get to the end of this without severe financial hardship. And I’m extremely lucky to be involved in this program, but I would like to ask you guys to help me stay lucky by getting there, Helping us get the money faster so that I can continue to work and supply for my family.
Chairman Thomas: additional comments from members of the public?
Raub : Hello. My name is Jenifer Raub, and my husband is going to make me cry. I just ask you to please speed this up. Tell us when we can apply, not September.
Chairman Thomas: Dr. Mills.
Mills: For the scheduling, so everyone knows, the concept plan that's before you for translation has the first application deadline, meaning the application would have to be in, is in March, which means the application would post this year. There would be time to obviously be responsive to the application and the application available in March.
Chairman Thomas: any other comments from members of the public?
Raub: Only me. My name is Jenifer Raub, and that's outrageous.
Burkes: My name is Dennis Burkes. I'm a patient, Parkinson’s patient. And this reminds me of the old saying, "Water, water everywhere and not a drop to drink." Down in San Diego we sit amongst other research institutes that are sitting on hundreds of millions of dollars. Guess what they're doing? They’re trying to figure out how they're going to dispense that money, and they’re just dragging that out and dragging that out. And it's so frustrating to all of us. If there's something wrong with the science here, if you know something or some reason this shouldn't proceed, then tell us. Don't let bureaucracy and policy and procedure stop this project from moving forward and taking another year because we're going to run out of money very soon. Ray is right. Maybe we can come up with more money, but we're not the most well-heeled group. And our list in our Rolodex has been used up. And it's going to be tough. And we've hired new people, we have new researchers at work now, and it would just be tragic to see that come to an end with all the funds that are there and with such a promising project as this one. So I just ask that you please take that into consideration. Thank you.
Chairman Thomas: Other comments from members of the public?
Roos: This -- I don't know which of you this is addressed to, but why was there zero dollars in this year's budget for translation?
Chairman Thomas: Dr. Mills.
Mills: So the schedule was set up because we were going to be launching all of these initiatives, not just the translational phase. So we have multiple discovery reviews to do, we have the translational review to do, we have the educational reviews to do, and we have all the clinical reviews to do. So we just have slots that we can have these things fall into. The reason that March was picked as the first application deadline for the translation phase was because we just did an award review in February. It was the most recent award that we had. We hadn't done a discovery award in a while. So when we were ordering them between discovery and translation, because we had just completed the translational phase award in February, we slotted discovery first.
Roos: And the follow-up question is why can't you approve a project like this now? Is this procedure really necessary, to wait a year?
Mills: I would just – James (Harrison) is legal counsel here.
Harrison: So Prop. 71 (the ballot measure that created the agency) requires that we go through a competitive selection process which entails review by the grants working group. And backing up, that involves releasing a program announcement, which will be done expeditiously assuming the board approves the concept proposal. We then need time to process the applications, Schedule a GWG (grant review group) meeting for the review, and then bring those recommendations to the board for its final consideration.
Roos: You guys (unintelligible). Can you do it in three months? I just don't understand why it has to wait a year. Thank you.
Thursday, September 17, 2015
Brain Cancer Targeted: Calabasas Biotech Firm Set to Win $20 Million in California Stem Cell Funding
John S. Yu, chairman, ImmunoCellular -- Cedars-Sinai video
Highlights
Second CIRM bet on phase three trial
$34 million in co-funding
Application initially rejected
California’s stem cell agency next week is expected to award
$20 million to a tiny California firm to help finance a phase three clinical trial
of a therapy for a rare brain cancer.
The move would be the $3 billion agency’s second investment
in a phase three clinical trial, the last major hurdle before a therapy can be
offered for widespread public use. The first was an $18 million bet this spring on NeoStem, Inc., now known as Caladrius.
The two trials offer the best likelihood of
fulfilling -- in relatively short order -- the 2004 campaign promises made to voters
when they created the Golden State's stem cell research effort.
The firm involved is ImmunoCellular Therapeutics, Ltd., a
publicly traded enterprise headquartered in Calabasas, Ca., a suburb northwest of
Los Angeles. Calabasas is better known for its entertainment personalities, such as the Kardashian family, than
biotech.
In addition to the state funds, the trial would be backed by
$34.4 million in co-funding, according to the California Institute for
Regenerative Medicine(CIRM), as the agency is formally known. Earlier this
year, ImmunoCellular estimated the total cost of the trial could be about $50
million.
The firm's proposed therapy targets glioblastoma, a
fast-moving cancer that CIRM said is “resistant to current standards of care." It has a survival rate of slightly more than one year. Immunocellular said
that about 10,000 new patients are diagnosed each year in the United States.
The treatment is called ICT-107. Immunocellular reported on
its Web site that the treatment is “an autologous (patient-derived) dendritic
cell immunotherapeutic that targets six different antigens (peptides that are
tumor markers) associated with glioblastoma.”
The CIRM summary of reviewer comments said that the phase one trial for the treatment produced a “tremendous survival response.” The summary said,
“Though the survival response observed in the Ph1(phase one) trial was not fully replicated in the Ph2 trial, results are supportive of continued clinical development and of the Ph3 trial as designed.”
ImmunoCellular has been around with its current focus since
2006 when it acquired its cellular-based technology from Cedars-Sinai in Los
Angeles. John S. Yu, director of surgical neuro-oncology at Cedars, is listed
as the founder of the firm. He is now chairman of the board and chief
scientific officer.
The firm has four full-time employees and four part-time,
including Yu, according to February 2015 filings with the Securities and Exchange
Commission. The firm said,
“We have a number of consulting agreements for clinical development, regulatory affairs, investor relations and business development. We outsource all of our drug discovery research, process development, manufacturing and clinical development to third parties with expertise in those areas."ImmunoCellular reports no revenues for the past several years. CIRM said, however, the firm has promised $34.4 million in co-funding for the clinical trial.
In an August closed-door session, CIRM’s scientific reviewers scored the
ImmunoCellular application as having “exceptional merit” on a 9-0 vote.
Ratification of that decision will occur in public
next Thursday in a teleconference meeting of the agency’s 29-member governing
board, which includes one representative from Cedars-Sinai.
The board almost never rejects a positive recommendation from its reviewers. The agency also does not release the names of successful applicants in advance of a board vote. The California Stem Cell Report identified ImmunoCellular through other means.
The firm's original application was deemed by CIRM reviewers to need improvement on a
1-9-2 vote and was sent back to ImmunoCellular for revision. The August review summary said,
“(R)eviewers had feasibility concerns regarding the applicant’s ability to enroll the trial and maintain the reagent supply chain to support manufacturing of the product. Reviewers also had concerns with the trial design, which centered around selection of the patient population targeted in the registration trial and the lack of immune monitoring proposed in the trial.
“The applicant was provided the opportunity to address these concerns in a revised application, and their responses and modifications to the proposal reassured reviewers that the applicant could enroll and conduct the Ph3 trial as proposed and that, if endpoints are met, the trial design could support licensing approval by FDA.”The price of ImmunoCellular stock closed at $0.425 today, up nearly one cent. The 52-week high of the stock was $1.03 and the low 35 cents.
Google chart |
Labels:
cancer,
cirm 2.0,
clinical trials,
immunocellular
California's $3 Billion Stem Cell Agency Releases More Information for Next Week's Meeting
The California stem cell agency yesterday made public significant
background information concerning its board meeting one week from today,
including an application for a $20 million clinical trial award.
Release of the information is a step forward in openness and
transparency for the agency, which has slipped in that area recently. (See here and here.)
The $20 million award is the only application up for
approval next Thursday, just four business days away. The California Stem Cell
Report will have more on the proposal later today.
Items with fresh, additional information include new conflict of interest standards for the agency’s blue-ribbon grant reviewers, changes in the scheduling of upcoming rounds for basic and translational research and
changes in loan award policies.
Still missing is information involving the agency’s plans to
correct deficiencies identified in a $230,000 performance audit and the agency’s
ongoing revision of its plans for spending its last $1 billion.
Next Thursday’s meeting will be a teleconference session
with 17 remote locations, including Atlanta, where the public can participate
and listen in. All are places from which board members log in for the meeting. The locations include
San Francisco (3 locations), Fresno, Davis, Los Angeles(3 locations), Napa, Stanford,
Sacramento, Davis, Fresno, Berkeley, Los Gatos, Irvine and La Jolla (2
locations). Specific addresses can be found on the agenda.
The meeting will also be audiocast on the Internet, but no
public participation is available by that means.
Comments to the board can be sent in advance of the meeting
to mbonneville@cirm.ca.gov.
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