So, FDA has lifted a hold on the first ever clinical trial testing cells derived from human embyonic stem cells. The study- based in California and sponsored by the biotechnology company Geron (view press release here)- will administer cells derived from human embryos (“neural support cells”) to ten patients with recent spinal cord injury with the primary aim of demonstrating safety. The same study had been initiated last year- but halted after safety concerns arose in rodent tests. According to news reports, Geron was able to deliver a clean package of studies to FDA. And so- roughly 20 years since the first ever gene transfer study, we now have the first ever human trial of embryo stem cell derived tissue.
BibTeX
@Manual{stream2010-60, title = {Embryonic Stem Cell Trials Start Development}, journal = {STREAM research}, author = {Jonathan Kimmelman}, address = {Montreal, Canada}, date = 2010, month = aug, day = 4, url = {http://www.translationalethics.com/2010/08/04/embryonic-stem-cell-trials-start-development/} }
MLA
Jonathan Kimmelman. "Embryonic Stem Cell Trials Start Development" Web blog post. STREAM research. 04 Aug 2010. Web. 05 Dec 2024. <http://www.translationalethics.com/2010/08/04/embryonic-stem-cell-trials-start-development/>
APA
Jonathan Kimmelman. (2010, Aug 04). Embryonic Stem Cell Trials Start Development [Web log post]. Retrieved from http://www.translationalethics.com/2010/08/04/embryonic-stem-cell-trials-start-development/
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