Literature DB >> 23836804

Overcoming challenges to initiating cell therapy clinical trials in rapidly developing countries: India as a model.

Sowmya Viswanathan1, Mahendra Rao, Armand Keating, Alok Srivastava.   

Abstract

Increasingly, a number of rapidly developing countries, including India, China, Brazil, and others, are becoming global hot spots for the development of regenerative medicine applications, including stem cell-based therapies. Identifying and overcoming regulatory and translational research challenges and promoting scientific and ethical clinical trials with cells will help curb the growth of stem cell tourism for unproven therapies. It will also enable academic investigators, local regulators, and national and international biotechnology and biopharmaceutical companies to accelerate stem cell-based clinical research that could lead to effective innovative treatments in these regions. Using India as a model system and obtaining input from regulators, clinicians, academics, and industry representatives across the stem cell field in India, we reviewed the role of key agencies and processes involved in this field. We have identified areas that need attention and here provide solutions from other established and functioning models in the world to streamline and unify the regulatory and ethics approval processes for cell-based therapies. We also make recommendations to check the growth and functioning of clinics offering unproven treatments. Addressing these issues will remove considerable hurdles to both local and international investigators, accelerate the pace of research and development, and create a quality environment for reliable products to emerge. By doing so, these countries would have taken one important step to move to the forefront of stem cell-based therapeutics.

Keywords:  Cellular therapy; Clinical translation; Clinical trials; Stem cells

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23836804      PMCID: PMC3726140          DOI: 10.5966/sctm.2013-0019

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stem Cells Transl Med        ISSN: 2157-6564            Impact factor:   6.940


  5 in total

Review 1.  Hurdles to clinical translation of human induced pluripotent stem cells.

Authors:  Evgenios Neofytou; Connor Galen O'Brien; Larry A Couture; Joseph C Wu
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2015-07-01       Impact factor: 14.808

2.  The pluralization of the international: Resistance and alter-standardization in regenerative stem cell medicine.

Authors:  Achim Rosemann; Nattaka Chaisinthop
Journal:  Soc Stud Sci       Date:  2016-02       Impact factor: 3.885

Review 3.  Overcoming barriers to facilitate the regulation of multi-centre regenerative medicine clinical trials.

Authors:  Erika Kleiderman; Audrey Boily; Craig Hasilo; Bartha Maria Knoppers
Journal:  Stem Cell Res Ther       Date:  2018-11-08       Impact factor: 6.832

4.  Citalopram increases the differentiation efficacy of bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells into neuronal-like cells.

Authors:  Javad Verdi; Seyed Abdolreza Mortazavi-Tabatabaei; Shiva Sharif; Hadi Verdi; Alireza Shoae-Hassani
Journal:  Neural Regen Res       Date:  2014-04-15       Impact factor: 5.135

Review 5.  Evolution of Mesenchymal Stem Cell Therapy as an Advanced Therapeutic Medicinal Product (ATMP)-An Indian Perspective.

Authors:  Sathish Muthu; Madhan Jeyaraman; Moinuddin Basha Kotner; Naveen Jeyaraman; Ramya Lakshmi Rajendran; Shilpa Sharma; Manish Khanna; Sree Naga Sowndary Rajendran; Ji Min Oh; Prakash Gangadaran; Byeong-Cheol Ahn
Journal:  Bioengineering (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-07
  5 in total

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