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Two new Series A rounds inject $72M into regenerative medicine and NASH – MedCity News

Posted: April 12, 2017 at 7:43 am

Two of the hottest fields in biopharma got another injection of cash this week, with a combined $72 million in Series A financing.

That includes $32 million raised by Frequency Therapeutics to further its novel regenerative medicine approach, and a separate $40 million round for Cirius Therapeutics take on liver fibrosis and NASH.

Headquartered in Woburn, Massachusetts,Frequency Therapeutics was founded in 2015 with a mission to kickstart one of the bodys natural healing mechanisms. Its$32 million Series A financing round was led by CoBro Ventures, with support from Morningside Ventures, Emigrant Capital, Korean Investment Partnership, Alexandria Real Estate Equities,and others.

Frequency is built around its so-called Progenitor Cell Activation (PCA) platform developed by Robert Langer and Jeffrey Karp from MIT and Harvard Medical School. Progenitor cells are slightly more specialized than stem cells. And while they typically lie dormant after fetal development, they can be activated to regenerate damaged tissues similar to the way stems cells do.

Theyre already in the right place and trained to do the right job, explained Frequencycofounder and CSO Chris Loose, in an email forwarded by a company representative.

While the PCA platform could theoretically be applied to many fields, such as skin disorders, muscle regeneration, and gastrointestinal diseases, the initial R&D focus will bechronic hearing loss. This often occurs with the gradual loss of key cells in the inner ear, called sensory hair cells.

Frequencys small molecule therapy would activate the progenitor cells waiting in the wings, helping to replace the lost cells and loss of function for the remainder of the patients life.

Once a new hair cell is regenerated, we expect it to be long-lasting, Loose explained. The hair cells you are born with are the ones you die with, so a hair cell can survive and function for over 100 years in some people.

Also on Tuesday,Cirius Therapeutics (previously known as Octeta Therapeutics) publicized a $40 million Series A round. The financing was led by Frazier Healthcare Partners and Novo A/S.

The money is destined to fund the companys ongoingEMMINENCE trial, a Phase 2b study of its second-generation insulin sensitizer, MSDC-0602K, for the treatment of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and liver fibrosis.

It speaks to the novel approach Cirius is taking to control the silent epidemic of NASH, which often strikes alongside obesity, metabolic syndrome, and type 2 diabetes.

In a company statement, newly-announced CEO Bob Balteraexplainedthe connection.

A great deal of experimental data, including results from a Phase 2 trial in patients with Type 2 diabetes, has been generated demonstrating that these next-generation insulin sensitizers act in a novel way to positively impact the underlying metabolic parameters that drive NASH,Baltera said.

The challenge for the company is ensuring the safety of its candidate,MSDC-0602K. While promising, existing insulin sensitizers come with an array of problematic side effects and NASH is a high-risk patient population.

On the other hand, there are no disease-modifying therapies on the market, so a little benefit will go a long way.

Echoing others in the field, one of the lead investors noted that a combination approach to NASH will likely work best.

At Frazier, we believe the future of NASH therapies will be a multi-drug approach, with a need for therapies that address the underlying metabolic drivers of disease, as well as resultant fibrosis and inflammation, said Dan Estes of Frzaier Healthcare. We see a distinct opportunity for MSDC-0602K to become a cornerstone therapy in NASH, both as monotherapy but ultimately as part of combination approaches.

Photo: abluecup, Getty Images

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James Rothman appointed Sterling Professor of Cell Biology – Yale News

Posted: April 12, 2017 at 7:43 am

James E. Rothman, newly appointed as a Sterling Professor of Cell Biology, is one of the world's most distinguished biochemists and cell biologists. For his work on how molecular messages are transmitted inside and outside of human cells, he was awarded a Nobel Prize in 2013.

A Sterling Professorship is one of the universitys highest faculty honors.

Rothman helped reveal the mechanism that allows cellular compartments called vesicles to transmit information both in the interior of the cell and to the surrounding environment. The fusion of vesicles and cellular membranes, a process called exocytosis, is basic to life and occurs in organisms as diverse as yeast and humans. Exocytosis underlies physiological functions ranging from the secretion of insulin to the regulation of the brain neurotransmitters responsible for movement, perception, memory, and mood.

Rothmans current research concerns the biophysics of membrane fusion and its regulation in exocytosis; the dynamics of the Golgi apparatus at super-resolution; and the use of bio-inspired design in nanotechnology.

After graduating from Yale College with a degree in physics, Rothman earned a Ph.D. in biological chemistry from Harvard Medical School. He conducted postdoctoral research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology before moving to the Stanford School of Medicine as an assistant professor. He continued his research at Princeton University, where he became the founding chair of the Department of Cellular Biochemistry and Biophysics at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center and vice chair of the Sloan-Kettering Institute. Prior to coming to Yale in 2008, Rothman served on the faculty of Columbia Universitys College of Physicians and Surgeons, where he was a professor in the Department of Physiology and Biophysics, the Clyde and Helen Wu Professor of Chemical Biology, and director of the Columbia Genome Center.

Rothman serves as chair of the Yale School of Medicines Department of Cell Biology and as director of the Nanobiology Institute on Yales West Campus.

He has received numerous awards and honors in recognition of his work on vesicle trafficking and membrane fusion, including the King Faisal International Prize for Science, the Gairdner Foundation International Award, the Lounsbery Award of the National Academy of Sciences, the Heineken Foundation Prize of the Netherlands Academy of Sciences, the Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize of Columbia University, the Lasker Basic Science Award, the Kavli Prize in Neuroscience, the Massry Prize, and the E.B. Wilson Medal. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and its Institute of Medicine, and is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

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Taking Cell Therapy one Step Further with this Boost Reagent – Labiotech.eu (blog)

Posted: April 12, 2017 at 7:43 am

Cell therapy is revolutionizing medicine, heres how the latest technology can help overcome the major challenges stopping it from taking over the market.

Offering unprecedented possibilities to treat some of the most challenging diseases, cell therapy is stealing the show in the biotech space. Strimvelis, the first hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) gene therapy is already treating rare genetic diseases. In less than a year, CAR-T therapy is expected to hit the market and revolutionize the treatment of cancer. And in the not-so-far future, cell therapy could even eradicate HIV or put an end to diabetes, which is reaching epidemic proportions in Western countries.

The first cell therapies have already been on the market for a few years, and analysts are confident that the numbers will quickly grow over the years. The stem cell therapy market alone is expected to hit 57Bn ($61Bn) by 2022, and the upcoming CAR-T technology will reach an impressive 8Bn ($8.5Bn) in the next decade.

Although the potential is definitely there, researchers are still looking for ways of making these therapies cheaper, safer and more effective. Currently, not all patients are suited to receive cell therapy due to scientific or economic challenges. The advent of allogeneic therapies is addressing the financial obstacles, but what about efficiency?

One of the key elements to building a successful cell therapy are viral vectors, which are used to deliver the necessary DNA sequences to engineer the cells. Lentiviral vectors are a common choice because they have a rather larger capacity and enable long-lasting genetic expression.

They are specially researched for ex-vivo treatment of hematopoietic stem cells and primary T-cells. The percentage of cells that can be reached, however, often remains low, and the number of gene copy numbers per cell can be extremely variable.

Finding a solution to this challenge is unfortunately not as simple as increasing the virus load. Cells that carry a surplus of copies integrated into their DNA are more prone to mutations that affect their survival and put the safety of the patient in danger. This is an essential factor taken into account during the regulatory phase to determine whether a therapy can make it to the market or not.

How can we then improve the efficacy of transduction without affecting the health of the cells and the safety of the therapy? In the lab, researchers often use enhancers such as polybrene, a polymer that can increase the efficacy of transduction of viral DNA. However, this substance is not applicable in a clinical context because of its heightened cell toxicity.

To overcome these challenges, scientists at SIRION Biotech got down to work and screened for compounds that could improve the fusion of the viral and cell membranes. The result was a technology with the potential to solve a major problem in the development of cell therapies, with DNA delivery reaching an impressive 80% of hematopoietic stem cells while keeping the copy numbers down to the ideal value of 3 to 5 per cell.

This technology, called LentiBOOST, works its magic simply by adding a non-toxic polymer to the mixture during transduction. It has already been accepted as an element of clinical trials from phase I to phase III and its possibilities seem unlimited. One of SIRIONs partners, the Heinrich Pette Institute in Hamburg, is studying the potential of LentiBOOST to improve transduction in a therapy intended to actively remove HIV from infected blood cells and induce long-lasting resistance against the virus.

With applications ranging from cancer to infectious disease, cell therapy is definitely going to change medicine. Technology like LentiBOOST is helping these amazing developments materialize with a boost to both their efficacy and safety.

You can find more information on LentiBOOST at SIRION Biotechs website!

Images from Montri Thipsorn, vchal /Shutterstock; SIRION Biotech

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Fresh fruit may prevent diabetes and related complications – Medical News Today

Posted: April 12, 2017 at 7:42 am

Most of us know that eating fresh fruit and vegetables is good for our health. However, people diagnosed with diabetes may avoid fruit due to its high sugar content. New research investigates the health benefits of fresh fruit consumption among people with diabetes.

Diabetes affects more than 420 million people worldwide and more than 29 million people in the United States alone.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), diabetes caused more than 1.5 million deaths in 2012. In the U.S., diabetes is a leading cause of death, accounting for almost 80,000 yearly deaths, according to the latest statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Fresh fruit and vegetables are healthful for most of us, but people with diabetes may abstain from eating fresh fruit because of its high sugar content.

This is why a team of researchers - led by Huaidong Du of the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom - decided to investigate the health effects of consuming fresh fruit in patients both with and without diabetes.

The authors were also motivated by the fact that, to their knowledge, no studies have so far investigated the long-term effects of fresh fruit consumption on the rate of diabetes or on the risk of diabetes-induced cardiovascular events.

The research was published in the journal PLOS Medicine.

The researchers examined the effects of fruit consumption on almost 500,000 people enrolled in the China Kadoorie Biobank national study. Participants were aged between 30 and 79 and lived in 10 different areas across China.

The participants were clinically followed for approximately 7 years.

During this follow-up period, 9,504 cases of diabetes were identified in participants who did not have diabetes at the beginning of the study.

Using Cox regression models, researchers analyzed the correlations with consumption of fresh fruit while also adjusting for age, sex, location, socioeconomic status, body mass index (BMI), and family history of diabetes.

In total, 18.8 percent of the participants said that they consumed fresh fruit every day, and 6.4 percent said that they never or rarely consumed them. Those who had been previously diagnosed with diabetes were three times as likely to not consume fruit than those without diabetes or with screen-detected diabetes.

The team found that people who did not have diabetes at the beginning of the study and consumed fresh fruit in high amounts had a significantly lower risk of diabetes. Additionally, those who had diabetes at the beginning of the study and consumed high amounts of fruit had a significantly lower risk of dying from any cause, as well as a lower risk of developing cardiovascular complications.

More specifically, in comparison with the other study participants, those who consumed fresh fruit daily had a 12 percent lower relative risk of developing diabetes.

Study participants who had diabetes at baseline but consumed fresh fruit more than three times per week had a 17 percent lower risk of all-cause mortality and up to a 28 percent lower risk of developing both major and minor cardiovascular complications.

"Major" cardiovascular complications refer to events that affect large blood vessels (ischemic heart disease and stroke, for instance), while "minor" refers to those affecting small blood vessels (such as kidney diseases, eye disease, and neuropathy).

In absolute terms, this means that daily fruit-consumers had a 0.2 percent decrease in their absolute risk of developing diabetes over a 5-year period, and people diagnosed with diabetes had a 1.9 percent absolute reduction in the risk of mortality from all causes.

Du and team explain the significance of these findings:

"These findings suggest that a higher intake of fresh fruit is potentially beneficial for primary and secondary prevention of diabetes. For individuals who have already developed diabetes, restricted consumption of fresh fruit, which is common in many parts of the world [...] should not be encouraged."

The study was purely observational, so no conclusions were drawn regarding causality.

Learn how legumes may lower the risk of type 2 diabetes.

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Michigan Medicine ranks in 90th percentile for diabetes performance – University of Michigan Health System News (press release)

Posted: April 12, 2017 at 7:42 am

ANN ARBOR, Mich. Michigan Medicine has ranked in the 90th percentile of the AMGA Foundations Diabetes: Together 2 Goal campaign for its diabetes performance related to lipid management.

The campaign, launched in March 2016, has a goal to improve care for 1 million people with type 2 diabetes by 2019. AMGA Foundation hopes to achieve this goal by leveraging the coordinated delivery systems of 150 participating AMGA members as well as national partners and collaborators.

Each quarter, nearly two-thirds of medical groups and health systems that participate in the campaign report diabetes prevalence and control rates in their patient populations. AMGA Foundation then recognizes participants who are high performers in different areas of diabetes care, such as A1c control, blood pressure control, lipid management and medical attention to nephropathy, in an effort to continue improving diabetes care across the nation.

Based on self-reported data for Q3 2016, Michigan Medicine ranked in the 90th percentile for its lipid management performance for diabetes patients.

We are pleased to be recognized for excellence in patient care, says Jennifer Wyckoff, M.D., assistant professor of endocrinology at Michigan Medicines Division of Metabolism, Endocrinology and Diabetes. We have taken many steps over the past 15 years to ensure top quality care for patients with diabetes, including quality metric dashboards and panel managers for our primary care clinics, a comprehensive diabetes education program and working with patient advocates.

AMGA congratulates Michigan Medicine for their commitment to care for people with type 2 diabetes, says Jerry Penso, M.D., M.B.A., president of AMGA Foundation and chief medical and quality officer of AMGA. Lipid management is an incredibly vital component of type 2 diabetes management, as heart disease and stroke are the top causes of death and disability among this population.

About Michigan MedicineAt Michigan Medicine, we create the future of healthcare through the discovery of new knowledge for the benefit of patients and society; educate the next generation of physicians, health professionals and scientists; and serve the health needs of our citizens. We pursue excellence every day in our three hospitals, 40 outpatient locations and home care operations that handle more than 2.1 million outpatient visits a year.

About AMGA Foundation AMGA Foundation is AMGAs philanthropic arm that enables medical groups and other organized systems of care to consistently improve health and health care. AMGA Foundation serves as a catalyst, connector and collaborator for translating the evidence of what works best in improving health and health care in everyday practice.Learn more atamga.org/foundation.

About AMGA AMGAis a trade association leading the transformation of health care in America. Representing multispecialty medical groups and integrated systems of care, we advocate, educate, innovate and empower our members to deliver the next level of high performance health. AMGA is the national voice promoting awareness of medical groups recognized excellence in the delivery of coordinated, high-quality, cost-effective care. More than 175,000 physicians practice in our member organizations, delivering care to one in three Americans. Learn more atamga.org.

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Merck, Amazon challenge developers to build Alexa apps for diabetes – MobiHealthNews

Posted: April 12, 2017 at 7:42 am

Amazon Web Services and Merck announced a developer competition on Monday to that plans to harness artificial intelligence for diabetics.

Dubbed the Alexa Diabetes Challenge, and powered by Luminary Labs, the contest aims to incent upstarts and individual developers to create apps that harness Amazons Alexa voice-enabled technologies particularly for patients recently diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes.

Early adopters such as Penn Medicine and Commonwealth Care Alliance are already running proofs-of-concept or pilot programs with Amazon Alexa being the centerpiece of improving patient experience.

Whats more, a new Healthcare IT News andHIMSS Analytics HIT Market Indicator reportfound that half of hospitals intend to adopt some fashion of AI in five years and more than a third plan to do so within two years.

The Amazon and Merck contest enables innovators to use not only Alexa but also Amazon Web Services cloud infrastructure.

Five entrants will be chosen in the first round. Those winners will collect $25,000 and 100,000 AWS credits apiece and move into the Virtual Accelerator to access mentors as they work to transform the initial concepts into real solutions, the companies said.

The accelerator work will culminate with the finalists presenting their apps to judges in a pop-up AWS loft in New York City, after which the winner will be awarded $125,000.

At the end of the Virtual Accelerator, finalists will present their solutions in-person to the judges at Demo Day at the AWS Pop-up loft in NYC. Submissions take place atalexadiabeteschallenge.comand close on May 22, 2017.

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Teen works to save summer camp for kids with diabetes – WBIR-TV

Posted: April 12, 2017 at 7:42 am

April 11, 2017: A 16-year-old with Type 1 diabetes is trying to save a summer camp that means so much to her.

Mary Scott, WBIR 6:56 PM. EDT April 11, 2017

Natalie Miller (Photo: WBIR)

Natalie Miller's Type 1 diabetes requires constant care: five blood sugar tests a day, an insulin pump, counting carbohydrates and the list goes on.

While the Powell High School junior has learned to deal with the pain and management of the medical treatments, she remembers when diabetes made her feel like an outcast.

"It definitely took a toll on my self-confidence for a while. I always feel weird, even now, when my pump will go off in class and every one will turn around and look at me," explained Miller, 16.

Camp Cure is a place where she always feels accepted. Every summer, East Tennessee Children's Hospital put on the week-long day camp exclusively for kids dealing with diabetes.

Even after Miller aged out of the camp, she returned as a volunteer counselor.

"For me, it's where I can go and be with people who understand what it's like to get up at three in the morning with low blood sugar. Or understand what it's like to be irritable because you're blood sugar is high," Miller said.

This year, Children's Hospital said it made the decision to close Camp Cure after four months of consideration.

"When we were really examining it, we did not have the finances to support it this year," said Hella Ewing, Children's Hospital VP of Patient Care Services and Chief Nursing Officer.

Camp Cure costs the hospital about $30,000 every year and is the hospital's only summer camp that does not have a financial endowment to cover costs.

Children's two other camps for children with disabilities and medical disorders, Donald M. Gally Summer Camp and Camp Eagle's Nest, have sustainable philanthropic support.

"We thought we would just take a step back, re-energize the camp, see what potential support we might be able to gain from the community and hope we can do it again next year," Ewing said.

Natalie Miller turned her disappointment from the news into action. She wrote a plea to the community to help bring back the camp next year and shared it on social media.

Read Natalie Miller's full letter below:

Let me give you a bit of background information, so you can see why this summer camp is worth the donations. My name is Natalie Miller, I'm sixteen and I've been Type 1 Diabetic for thirteen years this coming December. I was diagnosed at the age of 4, and I attended Camp Cure from the time I was five until age 12 (because that's the age limit for campers! Of course, you can become a junior staff member once you turn 13). Camp Cure was one of the only places where I felt like I fit in. The thing wasand still isthat no one understood me unless they had diabetes as well, which in Powell, is seldom and far between. Everyone understood me there, and knew the pain of having to poke my finger 4-5 times a day, take shots every time I ate and having to count carbs and measure out my food. They understand what it's like to wake up with a low blood sugar and having to muster up the energy to get up and check your blood glucose, or it being a high BG with uncontrolled thirst, urination and headaches. To say that Camp Cure was a big impact on me is an understatement; they took part in molding me into who I am today.

With that being said, we staff members always want to create a good environment for these children and to have fun and show that no disease would slow us down! These kids look up to us, and think "Wow! You can be a teenager with diabetes!" (Yes, they really say that!! Also, our staff are mainly diabetics, trained professionals... we have a team of nurses!) and they look up to us as role models, and trust that we will take great care of them and have lots of fun with them as well. At Camp Cure, we see a lot of firsts: A first finger stick, or a first insulin shot or changing a pump site, and we make a big deal about it as well, as it's such a milestone! Needles and hospital rooms and doctors are intimidating, even for me, and especially for these kids. It's such an honor to be able to witness their face once they realized that they've done something so significant on their own. This camp is so important to me, and lots of other people and kids. Don't let this year be any different from the last. We want to see new smiling faces, and we want to make an impact on these camper's lives. I know how much of a difference they made for me, and I want all of the T1D kids to know that they aren't alone in what they're going through, and we always welcome them with open arms.

Be sure to contact East Tennessee Children's Hospital for more information on how you can get involved with Camp Cure, and how you can chip in to help. Thank you!"

2017 WBIR.COM

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If you’re serious about lowering your diabetes risk, you should eat this right now – Star2.com

Posted: April 12, 2017 at 7:42 am

New research has found that a diet rich in legumes could lower the risk of developing diabetes.

Legumes are already known to have various health benefits thanks to being rich in B vitamins, minerals (including calcium, potassium and magnesium) and fibre. Although they have long been thought to offer protection against type-2 diabetes there has been little research so far to confirm these beliefs.

To examine this association researchers from the Human Nutrition Unit at Universitat Rovira i Virgili (URV) in Spain collaborated with other research groups in the Prevention of Diabetes with Mediterranean Diets (Predimed) study.

Together the team looked at effects of different non-soy legumes lentils, chickpeas, beans and peas on the risk of type-2 diabetes among individuals at high cardiovascular risk.

A low intake of legumes was considered to be 12.73g a day, approximately equivalent to 1.5 servings per week of 60g of raw legumes.

A high intake consisted of 28.75g a day, equivalent to 3.35 servings per week.

The team also assessed what effect replacing other protein- and carbohydrate-rich foods with legumes had on the development of the disease.

A total of 3,349 participants were analysed from the Predimed study, all at high risk of cardiovascular disease but without type-2 diabetes when the study started.

After four years, the results showed that that compared to individuals with a lower consumption of legumes, those with a higher consumption had a 35% lower risk of developing type-2 diabetes.

Those who ate more legumes were found to have lower risk of type-2 diabetes.

Lentils in particular were associated with a lower risk of the condition, with participants who had a higher consumption of lentils (nearly 1 serving per week) benefiting from a 33% lower risk compared to those individuals with a lower consumption (less than half a serving per week).

The team also found that replacing half a serving per day of foods rich in protein or carbohydrates, including eggs, bread, rice and baked potato, with half a serving per day of legumes was associated with a lower risk of type-2 diabetes.

The researchers highlight the importance of consuming legumes to prevent chronic diseases such as diabetes, although they added that further research is needed in order to confirm their findings.

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) also declared 2016 as the international year of legumes in an effort to raise peoples awareness of their nutritional benefits.

The results was published in the journal Clinical Nutrition. AFP Relaxnews

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Earnings Preview: Biotechnology Looks Healthy – Barron’s

Posted: April 11, 2017 at 3:44 pm


Barron's
Earnings Preview: Biotechnology Looks Healthy
Barron's
The iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology (IBB) has climbed 0.34%. Meanwhile the SPDR S&P Biotech ETF (XBI) has declined 0.21%. IBB could be benefiting from having a wider swath of companies, in addition to the fact that the average market cap of its index ...

and more »

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Agricultural biotechnology regulations are a mess Here’s how Trump can unshackle innovation – Genetic Literacy Project

Posted: April 11, 2017 at 3:44 pm

[The following is the first part of anInformation Technology and Innovation Foundation report.]

New techniques for improving plants and animals promise to reshape virtually every aspect of the relationship between humans and our environment for the better. Safer and more sustainable crops have already made enormous contributions to the economy and the environment, and genetically improved livestock and companion animals are close behind. Discovery of more precise, predictable, and easily used techniques derived directly from nature is dramatically accelerating this progress. But fears of the new have led to calls in many nations for precautionary regulation, which risks stifling agricultural innovation without any showing of need or benefit. There is a better way. This report discusses proposals for updating policies and regulations for agricultural biotechnology products in the United States to ensure they safeguard

This report discusses proposals for updating policies and regulations for agricultural biotechnology products in the United States to ensure they safeguard public and environmental health and animal welfare without discouraging needed innovations. An authoritative review of 10 years worth of academic literature has found that the scientific research conducted so far has not detected any significant hazards directly connected with the use of [genetically engineered] crops. This experience is evidence that the time is long past due for significant regulatory rollback in this field around the world. Good advice has already been offered as to the best ways for updating these regulations. Not all of it has been followed yet, leaving numerous opportunities for improvement by the new administration. This report recommends the following reforms:

BACKGROUND The single biggest obstacle slowing the wider dissemination of the considerable benefits from agricultural biotechnology innovations is unwarranted regulatory burdens across the world. The disparity between the degree of hazard or risk associated with these innovations and the regulatory hurdles they must clear has widened everywhere over the past three decades from a gap to a chasm. This has happened even while experience has shown that early safety concerns were unfounded, and that the predictability and safety associated with these innovations has been shown to be unmatched by the products of any other production method.

What Is Agricultural Biotechnology and Why Should We Care? Innovations in agriculture are being delivered today through a host of different techniques referred to with a baffling array of labels: recombinant DNA, genetically modified organisms (GMOs), genetic modification (GM), gene editing, CRISPR, TALENs, Zinc Fingers, meganucleases, advanced breeding, new breeding technologies, precision agriculture, big data, remote sensing, and more. There is some overlap among these terms both vis--vis the subject matter they cover and the ways in which they are used, but misunderstanding is widespread, and scientific justification for some of these terms is lacking or altogether absent.

When scientifically nonsensical terms are used as the foundation of discriminatory regulations, without due regard for hazard or risk, the resulting policies do not advance the protection of public and environmental health. This is the case for any and all regulations that single out GM processes or GMOs for regulatory scrutiny. Scientists and policy mavens spent years examining these issues in the late 1970s and early 1980s. They reached consensus that the process of genetic modification tells regulators nothing useful about any possible hazards of the resulting product, or the risks associated with different levels of exposure; these require consideration of the final characteristics and qualities of a productits phenotype. To use an example from manufacturing, a products safety does not depend on how a chemical is made, but rather on its chemical composition and structure. The same is true for food, feed, fiber, and animal products. Yet, for ideological or political reasons unsupported by data or experience, many nations regulators have adopted explicitly process-based regulations. Even countries that have avoided this fundamental error have drifted in that direction through

Yet, for ideological or political reasons unsupported by data or experience, many nations regulators have adopted explicitly process-based regulations. Even countries that have avoided this fundamental error have drifted in that direction through uncritical implementation of otherwise less flawed regulations that slow ag-biotech innovation. These different developments have combined to create the gross disparity between and within nations regarding risk and regulatory burden as manifested in regulatory proposals we examine here.

GM Food Is Safe The foundation of confidence in the safety of agricultural products produced through biotechnology, no matter what breeding method was used, lies in a concept known as substantial equivalence. This is based on the work of an international expert group at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), which published a series of landmark policy papers in the 1980s and 1990s. The concept of substantial equivalence emerged from the recognition that plants and animals we have long used for food provide a familiar baseline for comparison and for the evaluation of novel traits as we consider their safety. A number of factors are important, including:

The U.S. National Academy of Sciences explicitly endorsed this approach in its first paper on this topic, and reaffirmed it in 11 subsequent reports, which corroborated the safety of products produced with these methods. The safety of these products was reaffirmed in a comprehensive review of more than 1,700 peer-reviewed papers from the scientific literature over a decade, published in 2013, adding to a database of more than 2,000 such papers compiled by independent academics. It is noteworthy that based on their findings, independent academics and industry scientists reach identical conclusions. For these reasons, more than 275 scientific organizations have embraced the global scientific consensus on the safety of GM crops and foods. The European Union has summarized the safety issue thus:

Indeed, the use of more precise technology and the greater regulatory scrutiny probably make them even safer than conventional plants and foods; and if there are unforeseen environmental effectsnone have appeared as yetthese should be rapidly detected by our monitoring requirements. On the other hand, the benefits of these plants and products for human health and the environment become increasingly clear.

Process-Based Regulation Doesnt Work In the early 1980s, when the potential of recombinant DNA techniques to deliver solutions to problems in agriculture was first widely noted, two main schools of thought emerged on the best way to ensure their safety without discouraging innovation. Expert bodies around the world repeatedly found no unique or novel hazards associated with crops, livestock, microbes, or foods improved through biotechnology. They found that the foreseeable risks were similar to those with which we were long familiar with from classical plant and animal breeding throughout 10 millennia of domestication and agriculture. As a result, the United States, Canada, and Australia aimed to base regulations on experience and scientific data. U.S. policymakers, for example, concluded that existing regulations for risk assessment and management were sufficient, and determined to move forward with products of agricultural biotechnology under close scrutiny, with a watchful eye for surprises. This was attended by the expectation that regulations would be adapted regularly as knowledge and understanding accrued.

European politicians chose a different approach, and crafted new, process-specific regulations unrelated to any concrete demonstration of real hazards or actual risks, based instead on hypothetical potential harms. Following this lead, a number of other countries have also taken this precautionary approach and subordinated the findings of scientific risk assessment and experience to political and ideological interests. The results have been clear and dramatic; innovative products have rapidly swept to market dominance in countries that have chosen science-based approaches, while European farmers have become increasingly uncompetitive as innovators have fled the continent. The harshest condemnations of the failed European precautionary approach have come from Europeans.

But despite this reasoned approach early on, regulations in the United States more recently have not evolved to match our accumulated experience and the dramatic growth in our understanding. Regulations first laid down in 1987 have been significantly adapted to experience only once, in 1992. Since then, the disparity between the level of risk and the degree of regulation has expanded dramatically. This led the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy in 2015 to call for an updating of regulatory agencies responsibilities under the Coordinated Framework, the 1986 roadmap set forth to guide regulators into the new landscape. The new Trump administrations directive that each new regulation must be accompanied by repeal of two already in place is, in this arena at least, a step in the right direction.

The Purpose of Regulation Is to Manage Risk Regulations exist for a purpose: to manage and mitigate risks. Reasonable and effective regulations will also incorporate a consideration of economic costs and dynamic innovation effects. Thus, under the 1986 Coordinated Framework, the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service is charged with managing risks that crops improved through biotechnology may present to American agriculture; the Environmental Protection Agency with ensuring that pesticides are used safely to manage pests and protect human and environmental health; and the Food and Drug Administration with ensuring that food and feed derived from crops or animals improved through biotechnology are as safe to consume as other food and feed.

But much of the oversight applied to crops improved through biotechnology in the United States has lost sight of the fundamental principle for determining risk, expressed in the equation: risk equals hazard times exposure. If there is no prospect for exposure to a hazard, then the hazard, no matter how great, presents no risk. If there is no hazard, or if it is present only at very low levels, then even high levels of exposure may be entirely irrelevant to human or environmental health. But in the regulatory systems now in place there is no relationship among the presence of a hazard, the level of exposure, and the degree of regulatory scrutiny applied. If innovation is to be enabled, much less encouraged, that must be remedied. But the importance of one other objective driving the adoption of regulations to deal with biotechnological innovations in agriculture cannot be overstated:

But the importance of one other objective driving the adoption of regulations to deal with biotechnological innovations in agriculture cannot be overstated:

In response to public concern [t]he goal in developing the Coordinated Framework was to explain to the American public that, for questions involving the products of biotechnology (more specifically, organisms derived from recombinant-DNA technology), human health and the health of the environment were of paramount concern and were adequately protected.

There is no denying the virtuous intent of that sentiment, for if consumers are not convinced that biotech foods are safe they will not buy them. But in fact, the promulgation of regulations in advance of any confirmed finding of hazard or demonstration of risk has not assuaged public concerns. Nor has the subsequent confirmation of safety led to areduction in regulatory oversight or regulatory delays in the deployment of innovative technologies and products. In fact, entrenched opposition from the very beginning has taken every emplacement of regulation as confirmation of the need for yet more stringent regulation, driven by the unfounded assertion of unique and technology-specific hazards.

This discordance between the degree of regulatory oversight and the actual hazards and risks confirmed by experience has only grown over the years, exacerbated by the emergence of regulation for the purpose of litigation-avoidance by the agencies. Special interest groups have brought a significant number of procedural lawsuits against USDA for approving specific crops improved through biotechnology, leading to lengthy delays in the dissemination of new products.23 The ephemeral success of these lawsuits hinged on deficiencies noted by the courts in the documentation of USDAs decision-making process. In no case have they identified any genuine hazard, and, after USDA repaired the paper record for its decision making, the products are now on the market. But the opportunity costs, both economic and environmental, imposed by the delays remain on the ledgers.

[Read the rest of the report here.]

This article originally appeared on The Information Technology and Innovation Foundations website under the title How the Trump Administration Can Unshackle Innovation in Agricultural Biotechnology and has been republished with permission from the author.

Val Giddings is Senior Fellow at the Information Technology & Innovation Foundation. He previously served as vice president for Food & Agriculture of the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) and at the Congressional Office of Technology Assessment and as an expert consultant to the United Nations Environment Programme, the World Bank, USDA, USAID, and companies, organizations and governments around the world. Follow him on twitter @prometheusgreen.

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Agricultural biotechnology regulations are a mess Here's how Trump can unshackle innovation - Genetic Literacy Project

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