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Stem cell tourism

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stem cell tourism, a form of medical tourism, is the internet based-industry in which stem cell procedures are advertised to the public as a proven cure.[1] In the majority of cases, it leads to patients and families traveling abroad to obtain procedures that are not proven, nor part of a clinical trial approved by an authority like the Food and Drug Administration in the United States.[2] These procedures have not gone through the vetting process of clinical research and they lack rigorous scientific support.[3] Although for the general public, this advertising in glossy websites, may sound authoritative, for translational doctors and scientists this leads to the exploitation of vulnerable patients. These procedures lack the reproducibility, the rigor that is required for successful development of new effective medications. Although the term may imply traveling overseas, in recent years, there has been an explosion of "stem cell clinics' in the US which has been well documented.[4] These activities are highly profitable for the clinic but no benefit for the patients, sometimes experiencing complications like spinal tumors,[5] death, or financial ruin, all of which are documented in the scientific literature.[6] There is a great deal of interest in educating the public and patients, families and doctors who deal with patients requesting stem cells clinics.[7] In recent years, the FDA has become more active in overseeing stem cell clinics, taking a number of concrete steps including sending warning letters, putting out advisories, and in two cases filing suit in federal court to impose permanent injunctions on specific clinic firms.[8][9]

Despite the great interest generated in the public for the use of stem cells, among all stem cell scientists, including the International Society for Stem Cell Research, the largest academic organization of scientist and advocates for stem cell research in the world.[10] Stem cell "therapy" is an aspirational goal, is still under development and although there is a great deal of research around the world.[11] Rigorous stem cell trials are still ongoing and patients should be educated to be aware of the unethical clinics in the US or abroad, that offer stem cells procedures as a cure when it is still under investigation.[12]

Furthermore, there is confusion in the general public between the concept of the "right to try" (RTT) legislation to the right to pursue any"stem cell preparations'.[13] These are different concepts. RTT is usually approved for promising pharmacological compounds that have earned a sound scientific or pre-clinical support. In contrast to stem cell tourism infusions that do not. One of the key elements in the RTT is the concept of promising, that is not just a theoretical possibility but a demonstrable and reproducible evidence obtained by scientific experimentation.[14] The right to try legislation seek opportunities for incurables and often terminal patients to receive the compassionate use of experimental therapies that have passed phase I clinical trials that have not gone through all the checks and balances needed for approval.[15] In contrast to the stem cell tourism, these trials have oversight by the FDA and there is no direct financial exploitation for the patient and families.[16]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • What is stem cell tourism? Narrated by Professor Timothy Caulfield
  • Concerns About Stem Cell Tourism
  • Stem Cell Clinical Trials: 4 Things to Know

Transcription

References

  1. ^ Bauer, Gerhard; Elsallab, Magdi; Abou-El-Enein, Mohamed (September 10, 2018). "Concise Review: A Comprehensive Analysis of Reported Adverse Events in Patients Receiving Unproven Stem Cell-Based Interventions". Stem Cells Translational Medicine. 7 (9): 676–685. doi:10.1002/sctm.17-0282. PMC 6127222. PMID 30063299.
  2. ^ Turner, L. (2015). "US stem cell clinics, patient safety, and the FDA". Trends in Molecular Medicine. 21 (5): 271–3. doi:10.1016/j.molmed.2015.02.008. PMID 25945404.
  3. ^ Knoepfler, P. S. (2015). "From bench to FDA to bedside: US regulatory trends for new stem cell therapies". Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews. 82–83: 192–6. doi:10.1016/j.addr.2014.12.001. PMC 4398607. PMID 25489841.
  4. ^ Knoepfler, P. S. (2019). "Rapid change of a cohort of 570 unproven stem cell clinics in the USA over 3 years". Regenerative Medicine. 14 (8): 735–740. doi:10.2217/rme-2019-0064. PMID 31456478.
  5. ^ Berkowitz, Aaron L.; Miller, Michael B.; Mir, Saad A.; Cagney, Daniel; Chavakula, Vamsidhar; Guleria, Indira; Aizer, Ayal; Ligon, Keith L.; Chi, John H. (July 14, 2016). "Glioproliferative Lesion of the Spinal Cord as a Complication of "Stem-Cell Tourism"". The New England Journal of Medicine. 375 (2): 196–198. doi:10.1056/NEJMc1600188. PMID 27331440.
  6. ^ Berkowitz, Aaron L.; Miller, Michael B.; Mir, Saad A.; Cagney, Daniel; Chavakula, Vamsidhar; Guleria, Indira; Aizer, Ayal; Ligon, Keith L.; Chi, John H. (July 14, 2016). "Glioproliferative Lesion of the Spinal Cord as a Complication of "Stem-Cell Tourism"". The New England Journal of Medicine. 375 (2): 196–198. doi:10.1056/NEJMc1600188. PMID 27331440.
  7. ^ Bowman, Michelle; Racke, Michael; Kissel, John; Imitola, Jaime (November 10, 2015). "Responsibilities of Health Care Professionals in Counseling and Educating Patients With Incurable Neurological Diseases Regarding "Stem Cell Tourism": Caveat Emptor". JAMA Neurology. 72 (11): 1342–1345. doi:10.1001/jamaneurol.2015.1891. PMID 26322563.
  8. ^ Commissioner, Office of the (2020-09-09). "FDA Warns About Stem Cell Therapies". FDA.
  9. ^ Commissioner, Office of the (2020-03-24). "FDA seeks permanent injunctions against two stem cell clinics". FDA. Retrieved 2021-02-09.
  10. ^ "Communicating About Unproven Stem Cell Treatments to the Public". www.isscr.org.
  11. ^ Tsou, Amy (February 10, 2015). "Ethical considerations when counseling patients about stem cell tourism". Continuum (Minneapolis, Minn.). 21 (1 Spinal Cord Disorders): 201–205. doi:10.1212/01.CON.0000461094.76563.be. PMID 25651226. S2CID 29862332.
  12. ^ Du, Li; Rachul, Christen; Guo, Zhaochen; Caulfield, Timothy (January 10, 2016). "Gordie Howe's "Miraculous Treatment": Case Study of Twitter Users' Reactions to a Sport Celebrity's Stem Cell Treatment". JMIR Public Health and Surveillance. 2 (1): e8. doi:10.2196/publichealth.5264. PMC 4869214. PMID 27227162.
  13. ^ Shapiro, R. S. (2017). "Reconciling States' "Right to Try" Legislation and FDA's Expanded Access Program: Legal Issues". Therapeutic Innovation & Regulatory Science. 51 (2): 153–156. doi:10.1177/2168479016683217. PMID 30231723. S2CID 52301267.
  14. ^ Speers, M. A. (2019). "Providing Patients with Critical or Life-Threatening Illnesses Access to Experimental Drug Therapy: A Guide to Clinical Trials and the US FDA Expanded Access Program". Pharmaceutical Medicine. 33 (2): 89–98. doi:10.1007/s40290-019-00274-3. PMID 31933253. S2CID 109920343.
  15. ^ Kim, O. (2019). "A Response to Meyerson's Defence of the American Right to Try : Experimenting with hope". Journal of Bioethical Inquiry. 16 (3): 463–466. doi:10.1007/s11673-019-09918-0. PMID 31444643. S2CID 201285272.
  16. ^ Simmons, Z. (2017). "Right-to-Try Investigational Therapies for Incurable Disorders". Continuum (Minneapolis, Minn.). 23 (5, Peripheral Nerve and Motor Neuron Disorders): 1451–1457. doi:10.1212/CON.0000000000000515. PMID 28968371. S2CID 43161837.
This page was last edited on 8 November 2023, at 03:56
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