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Pluristem’s CEO, Zami Aberman, compares the state of stem cell research today to where antibodies were 20 years ago. Clinical evidence is key to moving the technology forward, he says.
June 3, 2014
By: Tim Wright
Editor-in-Chief, Contract Pharma
If biopharma had a Sputnik program, it would have to be stem cells. Research has been intensely competitive, and international. What has been missing, though, is clinical evidence of stem cell therapies’ efficacy and practicality. Last month, some of the world’s leading stem cell researchers, as well as interested pharma company experts, met at the ninth Annual World Stem Cells Regenerative Medicine Congress in London, to discuss the state of the science, and what they’re doing. Pluristem Theapeutics, an Israeli/U.S. company, is moving quickly to establish itself in this market, working with partners in the U.S., Europe and Korea, and taking an evidence-based approach to proving the efficacy of its PLX (placental expanded cells). So far, PLXs have shown great promise in Phase I and II clinical trials. For example, in tests involving hip replacement patients with damaged muscle tissue, injections of PLX were shown to lead to a 500% increase in muscle force, and 315% increase in muscle volume after six months. In clinical trials on patients with critical limb ischemia, cell injections were found to reduce the risk of amputation or death by 59%. Pluristem plans to start a clinical trial to evaluate the cells for treating pre-eclampsia in pregnant women. The company had started up eleven years ago to license and sell 3-D bioreactor technology that it had acquired from Technion University and The Weizman Institute, to companies that would use it to make stem cells. Aberman, a mechanical engineer by training, decided to change the company’s direction radically, and to shift from equipment and devices to therapeutics, and use the bioreactor to culture stem cells instead. Pluristem uses placentas, which are readily available as medical waste, as a source for the cells. This eliminates ethical problems, as well as some of the incompatibility issues and delivery limitations that can be seen with injected donor cells. Pluristem has also customized the 3-D reactor to recreate an environment that, Aberman says, closely simulates the natural one. The company is working on a variety of new clinical trials, and is also supplying its cells for a research project with the U.S. National Institute of Allergic and Infectious Diseases (NIAD) that is being funded by the US Department of Homeland Security. Its goal would be a simple intermuscular injection that anyone could use to prevent destruction of bone marrow after exposure to nuclear radiation (say, after a nuclear bomb explodes). Aberman says it is the only stem cell supplier to have an FDA and EMA-approved cGMP facility in place to generate clinical volumes of cells. Before travelling to London to speak at the World Congress, Aberman talked about the company’s history and current strategy.
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