高雄市生物科技發展協會|http://www.khba.org.tw
會員登入
記住帳號 自動登入
會員名錄
各式辦法
下載專區
留言板
您目前的位置:首頁 / 活動與新訊
Judge Says FDA Can Stop Clinic from Selling Stem Cell Treatments
活動日期:2019.06.11
2019.06.11  

Judge Says FDA Can Stop Clinic from Selling Stem Cell Treatments
https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/judge-says-fda-can-stop-clinic-from-selling-stem-cell-treatments-65989?utm_campaign=TS_DAILY%20NEWSLETTER_2019&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=73513735&_hsenc=p2ANqtz--O5LB-pP_7YLkxzHdChYSxxUeik95sHcIeASwF-ikDvAbqIujrVygCS_wZdgc-5QppeDGXeMmqolfUvnaZ5tx9TvHhSA&_hsmi=73513735

The decision may facilitate the agency cracking down more effectively on the unproven interventions these companies sell.

Jun 7, 2019
EMMA YASINSKI

In 2015, a stem cell clinic in Florida conducted a procedure on three women to treat their macular degeneration. Instead, it left each of them with severe vision loss. The tragedy has been held up as an example of the lack of regulatory oversight the US government has had over such outfits that offer unproven stem cell treatments—and now, it’s an example of how that is changing. 
On June 3, a federal judge ruled that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is entitled to a permanent injunction against US Stem Cell, forcing the company to stop conducting procedures using a particular technique that involves isolating stem cells from clients’ fat. 
The FDA also filed a suit against a California-based company Cell Surgical Network, which provides similar interventions, that is still pending in court.

Precedent from cases like this helps the FDA in future enforcement actions.

—Stephanie Caccomo, FDA

“The lawsuit itself wasn’t surprising. The allegations weren’t surprising. And the judge’s conclusion wasn’t very surprising,” Andrew Ittleman, an attorney at Miami-based Fuerst, Ittleman, David & Joseph, a law firm that counts government compliance for stem cell and regenerative medicine companies as one of its key practice areas, tells The Scientist. “If anything, people were wondering why it took so long.”
Hundreds of stem cell clinics have popped up across the US and other countries in recent years, making promises with little evidence that their treatments can cure ailments that traditional medicine cannot. The clinics have often avoided FDA oversight by claiming that their procedures, which often use a patient’s own cells, are not subject to FDA regulations. 
The agency has been cracking down on the industry, but it has only successfully obtained a judgment against a stem cell clinic once before. This latest ruling by Judge Ursula Ungaro of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida may represent a sea change in regulatory enforcement, and possibly open the door for the FDA to file suits against companies violating FDA guidelines for marketing stem cell treatments en masse, according to Ittleman.
“This is a landmark decision because this is only the second time the FDA has obtained a judgment against a stem cell clinic, and the first judgment since FDA announced in 2017 the agency’s risk-based enforcement priorities for regenerative medicine,” FDA spokesperson Stephanie Caccomo tells The Scientist in an email.

See “Texas Stem Cell Law Opens Door for Controversial Treatments

Research on stem cell therapies has ballooned in recent years, and some procedures for certain blood disorders have even been FDA-approved, but most remain unproven as far as the FDA is concerned. Extracting fat cells using liposuction, processing them to extract stem cells (known as stromal vascular fraction cells or SVF), and injecting them into other areas of the body — the strategy US Stem Cell uses—has been an FDA target before. Some clinics provide treatments with stem cells derived from bone marrow, cord blood, or birth tissue. 
Ittleman, who has represented clients sued by the FDA, doesn’t believe the ruling will immediately affect clinics using other types of stem cells. “The fat [derived stem cell treatment] has been really the one place where the FDA has been very clear for very long about its position. We don’t necessarily have that clarity in other areas,” he says. The ruling may inspire the FDA to target other unapproved stem cell treatments with litigation, he adds. 
The three patients who lost all or most of their sight were the first (and only) three participants in a discontinued clinical trial US Stem Cell was running on the procedure. Afterward, the patients saw university-based ophthalmologists for treatment, and those doctors published a report in March of 2017 in the New England Journal of Medicine detailing the adverse effects on each individual and raising concern about stem cell clinics.
US Stem Cell failed to follow best practice in ophthalmology of operating on one eye first, and returning later for a second surgery on the remaining eye. This way, if there is an adverse reaction, the patient can still see with the untreated eye. But the company conducted both procedures simultaneously.
Shortly after the failed procedures, two of the patients settled lawsuits with US Stem Cell, but the company faced few other penalties. While it stopped offering fat-derived stem cell treatments for macular degeneration, it continued to provide services using SVF that it claimed could treat myriad ailments, from Parkinson’s disease to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
The FDA sent a warning letter to US Stem Cell in August 2017 about marketing the unapproved products and violations to good manufacturing practices. But the company did not comply. Ittleman says they were “really sticking their fingers in the FDA’s eyes over the course of time saying, ‘You don’t regulate us.’”
In a written statement sent to The Scientist, US Stem Cell said, “While we believe there is substantial evidence to prove the efficacy of this protocol, we must immediately comply with the court as we review the decision.” A spokeswoman told The New York Times that the company plans to continue offering stem cell treatments derived from other tissue. 
“Precedent from cases like this helps the FDA in future enforcement actions,” says Caccomo. “The FDA will continue to take steps—such as issuing warning letters or initiating court cases—against clinics that abuse the trust of patients and endanger their health with inadequate manufacturing conditions or by manufacturing and promoting products in ways that make them drugs under the law, but which have not been proven to be safe or effective for any use.”

共有310筆資料 頁數: 第15頁(共16頁)
編號 標題 新增日期
1 工研院 生醫研發成果及技術移轉說明會(高雄場次) 2007.12.04
2 生技新藥產業發展條例與施行辦法說明會 2007.12.03
3 2007醫藥生物科技新知研討會 2007.10.30
4 研討會:藥業經營之藍海策略與自費市場商機 2007.11.16
5 國立高雄大學生物科技研究所延攬兼任教師公告 2007.11.01
6 2007年高雄食品展覽會徵展通知 2007.07.23
7 2007年台北國際醫療器材、藥品暨生技展 2007.10.31
8 第二十五屆藥事論壇講座 - 生技新藥產業發展條例及其相關辦法 2007.10.20
9 國立高雄大學陳文輝教授主編全球首本蘭花生技專書 2007.10.18
10 生技產業趨勢研討會暨DCB南科據點成立茶會 2007.09.14
11 『生技創育∼區域優勢再創台灣農業生技新生命』座談會 2007.09.14
12 BioJapan2007-World Bussiness forum-Return Yokohama Again 2007.07.20
13 歐盟第七期研究架構計畫食物、農漁業和生物科技第一梯次徵求計畫 2007.08.13
14 中華兩岸關係發展促進會赴大陸武漢交流通知 2007.07.24
15 如何利用政府服務辦理國際行銷說明會 2007.08.07
16 加拿大CS Bio Co提供生肽Peptides產品 2007.08.14
17 日本政府發展再生醫療研究之具體作為 2007.08.13
18 家田診所 參加 BioTaiwan 2007第五屆臺灣生技月-挑戰諾貝爾醫.. 2007.07.25
19 挑戰諾貝爾醫學獎討論會 2007.07.23
20 明文彥科技有限公司參加BioTaiwan-2007第五屆臺灣生技月 2007.07.20
上一頁  1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16  下一頁
版權所有©2006 高雄市生物科技發展協會 所有文字、資料禁止轉用
地址:高雄市中正一路120號14樓之3 TEL:(07)591-9569 / FAX:(07)591-9018 / e-mail: khba.tw@gmail.com
累積進站人數:2897219