Charlene Ouellet wants to clearly see her grandchildren one    day, and shes willing to do whatever it takes  including    spending $21,000  on an experimental and controversial stem    cell treatment that she hopes will improve her vision.  
    Its a big gamble, said her brother, Rick Ouellet, whos    accompanying her from Maine to Florida for the treatment. It    was now or never.  
    Ouellets surgery is scheduled for Aug. 23, when doctors in    Margate, Florida, will extract adult stem cells from bone    marrow in her hips and inject them into her eyes. Ouellet is    legally blind and suffers from Usher Syndrome, a degenerative    condition that causes vision and hearing loss. Ouellet said her    hearing is OK thanks to effective hearing aids, but her vision    is severely compromised.  
    The procedure is generating criticism from some scientists and    bioethicists, who say that its of dubious therapeutic value,    could be bankrupting desperate people and is designed to avoid    federal rules that would require more government oversight. The    Florida doctor performing the procedures, Dr. Jeffrey Weiss,    defended the practice because he said the clinic has helped    hundreds improve their vision since he saw his first patient in    2012.  
    The first question shouldnt be Are you charging money for    this? but rather, Are the patients seeing?  Weiss told the    Portland Press Herald in a telephone interview. Weve only    received criticism from jealous people who have never spoken to    us and dont know what were doing.  
    Weiss said 60 percent of his 370 patients have improved vision,    but he acknowledged those numbers have not been submitted for    peer review by other scientists. Weiss said hes working on    three research papers to be published in scholarly journals. He    has previously had two individual cases of vision improvement    published in medical journals.  
    LEGAL AND ETHICAL GRAY AREA  
    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is hosting hearings in    September in part to determine whether the stem cell procedures    need to be more tightly regulated. The clinic is registered on    http://www.clinicaltrials.gov  the official government site for    research trials  but the clinical trial is not funded or    officially recommended by federal health agencies. The trial is    registered with the National Institutes of Health, according to    the clinics website.  
    Bioethicists say research trials like the ones at the Florida    clinic fall into a legal and ethical gray area.  
    Jonathan Kimmelman, associate professor of biomedical ethics at    McGill University in Montreal, said he questions the 60 percent    figure touted by Weiss if it hasnt been reviewed by other    scientists. For all the public knows, it could just as easily    be 10 percent or 1 percent, Kimmelman said.  
    For every patient who has been helped, there could be 100 or    1,000 who have not seen any benefits, and we dont know whether    some patients are being harmed, he said. The whole setup is a    way for people to be bamboozled.  
    Kimmelman said adult stem cells have been proven to have    therapeutic value when treating leukemia, but research into    using stem cells for the eyes and other diseases is in its    infancy.  
    Ouellet, of Brunswick, said her vision has worsened    significantly since she was in her late 20s.  
    She has tunnel vision, and her vision is so poor that she is    considered legally blind. She cant drive and can only read    magnified print for a short amount of time because of eye    strain.  
    Its like youre wearing dark sunglasses indoors and theres    always big smudges on the lenses, Ouellet said. By the time    Im in my 70s I wont be able to see at all anymore.  
    Ouellet, 53, said her deteriorating condition  for which there    is no known cure  motivated her to try the experimental    treatment.  
    I have a lot of faith this is going to work, said Ouellet,    who has two adult children and three toddler grandchildren. I    have nothing to lose, and everything to gain.  
    Ouellet, who works part time at Village Candle in Wells, said    she was willing to take out a personal loan for the $21,000,    but fortunately an Internet fundraising campaign is covering    her costs.  
    NOW WAITING FOR AGENCY APPROVAL  
    Bioethicist Art Caplan said charging patients substantial fees    for treatment is a red flag. Most legitimate clinical trials    have government or private funding so that the patient doesnt    pay any money.  
    If it cant attract funding, its really suspicious. Its a    big danger sign, said Caplan, a professor of bioethics at New    York University. Caplan said if patients have to pay, it    contributes to the bias of the study.  
    Nobody is going to spend $20,000 to be part of a placebo    group, Caplan said.  
    Caplan, who said he had no personal knowledge of Weiss Stem    Cell Ophthalmology Treatment Study  or SCOTS  said some    doctors are cashing in on the popularity of stem cells with    treatments that have little proven scientific value.  
    There is so much hype over stem cells, Caplan said. Stem    cells are not this magic bullet for everything. Its easy to    persuade desperate people to try almost anything.  
    Weiss said that the bureaucracy of trying to acquire government    funding is cumbersome, especially when the procedure is not    tied to the profit motives of the pharmaceutical industry.  
    Meanwhile, he said he could help patients now.  
    We didnt really know how penicillin worked when it was first    developed, but we still used it because it works, said Weiss,    former chief of retinal surgery at the Joslin Diabetes Center    in Boston. Stem cells work, but we dont know exactly why.  
    Weiss said they are screening patients, but treating people    with many different eye conditions  about 50 separate eye    diseases  makes it difficult to conduct population studies.    Weiss said hes currently working on a research paper with a    small population of six to eight patients who have the same eye    disease.  
    But Kimmelman said the fact that Weiss is treating people with    so many varied eye diseases is another warning sign. The proper    way to conduct a study would be to control as many variables as    possible, Kimmelman said, and one variable that can be    controlled is to only treat people with the same eye disease.    If that works, then try different diseases.  
    Its like hes doing medicine entirely by individual    anecdote, said Kimmelman, who is advocating for more    regulation of stem cell clinics.  
    Kimmelman said the practice as its currently designed can fly    under the radar of FDA regulations. If the stem cells were    processed in any way  such as through genetic modification     the clinic would have to operate under much more stringent    federal regulations. Kimmelman said its probably not a    coincidence that clinics like SCOTS instead do minimal    processing in order to be less regulated. But does that mean    the minimal processing is the best way to treat patients with    stem cells, or merely the most convenient, Kimmelman said.  
    The idea that one could simply extract cells from one part of    the body and then squirt them into the eyes, and it would work,    that sounds pretty outlandish, he said.  
    PATIENTS REPORT BETTER VISION  
    But some people have come forward and said Weiss clinic has    improved their vision, including one Maryland woman who was    profiled in a Baltimore Sun article this year.  
    And Jennifer Carden of San Diego said she was one of four    patients who received treatment through the Stem Cell    Ophthalmology Treatment Study who traveled to Washington in    June to lobby Congress in favor of the treatments. Carden said    she has talked with two other patients on the phone who have    seen their vision improve after going to the same stem cell    clinic.  
    Carden said she spent $20,000  with about half defrayed by    fundraising  and it was worth it to improve the clarity of her    vision and her peripheral vision.  
    Am I willing to wait 10 years and my vision would just keep    getting worse and worse? said Carden, who has retinitis    pigmentosa, a degenerative eye disease. What is your vision    worth? If I could do it again, I would, but I dont have    another $20,000.  
    Carden said some patients can be helped more by additional stem    cell treatments.  
    Another warning sign, Kimmelman said, is that there was no    research conducted by Weiss on animal models, to determine the    basic safety of the procedure.  
    Weiss said the animal models would have had no scientific    value.  
    Rick Ouellet, Charlenes brother, said the family is aware of    the risks and the controversy.  
    Its very courageous for her to do this, Ouellet said.  
    Charlene Ouellet said shes ready for the treatment and aware    that it may not work.  
    Im comfortable with this decision. I want to be able to see    across the room, to be able to drive again, she said.  
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Brunswick woman taking gamble that stem cells will restore ...