| Literature DB >> 24304079 |
David A Brindley1, Anna French, Jane Suh, MacKenna Roberts, Benjamin Davies, Rafael Pinedo-Villanueva, Karolina Wartolowska, Kelly Rooke, Anneke Kramm, Andrew Judge, Mark Morrey, Amit Chandra, Hannah Hurley, Liam Grover, Ian Bingham, Bernard Siegel, Matt S Rattley, R Lee Buckler, David McKeon, Katie Krumholz, Lilian Hook, Michael May, Sarah Rikabi, Rosie Pigott, Megan Morys, Afsie Sabokbar, Emily Titus, Yacine Laabi, Gilles Lemaitre, Raymond Zahkia, Doug Sipp, Robert Horne, Christopher Bravery, David Williams, Ivan Wall, Evan Y Snyder, Jeffrey M Karp, Richard W Barker, Kim Bure, Andrew J Carr, Brock Reeve.
Abstract
Increased global connectivity has catalyzed technological development in almost all industries, in part through the facilitation of novel collaborative structures. Notably, open innovation and crowd-sourcing-of expertise and/or funding-has tremendous potential to increase the efficiency with which biomedical ecosystems interact to deliver safe, efficacious and affordable therapies to patients. Consequently, such practices offer tremendous potential in advancing development of cellular therapies. In this vein, the CASMI Translational Stem Cell Consortium (CTSCC) was formed to unite global thought-leaders, producing academically rigorous and commercially practicable solutions to a range of challenges in pluripotent stem cell translation. Critically, the CTSCC research agenda is defined through continuous consultation with its international funding and research partners. Herein, initial findings for all research focus areas are presented to inform global product development strategies, and to stimulate continued industry interaction around biomanufacturing, strategic partnerships, standards, regulation and intellectual property and clinical adoption.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24304079 PMCID: PMC3883132 DOI: 10.1089/scd.2013.0403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Dev ISSN: 1547-3287 Impact factor: 3.272