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A New Drug May Be Able to Completely Reverse Diabetes – Futurism

Posted: April 6, 2017 at 1:43 am

In Brief Scientists have used a new drug to reverse diabetes in mice. The drug inhibits the enzyme LMPTP, which contributes to the development of Type 2 diabetes by weakening the body's sensitivity to the hormone. Defining Diabetes

In the global community, the number of people with diabetes has been on the rise since1980, with 422 million people diagnosed by 2014.The U.S. alone has experienced a substantial rise in the incidence of diabetes, with the number of Americans diagnosed increasing from 5.5 million in 1980, to 22 million in 2014a more than 300percent increase in less than 40 years.

Ateam of researchers, led by Stephanie Stanford at the University of California, San Diego, is proposinga solutionin the form of a single pill that aims to restore insulin sensitivityin diabetic patients. Type 2 diabetes develops when the bodys response to insulin, the hormone responsible for regulating sugar in our blood, weakens.A number of genetic and lifestyle factors will influence whether or not someone developsthis type of diabetes in their lifetime.

Up until now, drugs were unable to restore the insulin signaling function in diabetic patients instead, theywork by filtering out excess glucosein the blood that comes as a result of the dysfunction. The drug produced by Stanfords team, on the other hand, hopes to restore function.

The drug inhibits an enzyme called low molecular weight protein tyrosine phosphatase (LMPTP), which is suspected to contribute to the reduction in cell sensitivity to insulin. With reduced LMPTP activity, the drug reenables insulin receptors on the surface of cells particularly those in the liver which in turn restores the cells ability to regulate excess sugar. When the body can once again regulate blood sugar levels, the condition of Type 2 diabetes is effectively reversed.

The researchers fed lab mice a high-fat diet that made them obese, which subsequently caused them to develop high blood glucose levels. The drug was given to themice on a daily basis and successfully restored insulin sensitivity withoutproducing any adverse side effects.

While the mouse trials results are exciting, the team must continue testing the drug for safety, sohuman clinical trials are still some time away. But Stanford is confident that the drug could lead to a new therapeutic strategy for treating type 2 diabetes,

While we have seen diabetes reversal in patients before,it has never been achieved through medication alone. So, if this drug is approved for use in humans it would be a truly revolutionary treatment.

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York County hosting free diabetes workshops – York Dispatch

Posted: April 6, 2017 at 1:43 am

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The York County Area Agency on Aging is hosting a six-weekdiabetes self-management workshopin the coming weeks.

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The York County Area Agency on Aging is hosting a six-weekdiabetes self-management workshopin the coming weeks.

The workshops will be held from 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. every Thursday from April 20 through May 25 at the York County Annex, located at 112 Pleasant Acres Road in Springettsbury Township, according to a county news release.

The self-management workshops are open to York County residents ages 50 and older living with Type 2 diabetes, residents ages 18 and older living with a disability and Type 2 diabetes, and caregivers of eligible participants.

Researchers at Stanford University developed the program to provide tools for managing diabetes, dealing with emotions and breaking the symptom cycle that comes with diabetes, the release states. A companion book and relaxation tape will be provided.

Pre-registration is required by April 17.

The program will be repeated May 25-June 29 at Country Meadows Leader Heights, 2760 Pine Grove Road; and July 13-Aug. 17 at St. Peter's Lutheran Church, 947 N. George St., North York, the agency said.

To register, call the York County Area Agency on Aging at 717-771-9610.

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Locals choose out of area diabetes services due to availability – Sequim Gazette

Posted: April 6, 2017 at 1:43 am

Angela Loucks remembers Dec. 11, 2011, as a day that would change her daughters life forever.

When the doctor at Peninsula Childrens Clinic told her Chloe, then 4-years-old, had Type 1 diabetes and was insulin dependent, Loucks broke down in tears.

Chloe took the news a little better than her mom.

She leaned over and put her hand on me and told me itd be OK, Loucks said.

And it has been OK for the Loucks family, they say.

At first, Loucks said she thought Chloes symptoms of extreme thirst and hunger were part of growing up but the diagnosis that their daughter now had a chronic condition was a culture shock. In time, lifestyle changes came and the Loucks family including dad Larry and sister Emily began to make healthier food choices in support of Chloe.

Being diabetic hasnt taken away her childhood either. Chloe still rides her bike, jumps on the trampoline, goes to birthday parties and trick or treats on Halloween. Treats are just eaten in moderation.

Its just a way of life for her now, Loucks said.

I dont really know anything different, Chloe said.

On and off

Traveling for care is a way of life for many young diabetics, too a functional reality for many local diabetics. The Olympic Peninsula has been without an endocrinologist, a doctor specializing in hormonal imbalances in the endocrine system, for more than a year.

Dr. Josh Jones, chief physician officer for Olympic Medical Physicians, said his group is not recruiting a new endocrinologist for a number reasons, but mainly because of their rarity.

Its difficult to have a solo, lone doctor of any kind of specialty of any kind of coverage, Jones said. There was plenty of need. We werent able to create a program and the clinical infrastructure around the endocrinologist.

Chloe and her family travel to Seattle Childrens every three-four months to see an endocrinologist while others travel to Swedish Pediatrics or Mary Bridge Childrens in Tacoma.

Dr. Jeff Weller, a pediatrician at Peninsula Childrens Clinic, said bringing in a pediatric endocrinologist is even more rare.

Its nearly impossible to have sub-specialists in a rural area, Weller said. All sub-specialists work at a tertiary care center like Mary Bridge.

To offer a local option, Seattle Childrens sends a team including a pediatric endocrinologist to Peninsula Childrens Clinic one day every three months to meet with children with diabetes.

Weller said that interval matches routine appointment schedules in bigger areas.

Waiting

Casey Vass of Sequim has five children and her youngest Kylus, 2, has been a diabetic for about a year. They met with Seattle Childrens endocrinology team in late February in Port Angeles, but Vass said there was such a backlog of patients they waited for more than four hours.

Vass said its easier for her family to travel to Seattle Childrens than wait that long again.

I want him to be monitored and know were doing what we need to be doing, she said.

I cant see putting my family through this every four months.

Shes traveled to Seattle for various diabetes education classes and appointments and since February shes called the clinic twice about filling a prescription and advice on dealing with the stomach flu.

Hes growing so fast that were adjusting his (insulin) numbers every time we go in, she said.

Time is the hardest part of managing her sons diabetes, Vass said.

Its so time-consuming, she said. Its all day with all the food and medical and insurance stuff.

Options

Sadie Crowe of Port Angeles has similar struggles with diabetes on the peninsula.

Crowe, 38, grew up a Type 1 diabetic in Sequim and her daughter Roslyn, 7, has lived with the autoimmune disease for four-plus years, too.

When Roslyn was diagnosed, we really considered whether we should stay here, Crowe said.

They dont provide the level of care we need for Type 1 diabetes here.

Both mother and daughter wear insulin pumps and Roslyn sees a doctor at Mary Bridge Childrens every three months.

It would be life changing for us if we didnt have to drive to Tacoma for care, she said.

Roslyn sees local physicians for immunizations, colds and other basic care but Crowe said when a diabetic is sick you get a little sicker.

Well call the endocrinologist sometimes because if we cant get the diabetes under control, then we cant stop the virus, she said.

On average, Roslyn has traveled about once a year to Tacoma for Mary Bridges pediatric intensive care unit, Crowe said.

Care

The total number of diabetics, Type 1 or 2, isnt known on the Olympic Peninsula, but the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation estimates there are more than 1.25 million Americans with Type 1 diabetes.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates about 26 million Americans have diabetes.

Type 2 diabetes, usually diagnosed in adults, is a metabolic disorder where a person can still produce insulin but cannot use it as well.

Vickie Everrett, supervisor of nutrition counseling and a diabetes educator for Olympic Medical Center, said they see and treat diabetes as an epidemic.

We want to change the mindset of people, she said.

Through her programming, she sees about 600 people annually for diabetes education with about 30 of those Type 1.

It isnt just, Youve got to lose weight and move more, Everrett said. Its really sitting down with them and talking with them about how they fix food, what kind of food access they have and what are their physical abilities in order to get their best medical care.

Some of the things they cover includes diabetes self-management and self-training, counseling services, and they offer a monthly support group from 6:30-7:30 p.m. the fourth Tuesday of each month at Olympic Memorial Hospital.

Everrett said she typically doesnt work with children under 18 and that patients are usually referred by primary care physicians for diabetes assistance.

Weller said when juvenile diabetics are diagnosed they are sent to a tertiary center like Seattle Childrens to be stabilized and work with a diabetes educator.

Everrett said theyve implemented a diabetes prevention program that starts again in August and is covered by Medicare in 2018 for patients who participated in the Center for Disease Controls diabetes program the past three years.

Possibile fixes

While options may be limited, physicians like Jones and Weller want to look for more collaboration.

We can leverage some of our electronic health records to help primary care care doctors provide better care especially around diabetes, Jones said.

Everrett agrees, saying there are a lot of people with diabetes and with early risk factors such as being overweight, a more sedentary lifestyle and those older than 60 who need enhanced support.

That defines a large part of our population, she said. But their providers have to refer them to the (diabetes education) service.

Even though diabetics may prefer to see a specialist, most local diabetes care is not provided by an endocrinologist, Jones said.

For the chronic ongoing care, their care will live in their primary care provider, he said.

Both types of diabetes can be managed by a primary care provider, Jones said, and in more complicated cases theyll consult a specialist.

Weller said tertiary centers are good about having phone access and Olympic Medical Center officials are looking to grow telemedicine offerings through secure, video-to-video in the future.

Peninsula Childrens Clinics recent partnering with Olympic Medical Physicians, also provides a lot of opportunities for growth and opportunity, Jones said, but there are no current plans regarding juvenile diabetes aside from current operations.

Hope

Traveling to Seattle Childrens takes a full day every three months for one of Chloes appointments, Loucks said.

But Chloe looks at the appointment as a fun trip, she says, and only dreads a scheduled arm poke for shots.

For me, whats more important is that she is comfortable and everything is a good fit rather than the cost of gas and traveling for a whole day, Loucks said.

After four-plus years of a strict diet, finger pricks and insulin injections through her pump, Chloe remains hopeful for a cure.

Once a year, she and her family make and sell baked goods at her great-grandmothers garage sale with proceeds benefiting diabetes research.

Im very hopeful, Chloe said.

For more information on Type 1 diabetes and juvenile diabetes, visit http://www.jdrf.org and for more on general diabetes research and information, visit http://www.diabetes.org.

For more information on Olympic Medical Centers Diabetes Prevention Program, call 417-7125.

Reach Matthew Nash at mnash@sequimgazette.com.

Diabetics like Chloe Loucks, left, continue to do everyday things like jump on a trampoline with her sister Emily but in the winter months its been hard to be active, she says. Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

Eating healthy food is an important part of controlling blood sugars for diabetics. For Chloe Loucks, right, she checks with her mom Angela most of the time before eating snacks like peanut butter crackers, applesauce and yogurt which can bring blood sugar levels up.

Chloe Loucks, left, stands with her family, dad Larry, mom Angela, and sister Emily, on March 8 at the Regional Outreach Luncheon Meeting for Clallam & Jefferson County at Sunland Golf & Country Club. Chloe and Larry spoke about how much Seattle Childrens Hospital has helped her with treatment. The guilds have helped more than 1,400 patients receive $1.2 million in uncompensated care. Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

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Obesity Quadruples Diabetes Risk for Most US Adults – Gallup

Posted: April 6, 2017 at 1:43 am

Story Highlights

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Obese adults between the ages of 25 and 64 are at least four times more likely to have been diagnosed with diabetes than those who are normal weight, according to the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index. By their mid-to-late 30s, 9.3% of adults who are obese have been diagnosed with diabetes, compared with 1.8% among those who are normal weight.

These results are based on nearly 500,000 interviews conducted in the U.S. from 2014 through 2016 as part of the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index.

Unlike some government estimates of obesity, the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index uses respondents' self-reported height and weight to calculate body mass index (BMI) and subsequent weight classes. It does not involve clinical measurements that typically result in higher obesity estimates. A BMI of 30 or higher results in an obese classification. Additionally, the Well-Being Index does not discern between Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes, but rather asks: "Has a doctor or nurse ever told you that you have diabetes?"

In 2016, 28.4% of all U.S. adults were classified as obese, and 11.6% reported having been diagnosed with diabetes. Researchers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have estimated that about one in three Americans born in the year 2000 will be diagnosed with diabetes in their lifetime, and that the percentage of Americans with the disease will at least double from current levels by the year 2050.

Not all individuals who are obese will develop diabetes, and some who are normal weight will get the disease. Factors other than obesity status or age could increase the risk of developing diabetes, including physical inactivity, race and ethnicity, and genetic predisposition.

Still, the odds of having been diagnosed with diabetes are substantially higher among those who are obese than among those who are overweight or normal weight, and remain elevated between the ages of 25 and 64. The peak years of elevated risk are between ages 35 and 39. At this stage in life, obese individuals are over five times more likely than their normal weight counterparts to have been diagnosed with diabetes.

Women Have Higher Diabetes Risk Because of Obesity

In 2016, women were only slightly more likely than men to report having been diagnosed with diabetes -- 11.7% to 11.4%, respectively. Women who are obese, however, are more likely than obese men to have diabetes across all age groups up to age 60, at which point both groups converge.

The increased diabetes risk is considerably higher for obese women than for obese men across most age groups. For example, obese women aged 50 to 54 are six times more likely than women who are normal weight to have diabetes, while obese men of the same age are only about three times more likely than their normal weight counterparts to have diabetes.

The results of this analysis cannot establish a causal relationship between obesity and diabetes, as individuals are not asked to confirm the age at which they were diagnosed with diabetes and their height and weight at the time of the diagnosis. Some who were obese when interviewed may have been normal weight at an earlier age when they were diagnosed with diabetes, and some who were normal weight (or overweight) at the time of the interview may have been obese at the point of their diagnosis.

The results do, however, add to a significant body of research that demonstrates the unambiguous link between the two diseases: Those who are obese carry a significantly higher risk of developing diabetes.

Implications

Obesity has climbed steadily in the U.S. since 2008, increasing nearly three percentage points to 28.4% in 2016. This means there are now 7 million more U.S. adults who are obese than would have been the case if the rate had held steady at the 2008 level.

Diabetes, in turn, has climbed by one point since 2008, to 11.6%. Every three-point increase in the U.S. obesity rate is associated with a roughly one-point increase in the diabetes rate.

The findings from this analysis show the strength of the relationship between obesity and diabetes, even for young adults. By their mid-to-late 20s, obese individuals are already four times more likely than their normal weight counterparts to have been diagnosed with diabetes. This increased risk only grows over the next decade before peaking between the ages of 35 and 39. As such, communities, businesses and healthcare providers should pursue efforts to curtail obesity at the earliest possible time and with increased urgency.

The costs of obesity are substantial. In unplanned absenteeism alone, obesity and associated chronic conditions have been estimated to cost the U.S. economy $153 billion annually. This economic impact is likely exacerbated given that the obesity-diabetes link is greatest among adults in their prime working years.

Curtailing the relentless climb of obesity and associated chronic conditions such as diabetes can be accomplished. Hospitals can put in place diabetes management programs to help people who have already been diagnosed, as well as diabetes prevention programs for those who are at risk.

"The best diabetes management programs are comprehensive -- delivering professional education, inpatient glycemic management, outpatient prevention, and self-management education and support -- and they engage multidisciplinary teams for coordinated care," said Sheila Holcomb, vice president, Sharecare Diabetes Solutions. "They focus on metrics such as achieving glycemic targets and reducing average length of inpatient stays."

Additionally, at the community level, initiatives like the Blue Zones Project -- an organization that specializes in transforming communities across the U.S. into higher well-being places -- has compiled many success stories.

For example, between 2010 and 2015 the California Beach Cities (Redondo Beach, Manhattan Beach and Hermosa Beach) had a 9.2-point decline in adults who were either overweight or obese, coupled with a 1.1-point decline in diabetes. This was done in part through close planning and cooperation with the Beach Cities Health District to transform both the physical structure of each community and the culture itself, resulting in a population that is healthier and better informed about what is needed to best pursue a life well-lived.

See the Gallup-Healthways report on U.S. diabetes prevalence across states and communities here.

These data are available in Gallup Analytics.

Results are based on telephone interviews conducted Jan. 2, 2014-Dec. 30, 2016, as part of the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index, with a random sample of 484,350 adults aged 18 and older, living in all 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia. The smallest sample size for all adults is for those who were classified as obese and aged 25 to 29 (n=5,789); the largest sample size is for those classified as normal weight and aged 18 to 24 (n=21,372). These sample sizes were reduced by roughly half when parsed by gender. The margin of sampling error for each reported BMI class within each age group is no more than 0.2 percentage points in most cases. All reported margins of sampling error include computed design effects for weighting.

Each sample of national adults since Sept. 1, 2015, included a minimum quota of 60% cellphone respondents and 40% landline respondents, with additional minimum quotas by time zone within region. Prior sampling dating back to Jan. 2, 2014, involved a 50% split between cellphone and landline interviews. Landline and cellular telephone numbers are selected using random-digit-dial methods.

Learn more about how the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index works.

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Living Well With Diabetes – Kfiz

Posted: April 6, 2017 at 1:43 am

06-Apr-2017

Fond du Lac County Public Health Officer Kim Mueller says six week courses on Living Well with Diabetes will be offered this spring. She says whether you have been living with it a long time or were just diagnosed it will help you manage it. She says 475,000 residents in Wisconsin have diabetes and another 1.4 million people are pre-diabetic. The course will be offered on Thursdays from 9:30 a.m. to Noon from April 27th through June 1st, and Fridays from 1 to 3:30 p.m. from May 19th through June 23rd at Agnesian Health Shoppe on Camelot Drive in Fond du Lac. She says they will have more sessions in the future at a variety of locations and times. The course is free, but registration is required. That can be done online at Agnesian.com. Mueller says the course will teach you what you need to know about physical activity, food choices, and medications associated with diabetes. She says its hoped it will help reduce emergency room visits.

Thursdays

Fridays

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Northern Colorado Surgeon Releases Three Year Results of Bone Marrow Stem Cell Treatment – PR Web (press release)

Posted: April 5, 2017 at 2:44 am

This study provides the first long term evidence of the safety and feasibility of utilizing a patient's own bone marrow concentrate stem cells to treat severe low back pain

Fort Collins, Colorado (PRWEB) April 03, 2017

Retired orthopedic spine surgeon, Kenneth Pettine, M.D. is excited to release the three year results of his bone marrow stem cell treatment study. Dr. Pettine has been a pioneer in the use of bone marrow concentrate stem cell injections. He was the first surgeon to inject biologics into the human spine as part of an FDA Study in the U.S. almost seven years ago. He has the only U.S. Patent on the method of treating orthopedic and spine pathology with a patient's own stem cells.

This study provides the first long term evidence of the safety and feasibility of utilizing a patient's own bone marrow concentrate stem cells to treat severe low back pain, said Dr. Pettine. Thats terrific news for patients who up until now only had the option of undergoing expensive and invasive back fusion or artificial disc surgery.

Degenerative disc disease is a common back pain diagnosis in the United States and affects millions of patients. The symptoms of the condition can become so painful that patients may be forced to miss work and are prevented from participating in regular daily activities. Treatment is often limited to palliative care such as chiropractic, physical therapy, narcotics, injections or invasive surgical procedures to try to decrease the daily chronic low back pain. Numerous studies have shown surgery improves back pain in the average patient only 40%. Stem Cell therapy improved the average patient 70% with long term follow up.

Dr. Pettines treatment uses a patient's own bone marrow concentrate stem cells to help reduce inflammation in the spine and stimulate the creation of new tissue in the spinal disc to help reverse the effects of the disease. The office procedure is performed with I.V. sedation and usually takes 45 minutes. The study noted that patients who received higher concentrations of stem cells in their injections saw a greater improvement in their back pain.. This three year follow-up research study shows utilizing a patient's own stem cells can provide long-term back pain relief and prevented the need for invasive surgery in 77% of the patients.

If you live in the Northern Colorado area and are experiencing neck or back pain due to degenerative disc disease, you can learn more about Dr. Pettines treatment and research by visiting his website at http://www.KennethPettine.com.

About Dr. Kenneth Pettine Dr. Pettine has been the principal investigator of 18 FDA studies about stem cells and their uses and is considered a pioneer in the field. He founded The Rocky Mountain Associates in Orthopedic Medicine in 1991 to offer patients a non-fusion surgical option for their neck and back pain. He co-invented the FDA-approved Prestige cervical artificial disc and the Maverick Artificial Disc. He is currently focused on the use of Mesenchymal stem cell therapy for patients desiring to avoid orthopedic or spine surgery. You can learn more about the therapy and Dr. Pettine at his website, http://www.KennethPettine.com.

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Northern Colorado Doctor Exploring New Non-Surgical Methods for Treating Neck Pain – Benzinga

Posted: April 5, 2017 at 2:44 am

Dr. Kenneth Pettine, a retired Orthopedic surgeon and founder of The Rocky Mountain Associates in Orthopedic Medicine in Northern Colorado, has released new information about treating neck pain due to cervical disc degeneration with non-surgical methods. Dr. Pettine is using injections of bone marrow concentrate to treat the pain, finding that patients experienced an improvement in their neck pain after six months, one year, and two years after treatment.

Loveland, Colorado (PRWEB) March 29, 2017

Millions of patients in the United States suffer from chronic neck pain due to degenerated cervical discs, the six discs in the spine that support the neck. Patients suffering from degeneration in one disc may be able to try a surgical solution such as a cervical disc fusion or the insertion of an artificial disc. If the pain originates in two or more of the cervical discs, though, many patients discovered that their surgical options were limited and they might be left with only palliative care options to mask their painful symptoms.

One Northern Colorado doctor is out to change that. Retired orthopedic surgeon Dr. Kenneth Pettine has been researching the use of using injection of bone marrow concentrate to treat degenerative diseases of the cervical spine. Bone marrow concentrate contains stem cells, which can help stimulate the growth of bone and tissue within the body. Dr. Pettine is specifically interested in the use of mesenchymal stem cells, which have anti-inflammatory properties and may be able to help with the degeneration of the discs.

In a recent study, Dr. Pettine tested the bone marrow concentrate on 182 patients from ages 18 to 80, giving them injections into the cervical discs causing them pain. Patients showed improvement at follow up appointments at six months, one year, and two years after the injections were given. No patients experienced complications from the injections and none had to have surgery.

"The results indicate a bone marrow concentrate injection may be a reasonable non-surgical treatment option for patients with degenerative cervical disc neck pain," said Dr. Pettine. "That's great news for those who were suffering painful symptoms and left without promising treatment options."

If you are interested in learning more about Dr. Pettine's research and how it could benefit your chronic neck pain, visit his website at http://www.KennethPettine.com. The site provides easy-to-understand information about mesenchymal stem cells and their use in treating orthopedic degenerative disc issues.

About Dr. Kenneth Pettine Dr. Pettine has been the principal author of 18 FDA studies about stem cells and their uses and is considered a pioneer in the field. He founded The Rocky Mountain Associates in Orthopedic Medicine in 1991 to offer patients a non-fusion surgical option for their neck and back pain. He co-invented the FDA-approved Prestige cervical artificial disc and the Maverick Artificial Disc. He is currently focused on the use of Mesenchymal stem cell therapy for patients DESIRING TO AVOID ORTHOPEDIC OR SPINE SURGERY. You can learn more about the therapy and Dr. Pettine at his website, http://www.KennethPettine.com.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2017/03/prweb14195867.htm

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UC Anschutz startup gets $6M boost to fight disease with stem cells – BusinessDen

Posted: April 5, 2017 at 2:44 am

Screenshot of Taigas website.

A startup at University of Colorado Anschutz is in the middle of a substantial capital raise.

Taiga Biotechnologies, which is developing new therapies for cancer, HIV and other diseases, has raised $6 million and is looking for an additional $14 million, according to a recent SEC filing.

The date of the first sale was March 16, and so far, the startup has 14 individual investors.

Founded in 2006, Taiga creates therapies for cancer, immune diseases and other serious medical conditions using stem cells, proteins and other molecular compounds.

In 2012, the firmreceived a patent to produce significant amounts of adult blood stem cells using blood from umbilical cords or bone marrow. Blood samples could be stored and expanded to be used after chemotherapy or radiation treatment, instead of having multiple bone marrow transplants.

Last summer, Taiga developed a product to help children with severe immune deficiencies, forcing them to live in protected and sterile environments. The product, which garnered an Orphan Drug Designation from the Food and Drug Administration, was approved for clinical trial in Israel.

Taiga is led by co-founders Brian Turner and Yosef Refaeli.

The company received $12 million in a raise ending in 2015, as well as $246,000 in 2010, according to SEC filings.

Taiga is basedat 12635 E. Montview Blvd. at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus.

Kate Tracy is a BusinessDen reporter who covers nonprofits, startups and the outdoors industry. She is a graduate of Corban University. Email her at kate@BusinessDen.com.

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GLOBAL STEM CELL MARKET FORECAST 2017-2025 – PR Newswire (press release)

Posted: April 5, 2017 at 2:44 am

LONDON, April 4, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- KEY FINDINGS

The global market for stem cell is anticipated to expand at a CAGR of 25.76% during the forecast period of 2017-2025. The rise in neurodegenerative diseases is the primary factor for the growth of the stem cell market.

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MARKET INSIGHTS The global stem cell market is segmented on the basis of product, technology, application, and geography. The stem cell market of the product is segmented into adult stem cell, embryonic stem cell, induced pluripotent stem cell market and rat neutral stem cell market. The stem cell market of technology is segmented into stem cell acquisition market, stem cell production market, stem cell cryopreservation market and stem cells expansion and sub-culture market. the application of the stem cell market is segmented into stem cells regenerative medicine market and drug discovery and development market. The stem cell market geography is segmented into North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific and rest of the world. the upsurge in neurodegenerative ailments, growing investments in R&D, government subsidy and sustenance, advancements in the applications of stem cell, significant growth in medical tourism, swelling stem cell banking are the major drivers for the stem cell market.

REGIONAL INSIGHTS The Stem Cell market in North America is expected to hold the largest share by 2025. Increased investments in research and development activities for the stem cell market and the presence of popular pharmaceutical market have contributed to the growth of the US market in the North American region. Asia- Pacific is anticipated to grow at CAGR of 26.23%, the fastest growing region among others. The growth of Asia-Pacific region is primarily driven due to growing incidences of chronic lifestyle diseases and government supports and their initiatives. Europe has generated revenue of $13556 million in 2016 which is set to increase by 2025. The Europe stem cell analysis market is primarily driven by the rising prevalence of chronic disorders such as cancer and cardiovascular disorders.

COMPETITIVE INSIGHTS The market players in the stem cell market are Cytori therapeutics Inc., Fibrocell science, Cellartis AB (acquired by Takara holdings Inc.), Biotime Inc., GE Healthcare, Thermo fisher scientific Pvt Ltd, Stem cell technologies, Cellular dynamics international (holding company Fujifilm), Vericel corporation (Aastrom bioscience), Brainstorm cell therapeutics, California stem cell Inc. (Holding company Caladrius biosciences, Inc. ), Beckton Dickinson and company, Stryker corporation, Celgene corporation. Some major companies involved in stem cell are; GE Healthcare, Stem cell technology, Thermo Fisher, Becton, Corning and many others.

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GLOBAL STEM CELL MARKET FORECAST 2017-2025 - PR Newswire (press release)

Posted in California Stem Cells | Comments Off on GLOBAL STEM CELL MARKET FORECAST 2017-2025 – PR Newswire (press release)

Could stem cells offer hope for autism? – WTAE Pittsburgh

Posted: April 5, 2017 at 2:44 am

Gracie Gregory smiles beneath her brilliant blue eyes. She's sitting on her mother's lap, next to her older sister, Ryleigh, who boasts about Gracie being "very sweet and kind."

It wasn't always so. Just a couple years ago, Ryleigh, 11, was scared of her sister when she'd throw tantrums and screaming fits.

"She would've fought and kicked," Ryleigh says, noting that it wouldn't have been possible to sit like this next to Gracie.

Why was she scared of her sister?

"Because of the kicking."

Gracie, 7, interrupts: "I don't even remember it."

"We do," says her mother, Gina Gregory.

Gracie has autism, a condition that affected nearly every aspect of her family's life after she was diagnosed at 2. But a new study is offering hope for the Gregorys and families like them.

Gracie was one of 25 children who took part in the first-of-its-kind study at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. The goal: to see whether a transfusion of their own umbilical cord blood containing rare stem cells could help treat their autism.

The results were impressive: More than two-thirds of the children showed reported improvements. A larger second trial is underway, one its researchers hope will lead to long-term treatment for children with autism.

Skeptics say there are too many unanswered questions to get excited. Even Duke researchers acknowledge as much. The initial trial, published Wednesday in the journal Stem Cells Translational Medicine, was a safety study, not a controlled, double-blind study with definitive proof of positive results. This study was open-label, meaning everyone -- the doctors and the families -- knew that the therapy was being administered.

But for the Gregorys, the change in their daughter has been monumental.

Gone are the days of Gracie throwing fits in long lines at Disney World or during dinner at restaurants. When a tantrum intruded on family outings, her mom and dad wished they had T-shirts that said "My kid has autism" to ward off judgmental stares.

During autism therapy sessions, Gracie would kick, scream, spit and hit at her occupational therapist. "It was horrible to try to get her to sit there," her mother says.

Even just brushing her teeth or combing her hair could set her off.

Gracie, then 5, was on the mild to moderate autism scale, but her parents say the disorder consumed about 75% of their daily routine. After her participation in the study, that figure has been reduced to a mere 10%.

On a scale of 1 to 10, they rate her improvement around an 8 or 9; it's been that dramatic. She's even begun attending a "regular" school and thriving there, something her parents never thought possible. She'd been in various specialized school programs, and nothing was the proper fit.

Are Gracie's changes a result of the cord blood transfusion stimulating her brain? Or did her brain just mature as she got older? Could it be that her parents were subconsciously determined to magnify her improvements, given all their family had been through?

Those are questions the Gregorys still ask. But they do know that their daughter's transformation appeared to begin about six months after her transfusion in January 2015 and has continued ever since.

Her father's favorite adjustment is her newfound affection. Instead of shunning hugs, she now welcomes an embrace.

"We will say we don't think it's cured her. You still see some of the small idiosyncrasies that she does have," says her father, Wade Gregory. "But again, I think it's supercharged her learning curve. It's pushed her to do things she normally wouldn't do."

Her mother adds, "She got better, and we're just thankful for that -- whether it be the stem cells or not. We're just thankful for what changes have happened."

Billions of cells

Dr. Joanne Kurtzberg shows off a freezer deep inside the bowels of the Carolinas Cord Blood Bank at Duke University Medical Center. Known as a thermogenesis freezer, it stores up to 3,640 units of cord blood -- left over from babies' umbilical cords and placenta -- at minus 196 degrees Celsius.

Each unit is designated by labels with specially designed adhesive to withstand extremely cold temperatures for decades. There are 14 cord blood freezers in all.

It is the cord blood in those freezers -- stored or donated by parents in case a serious illness develops -- that's at the cutting edge of this research.

Kurtzberg, who heads the Robertson Clinical and Translational Cell Therapy Program, has teamed up with Dr. Geraldine Dawson, director of the Duke Center for Autism and Brain Development.

Both saw a great need for medical advances to help treat children with autism. An estimated one in every 68 children in America has some form of autism spectrum disorder, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

About 30% never learn to speak, and many children even with early behavioral interventions still struggle to adapt. There also are no FDA-approved medications that improve the core symptoms of autism.

"I was very interested in collaborating with people here at Duke who could offer medical approaches that could enhance neuroplasticity, or the brain's ability to respond to treatment," Dawson says.

That's where Kurtzberg comes in. Over the past two decades, she had seen children with inherited metabolic disorders be treated with cord blood after receiving high doses of chemotherapy.

"We've been able to show that with some of these diseases, a cord transplant rescues them from death and also improves their neurologic outcome," she says.

She began wondering: Could cord blood help other children?

About a decade ago, her laboratory began clinical tests of children with cerebral palsy whose parents had banked their cord blood. Again, they saw positive results. And in some of those children who had autistic tendencies, they saw autistic symptoms improve. Another spark went off: What if they tested cord blood specifically for autism?

The safety trial began a little over a year and a half ago. Not only did it find cord blood to be safe, but 70% of the 25 children, age 2 to 6, had behavioral improvements as described by their parents and tracked by the Duke researchers. The research is largely funded by a $40 million donation from the Marcus Foundation, a nonprofit created by Home Depot co-founder Bernie Marcus.

The children traveled to Duke three times over the course of a year. They underwent a series of evaluations such as autism assessments, MRIs and EEGs to track their brain activity. On the first trip, the children received the cord blood infusion along with the intense evaluations. Each child received 1 billion to 2 billion cells, given through an IV in their arms or legs. At six months and then a year later, the children returned for more tests and observations.

"Some children, who were not speaking very much, had big increases in their vocabulary and their functional speech," Kurtzberg says. "Many children were able to attend to play and have meaningful communication in a way that they weren't before. Some children had less repetitive behaviors than they did when they came onto the study."

Adds Dawson, "The study was very encouraging. We did see positive results. However, it did not have a comparison group, which is very important in establishing whether a treatment is actually effective."

Both researchers can't stress that enough: that although they're cautiously optimistic about the results, they want the science to play out. They are now in the midst of the definitive trial on whether cord blood can treat autism -- a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial involving 165 autistic children, ranging in age from 2 to 8. The FDA has oversight of the study.

During the phase II study, the children on their first visit receive a cord blood infusion -- either their own or from a donor -- or they get a placebo. They also undergo a battery of assessment tests and brain monitoring.

On their second visit six months later, the children receive a second infusion with whatever preparation they did not receive the first time and undergo more evaluations. The order of the infusions is not known. Researchers will monitor them for the next year for any sign of behavioral improvements.

It's known as a crossover trial, in which each subject gets the treatment and the placebo but in a different order. Researchers say it would have been nearly impossible to find participants if parents knew that their children might not receive an infusion.

How groundbreaking would it be if the trial shows similar results to the safety study?

"If we can show that receiving an infusion of cord blood is more effective for improving social behavior than the placebo," Dawson says, "then this will be game-changing."

Kurtzberg adds, "We'll be extraordinarily encouraged if the second trial shows that the cells benefit children when the placebo does not. We will consider that a breakthrough."

Both researchers were shaped early in life by the struggles families face raising autistic children. As a teen, Dawson babysat twins with autism who lived across the street. "It was just an inspiration to devote my career to improving the lives of people with autism," she says.

Kurtzberg was similarly affected. When she was a junior in college, she would visit a girl with severe autism and play with her as a means of behavioral intervention. "The family still writes to me," she says.

It is for this reason -- their longtime devotion to families raising children with autism -- that both issue a heap of caution. Although they're excited about the results of the first study, Kurtzberg says, "we don't want to mislead people and claim it's working before we have definitive proof."

Adds Dawson, "It's important for parents who might hear about cord blood as a potential treatment for autism to know that we are working very hard to know the answer to that question. We aren't there yet."

Cautious optimism

Kurtzberg has a hypothesis about what may be happening: that certain immune cells within the cord blood are crossing the blood-brain barrier and altering brain connectivity while also suppressing inflammation, which may exist with autism.

"I feel more confident now because of our (cerebral palsy) study, which preceded this study and does show benefits," Kurtzberg says.

Dr. Arnold R. Kriegstein, director of the stem cell center at the University of California, San Francisco, says that he hopes there will be breakthrough treatment for children with autism but that much more needs to be known before this will become a reality.

"One has to be very careful when interpreting results that haven't come from properly controlled, double-blind studies," he said. "All I can say is that it would be wonderful if this treatment was effective, but one has to be very cautious before reaching any conclusions."

Even without a placebo effect, he says, many factors could have resulted in an improved outcome in the first study: The growing children could have acquired skills simply through maturation, possibly enhanced by occupational therapy, and their parents may have clung to positive gains, creating a biased outcome.

Thomas Frazier II, chief scientific officer of the advocacy group Autism Speaks, said the results of the initial study were encouraging but that more work needs to be done before the public gets excited. "It's too early to get hopeful. Too early to change behavior," he said. "I hope people don't go out and spend money on banking cord blood as a result [of this trial]."

Kriegstein of UCSF also wonders whether cord blood is really stimulating cells in the brain and creating new connections. "There are so many unanswered questions about what might be going on here, it becomes very difficult to evaluate the proposed mechanism," he said.

"The question remains: How do these cells injected intravenously wind up in the brain, how do they target the appropriate brain regions, and what are they doing that could improve brain function?"

'I forgot how bad it was'

An 8-year-old boy with autism sits at a table in a room within Duke's Center for Autism and Brain Development. Clinical research specialist Michelle Green watches from behind a two-way mirror. Two cameras in the room feed computer monitors, allowing her to further analyze his behavior.

Dr. Lauren Franz, a clinician, works with the boy in the room.

"What kind of things make you feel threatened or anxious?" she asks.

"Like when I'm done with a test," the boy says.

"How does it feel when you're frightened or anxious? How does that feel?"

"Like pretty weird," he says.

The boy is participating in the second trial, and he's returned for his six-month assessment and second infusion. Researchers don't know which infusion he received first: the cord blood or the placebo.

But they track, record and monitor the slightest of details. Although it might seem like an innocuous conversation, researchers will compare the results with those of his first visit and any follow-ups. Was he able to sit still at the table before? Could he articulate his thoughts? Did he talk before the study? Has he improved?

At the Gregorys' home in Florida, Gracie's parents remember when she went through those same tests. The best investment they ever made, they say, was the $2,000 spent on banking her cord blood. At the time, it was just a precaution; her autism diagnosis didn't come until three months after her second birthday.

They know the desperation of families raising a child with autism -- of longing for their daughter to have a shot of normalcy in life. "You can't quantify it. You can't measure it. You want to see your child succeed," her father says.

Mom and Dad recently watched old home videos, of Gracie singing inaudibly, of her covering her ears when "Happy Birthday" was sung for her third birthday, of showing no emotion on Christmas when she was 2. "I forgot how bad it was," her mother says.

They hope the current study leads to similar successes -- and results in breakthrough treatment for autistic children everywhere.

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Could stem cells offer hope for autism? - WTAE Pittsburgh

Posted in California Stem Cells | Comments Off on Could stem cells offer hope for autism? – WTAE Pittsburgh

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