Showing posts with label clinical trials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clinical trials. Show all posts

Monday, May 24, 2021

Read All About It: Bubble Babies Hit by Suspension of Trial for Genetic Cure; California Taxpayers Paying for Trial

 "Indispensable" is what the Los Angeles Times this morning called this blog, the California Stem Cell Report. 

The comment came in a story that was triggered by our coverage of the Orchard-CIRM-UCLA bubble baby clinical trial, which was shoved aside by Orchard Therapeutics for financial reasons. That leaves a bunch of children out in the cold as far as the genetic treatment is concerned. 

UCLA says the treatment has saved the lives of more than 50 persons. 

Below is a list of the Orchard stories that we have carried on our new platform since we unearthed the issue on May 11. You can subscribe free to articles on our new home by clicking on the subscribe button in stories on the new platform. Subscribe today.

Here is the list.

Wicked' Problems, Orchard Therapeutics and Bubble Babies: A California Stem Cell Story

CaliforniaStem Cell Agency Pledges to Do "Everything" to Salvage Cure for Bubble Baby Disease

Can a California 'March-In' Save Terminally Ill 'Bubble Babies?'

Orchard's Suspension of Bubble Baby Disease Trial Earns Sharp Rebuke

Bubble Baby Cancellation Story Draws Attention in California's Largest Newspaper



Wednesday, July 01, 2020

Celularity and $750K from California Stem Cell Agency: Where is the Money Being Spent?

The New Jersey firm that was awarded $750,000 by the California stem cell agency to help finance a Covid-19 clinical trial has four trial sites in two states, but has not identified any in California. 

State law requires that awards from its taxpayer-funded stem cell agency be spent for work in California. 

The firm is Celularity, Inc., which is developing a product that has been fast-tracked by the federal government and which has the support of President Trump's personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani. 

According to the National Institutes of Health website this morning, Clinicaltrials.gov, Celularity has three clinical trial sites in its home state of New Jersey and one in Washington state for the Covid therapy. The information shows that all of those sites are currently recruiting patients. The estimated primary completion date of the work is Nov. 30, 2020.

Although the stem cell agency said on Sunday that a trial site existed in California, it declined to disclose the location. The agency referred questions about a site in California to the company, which has not responded to three requests yesterday and today for information.

Corey Casper, interim president of the Infectious Disease Research Institute in Seattle, is listed as the principal investigator for the trial by Celularity. Casper spoke to stem cell agency directors on May 15 on behalf of the application. Casper also did not respond to inquiries about the location of the California work. 

Six weeks ago, when Celularity's application first came before directors of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), Casper said the treatment "has a biologic plausibility for being very important and very unique in its treatment for Covid disease."

He continued,
"I think that we have adequate safeguards that have been put into the trial to really assure the safety of the participants."
Safety concerns have been raised by CIRM's grant reviewers as well as by other scientists. The reviewers, who are from outside California, originally rejected the application, giving it a score of 84, one below the cutoff point. After Celularity addressed reviewers' concerns, it scored 85 and was sent to directors who approved it last Friday with no debate.

It is CIRM's 64th clinical trial.

Wednesday, May 20, 2020

Sickle Cell Trial, Backed by $2 Million from State of California, Will be Based in Los Gatos

More details emerged today about a $2 million sickle cell award and clinical trial involving the California stem cell agency, including the location of the trial in Los Gatos and the involvement of a Stanford University researcher. 

The award was approved last Friday by the agency. It went to a Canadian firm, ExCellThera, Inc.,  which is partially matching the state award with $857,143. With the addition of ExCell, the stem agency is now involved in 63 clinical trials. 
                                                                                                                  
The company said yesterday that the Phase 1 trial, which involves safety, will use its ECT-001 product, and will be conducted at the Lucile Packard Children's Hospital. It will be led by Sandeep Soni of Stanford University. The safety phase trial is aimed at children and young adults.

Guy Sauvageau, CEO and founder of ExCellThera, said in a news release.
"The current standard of care for severe sickle cell disease is a blood stem cell transplant, which is only available to patients who have a matched donor. 
“However, the unique properties of ECT-001 cell therapy enable patients without a matched donor to receive treatment, with a greatly reduced risk of post-transplant complications. This study introduces a new indication into the ongoing evaluation of our ECT-001 technology, which we hope will make this life-saving therapy available to a far greater number of  severely ill patients."
The trial has not yet been posted on clinicaltrials.gov. It is not clear whether recruitment of patients is  underway.  Here is a link to a summary of  the stem cell agency's review of ExcellThera's application (CLIN2SCD-11674).

Friday, May 08, 2020

Quarter-of a-Billion Dollar 'Salute' to California Stem Cell Agency; Japanese Firm and jCyte Sign Big Licensing Deal

A California stem cell company with major backing from the state's stem cell agency received a $252 million boost today when a Japanese firm cut a deal to develop the firm's therapy for an eye disorder that affects nearly 1.9 million people globally. 

The California company is jCyte, Inc., of Newport Beach. It has received $15 million from the California stem cell agency over the last few years to develop a treatment for retinitis pigmentosa. Its co-founder, Henry Klassen of UC Irvine, has received an additional $19 million from the agency for his work that led to creation of jCyte. The Japanese firm is Santen Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd., a publicly traded firm. 

In a comment for the California Stem Cell Report, Maria Millan, CEO of the agency, formally known as the the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), said, 
"This is exciting news for everyone at jCyte. They have worked so hard over many years to develop their therapy and this partnership is a reflection of just how much they have achieved.
"For us at CIRM it’s particularly encouraging. We have supported this work from its early stages through clinical trials. The people who have benefitted from the therapy, people like Rosie Barrero (see video above), are not just patients to us, they have become friends. The people who run the company, Dr. Henry Klassen, Dr. Jing Yang and Paul Bresge, are so committed and so passionate about their work that they have overcome many obstacles to bring them here, an RMAT designation from the Food and Drug Administration, and a deal that will help them advance their work even further and faster. That is what CIRM is about, following the science and the mission."
In its news release, jCyte said, 
"The treatment is a minimally-invasive intravitreal injection, which can be performed in an ophthalmologist’s office with topical anesthetic. The entire procedure takes less than 30 minutes. The principal mechanism of action is the release of neurotrophic factors that may rescue diseased retinal cells. jCell therapy aims to preserve vision by intervening in the disease at a time when host photoreceptors can be protected and potentially reactivated."
The company's statement continued, 
"Under the terms of the licensing agreement, jCyte will receive $50 million in upfront cash, $12 million in a convertible note offering, and $190 million in clinical and sales milestones based on regulatory approval and initial sales in Europe, Asia and Japan. The total deal is valued at up to $252 million. jCyte is also entitled to receive tiered, double-digit royalty payments on net sales of jCell therapy once commercialized outside the U.S."
Currently there no federally approved treatments for the rare, genetic affliction. In its clinical trials, jCyte has treated more than 100 patients,, and the federal government has given it a regenerative medicine advanced therapy designation based on the early results. That designation is aimed at speeding further federal review.  The company says the treatment could have application in other degenerative retinal diseases, including age-related macular degeneration and diabetic retinopathy.

In another rare instance, jCyte featured CIRM's role in funding the work. The agency was cited in the fifth paragraph of the company news release. The firm's web site also contains a glowing acknowledgement of the importance of CIRM support. In virtually all news releases from businesses or academic institutions, the role of CIRM's funding, which totals $2.75 billion over the last 14 years, is omitted. 

The deal with jCyte undoubtedly will be cited during possible efforts this fall to keep CIRM operating. It is running out of cash and is hoping a proposed $5.5 billion ballot initiative will be approved by voters to keep the agency operating.

Klassen co-funded the company along with Yang, also of UC Irvine. The cells used in the treatment are manufactured at a facility at UC Davis that was financed with funds from the stem cell agency. 

Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Global Growth in 2020 for Regenerative Medicine While California's Stem Cell Program Faces Extinction

ARM graphic
SAN FRANCISCO -- Leaders of the stem cell and regenerative medicine industry gathered yesterday at a sumptuous hotel here, and the talk was of billions of dollars in business, not to mention medical treatments that can cost millions. 

Just 11 miles away across the famed San Francisco Bay, however, was another sort of stem cell scene. It could be found in the not-so-posh, Oakland headquarters of the state stem cell program, known officially as the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM)

CIRM is going broke. Its original $3 billion has shrunk to $27 million over the last 15 years. 

On the other hand, global financing for therapies and treatments in the regenerative medicine field totaled nearly $10 billion in 2019, marking the second highest year ever, the leading U.S. industry group reported at the session at the Parc 55 hotel.


Janet Lambert, CEO of ARM -- ARM photo
"2019 (was) a year of significant growth in the regenerative medicine sector," said Janet Lambert, CEO of the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine (ARM), told a standing-room-only crowd of more than 500 gathered for its annual briefing. "We enter 2020 poised for continued expansion."

Lambert said,
"The pipeline is robust, with several next-gen technologies entering the clinic and an increase in clinical trials for indications with large patient populations."
Her comments came as CIRM faces a financing shortfall that could mean its virtual extinction. 

The agency, created in 2004 by state voters, is down to its last $27 million of uncommitted cash. CIRM has often spent close to $300 million a year. The agency is hoping voters next November will provide it with $5.5 billion more under the terms of a ballot initiative yet to qualify for the ballot. CIRM's only significant source of funding is bonds issued by the state. 

Lambert's organization has more than 350 members, including CIRM. The largest percentage of ARM's membership comes from cell and gene therapy companies. The global financing it reports is almost entirely private. 

ARM's 2019 survey tracked nearly 1,000 companies globally, including 534 in the United States. The second largest number, 237, includes Europe and Israel. Lambert said the fastest growing area is Asia, which has 180.

ARM counted 94 phase three clinical trials globally, the last stage before a therapy is approved for widespread use by the federal government. 

CIRM is helping to finance 60 clinical trials, including three that are still active in phase three. It has yet to back research that has led to a widely available product.

Here are links to CIRM's phase three trials: BrainStorm Cell Therapeutics,  $16 million, ALS, PI Ralph Kern; Humacyte, Inc., $10 million, kidney failure, PI Jeffrey Lawson; Medeor Therapeutics, $11 million, kidney failure, PI Karen Smith. 

Here is a link to Lambert's slides. In the near future, ARM expects to mount online a video of her presentation including two additional panel sessions that examine the current and future outlook for regenerative medicine.   

Monday, November 04, 2019

California Stem Cell Agency Chalks Up its 60th Clinical Trial as Funds Dwindle

OAKLAND, Ca. -- The California stem cell agency last week awarded about $54 million for research into afflictions ranging  from eye disease to epilepsy as it edged increasingly closer to running out of cash.

Nine applications were approved including more clinical trials -- the last stage before therapies are approved for widespread use. The actions bring to 60 the number of clinical trials that the 15-year-old agency is helping to finance.

The California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), as the agency is formally known,  has about $27 million left, plus any additional funds that the agency might recover when awards are cut short as research fails to meet required milestones. The $27 million, however, is earmarked for sickle cell research in a partnership with the federal government.

In some past years, CIRM handed out as much as $300 million a year.

The agency's sole source of significant funding has been $3 billion in state bonds. It is pinning its hopes for the future on voter approval of a $5.5 billion ballot initiative in November 2020.  Playing a role in that effort is likely to be a CIRM-financed, economic study from USC that bolsters the argument that the economic benefits of the agency more than justify renewing its funding.

Dana Goldman, a professor of public policy, pharmacy and economics at USC and who directed the study, said that the private sector is not going to make the types of investments that CIRM has made in developing new treatments. He told the board last week that it would take only small improvement in success rates in such areas as stroke therapy to more than cover the cost of CIRM's activities. (Here is a link to his slides for the presentation.)

CIRM was created in 2004 by voters but has yet to invest in research that has resulted in a widely available therapy.

Maria Millan, CEO of CIRM. said in a news release:
“Programs, such as those funded today, that were novel stem cell or gene therapy approaches addressing a small number of patients, often have difficulty attracting early investment and funding. CIRM’s role is to de-risk these novel regenerative medicine approaches that are based on rigorous science and have the potential to address unmet medical needs. By de-risking programs, CIRM has enabled our portfolio programs to gain significant downstream industry funding and partnership."
Below is a list of the awards with links to the official summaries of the review of the applications, which can be found by clicking on the application number. Letters by applicants to the board can be found by clicking on the applicant's name. Additional letters of support for the research can be found on the agenda for the meeting. 

Here is the UCLA news release on the awards to three UCLA researchers.

Application Number 
Amount 
(in millions)
Institution
PI
Target
$5.5
Stanford
IPEX
$6.6
UC Irvine/jCyte
Retinitis pigmentosa

$10.5 
Cedars-Sinai
Retinitis pigmentosa
$5.5
Brain Neurotherapy Bio
Parkinson’s Disease
$10.3
UCLA
Limbal stem cell deficiency 
$4.9
UCLA
Immune deficiency 
$3.2
UCLA
Myeloma
$2.9
City of Hope
Ovarian cancer
$4.8
Neurona Therapeutics
Nicholas Corey
(no letter posted)
Epilepsy

Thursday, October 03, 2019

California's $72 Million Diabetes Wager: ViaCyte Announces Major "Firsts" for Its Stem Cell Therapy


Vox Pop video/Viacyte

One of California's bigger stem cell bets -- $72 million -- turned up this morning with a strong positive report that included a couple of "firsts" in its search for a virtual cure for diabetes.

The announcement came from ViaCyte, Inc., of San Diego. The California stem cell agency has pumped $72 million into the company, making the firm the top for-profit recipient of state stem cell largess. 

The news comes as the agency, known formally as the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), is running out of funds and hoping that voters will give it $5 billion more. A major research score would be a big plus for that ballot initiative effort. 

The agency's president, Maria Millan, described the ViaCyte announcement as important and encouraging. 

ViaCyte is developing a tiny device that is implanted in a person's body and that generates insulin as needed. It is aimed primarily at type one diabetes, which afflicts more than one million Americans 

ViaCyte issued a news release on the developments at major, national stem cell conference in Carlsbad, Ca. The headline on the release said, 
"First demonstration of insulin production in patients from a stem cell-derived islet replacement therapy"
The release said,
"Preliminary data show that implanted cells, when effectively engrafted, are capable of producing circulating C-peptide, a biomarker for insulin, in patients with type 1 diabetes."
Paul Laikind, CEO and president of the firm, declared,
“ViaCyte is the first and only company in human clinical trials with a stem cell-derived islet replacement therapy candidate, and we are now the first to demonstrate production of C-peptide in patients receiving implanted stem cell-derived islets. These data show that our PEC-01 cells are functioning as intended when appropriately engrafted. “While there is still more work to be done, this is an important milestone. We plan to present additional data in the near future.”
Laikind continued,
“ViaCyte has achieved a number of firsts in this field. Now with the first demonstration of insulin production in patients who have received PEC-Direct, we are confident we can be the first to deliver an effective stem cell-derived islet replacement therapy for type 1 diabetes.”
Asked for comment, CIRM's Millan said,
"This is encouraging news. We are very aware of the major biologic and technical challenges of an implantable cell therapy for Type 1 Diabetes, so this early biologic signal in patients is an important step for the ViaCyte program."
ViaCyte is scheduled to present its findings later today at the Cell & Gene Meeting on the Mesa. That session can be seen live on the Internet 1:45 p.m. PDT. 

(An earlier version of this item contained a slightly different quote from Millan. CIRM re-submitted the latest quote, which adds information.)

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Update on California's $72 Million Bet on a Diabetes Cure: Gene Editing Holds Promise


Viacyte video

A San Diego stem cell firm fueled by $72 million from the state of California this week announced an "important step" in its search for a diabetes cure in collaboration with a Massachusetts gene-editing enterprise.

The California business is ViaCyte, Inc., a privately held company that has received more funding from the California stem cell agency than any other business. 


It ranks 9th on the list of all recipients of cash from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), as the agency is formally known. The ranking places it ahead of such highly regarded research institutions as Salk in La Jolla and Gladstone in San Francisco.

The East Coast firm is CRISPR Therapeutics, AG, a publicly traded firm that aims at "developing transformative gene-based medicines for serious human diseases."

CRISPR and Viacyte announced on Tuesday that their research is now showing that ViaCyte's "CyT49 pluripotent stem cell line, which has been shown to be amenable to efficient scaling and differentiation, can be successfully edited with CRISPR. The CyT49 pluripotent stem cell line is currently being used to generate islet progenitors for clinical trials."

Paul Laikind, CEO of ViaCyte, said in a news release that the latest news brings the firms "potentially one step closer to a transformational therapy for patients with insulin-requiring diabetes through the development of an immune-evasive gene-edited version of our technology."

Laikind described the gene editing result as "an important step" in achieving "yet another first, the development of an immune-evasive cell replacement therapy as a potential cure for type one diabetes."

In 2017, CIRM gave ViaCyte $1.4 million for work on the CyT49 line. Maria Millan, president of CIRM, said at the time,
“Development of an immune-evasive cell therapy would increase the chances of engraftment and durable effect of a cell replacement therapy for diabetes."
Investors were not energized by the CRISPR/ViaCyte announcement. CRISPR's stock price closed at $49.40 today, down from a $49.67 close on Monday, the day prior to the announcement. The 52-week high for the firm is $53.97. The low is $22.22. 

Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Pressures for Stem Cell Profits and Cures: A Case from Japan with Implications for California

A stem cell treatment in Japan for spinal cord injury is raising a ruckus about ethics, efficacy and billion-dollar searches for cures and profits.

The matter involves a therapy called Stemirac and Sapporo Medical University. The treatment is now available to the public in Japan with most of its $140,000 cost covered by Japan's national health insurance program. 


The most recent overview of Stemirac came yesterday on a site called "Undark" in an article written by Amos Zeeberg. In the piece, Arnold Kriegstein, director of the stem cell program at UC San Francisco, called Stemirac  "essentially an unproven therapy."  Bruce Dobkin, a UCLA neurologist, was reported as saying "the results briefly reported in the media may suggest the treatment doesn’t even work."

(Undark's site says it is a "is a non-profit, editorially independent digital magazine exploring the intersection of science and society."  Its publisher is Deborah Blum, a former colleague of this writer at The Sacramento Bee. Blum is now director of the Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT.) 

In the piece yesterday about Stemirac, Zeeberg wrote, 
"It’s arguably the world’s most ambitious approved stem cell treatment and should have been a cause for celebration: a long-awaited breakthrough for the field of regenerative medicine — using modern biological tools to repair the body — and a harbinger of more impressive medicines."
He continued, 
Arnold Kriegstein
UCSF photo
"Instead, the therapy has been met with a heated debate. On one side, many experts have slammed Stemirac’s approval in uncommonly direct terms, saying there isn’t enough evidence to show it is effective or even safe. The treatment went through an expedited approval unique to Japan: After short, small clinical trials that suggest safety and efficacy, regulators can approve stem cell treatments on a conditional basis — allowing use of the treatments for seven years, while sponsors gather additional evidence to support a full approval.
"Critics also say Japan’s approach is far too soft — that early approvals allow patients to take experimental therapies that could be ineffective or dangerous, at a high cost to both patients and insurance providers. 'This is essentially an unproven therapy,' said Arnold Kriegstein, a stem cell researcher at the University of California, San Francisco. 'I’m very surprised this is happening in a country like Japan.'..."
The Undark article continued, 
Bruce Dobkin
UCLA photo
"What’s more, UCLA neurologist Bruce Dobkin told Undark, the results briefly reported in the media may suggest the treatment doesn’t even work. Dobkin pointed to previous trials testing other potential treatments for spinal cord injuries, and the Stemirac findings 'are exactly the results we found in patients in randomized controlled trials — in the control groups,' he said. That is, patients injected with Stemirac seemed to do as well as patients who got placebos in these earlier trials. He says people who have recently suffered spinal cord injuries, like Kusachi, the injured high diver (mentioned in Zeeberg's piece), and the others in the Stemirac trial, often have significant natural improvement over the next several months — exactly the period covered by the trial. It’s possible the patients were simply healing naturally, he says, but without a control group and double-blinding, it is hard to tell."
Undark's article captures many of the issues surrounding the development of stem cell therapies including the pressure to generate results for patients and profits for companies -- not to mention prestige and praise for researchers.

California's $3 billion stem cell program feels that pressure as well. It is running out of cash and would more than welcome a breakthrough in one of its 56 clinical trials -- one that would stimulate California voters to provide more billions for the state's nearly 15-year-old stem cell research effort.

Friday, August 23, 2019

The Search for a Cure for the Bubble Boy Disease: Orchard Therapeutics and the California Stem Cell Agency

Alliance for Regenerative Medicine video

Orchard Therapeutics, a British firm in which the California stem cell agency is directly supporting with $8.5 million, reports that it is "well underway" with its plans for a major facility in the San Francisco Bay area. 

Orchard says that it is on schedule to open the 150,000-square-foot plant in Fremont, Ca., in 2021, according to an article on BioProcess International.  

The move is part of a broad effort by Orchard to commercialize genetic therapies based on research pursued for decades by Donald Kohn of UCLA. California's stem cell research program has pumped $52 million into Kohn's research, which has saved the lives of more than 50 babies in (ADA-SCID) clinical trials.

Kohn has targeted what is often known as the bubble boy syndrome, a rare, fatal immune deficiency disorder (adenosine deaminase-deficient severe combined immunodeficiency -- ADA-SCID).  

UCLA has licensed Kohn's work to Orchard and will receive compensation at some point. CIRM is also slated to receive compensation should a product be developed. Kohn is one of the scientific founders or the Orchard and is a scientific adviser to the firm. 

The BioProcess article last week by Dan Stanton quoted Ran Zheng, Orchard's chief technical officer, as saying, 
“The diseases we target affect patients around the world, which require us to have the infrastructure to deliver gene therapies globally. We are therefore building a commercial-scale manufacturing infrastructure and leveraging technologies that will allow us to deliver our gene therapies globally and in a fully-integrated manner.”

The Fremont facility represents only part of Orchard's presence in California. Ron Leuty of the San Francisco Business Times reported that the firm leases 14,138 square feet in Menlo Park for labs and offices and 4,472 square feet for development labs and offices in Foster City. 

Orchard's stock price closed at $13.67 yesterday. Its 52-week high was $21.64 and the 52-week low was $8.65.

(Editor's note: This item has been altered from an earlier version to be more specific about the number of babies whose lives have been saved in clinical trials involving Kohn's work. The number now exceeds 50.) 

Tuesday, August 06, 2019

California Stem Cell Agency Backs Breast/Ovarian Cancer, Brain Injury Research and More with $29 Million; $71 Million Left


Saul Priceman of the City of Hope. Priceman received $9.3 million last month from CIRM for a clinical trial for breast cancer. City of Hope video.

The California stem cell agency last month handed out $29 million to finance efforts to develop treatments for traumatic brain injury, ovarian cancer and more, leaving it with about $71 million for new research awards before its cash runs out. 

The nearly 15-year-old agency, known formally as the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), is hoping that a yet-to-be written ballot initiative for the November 2020 ballot will give it a $5.5 billion infusion. The agency began its life in 2004 with $3 billion. 

Fresh figures from the agency show that it has about $43 million available for new awards, not including those involved in a sickle cell anemia effort with the National Institutes of Health.  CIRM's contribution to that program totals about $28 million. The agency is still accepting applications in that program. 

The amount of funds available overall to CIRM could rise as funds come back to the agency as the result of termination of unsuccessful research.

In last month's two-hour meeting, CIRM's board approved five grant applications, but not without more public discussion than has occurred in some past years when the agency was flush with cash. 

Directors talked about priorities, CIRM's portfolio and the vagaries of the scoring process, which is done behind closed doors by out-of-state researchers/reviewers who do not have to publicly disclose their professional or financial conflicts of interest. 

But the meeting also led to a reflection by CIRM board member Jeff Sheehy on the value that CIRM has brought to the field and California. Sheehy is a patient advocate of the 29-member panel. He has been on the board since its first meeting in December 2004 and leads the board's public discussion during ratification of funding decisions by reviewers.

Sheehy told his fellow board members that he had lost his mother to ovarian cancer and knew the "incredibly painful, difficult road" that she walked.  He said that CIRM is providing a new path to a better future for cancer patients and others with dreadful diseases and urged diligence in supporting renewed funding for the agency.  

In formal action, the board approved a $9.3 million investment in a clinical trial for a treatment of breast cancer, the second most common cancer in women. The trial is the 56th in which the agency is involved. The award went to Saul Priceman of the City of Hope. The review summary of his application (CLIN2-11574) can be found here. 

The CIRM panel also approved awards to the following researchers and institutions. The review summaries for all, including applications not approved, can be found here

Mark Tuszynski, $6.2 million, UC San Diego, spinal cord injury (no UCSD news release)
Evan Snyder, $4.9 million, Sanford Burnham, ischemic brain injury (no Sanford news release)
Brian Cummings, $4.8 million, UC Irvine, traumatic brain injury (UCI news release)
Mark Humayun, $3.7 million, USC, age-related macular degeneration (no USC news release)

The CIRM news release on the July meeting and awards can be found here. The transcript of the meeting can be found here. 

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