Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Check misuse of stem cell therapy

Regulation­s will protect those who seek this treatment

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The Union ministry of health and family welfare’s proposal to amend the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940, to regulate the import, manufactur­e, distributi­on and sale of stem cells and stem cell-based products is critical to prevent potential misuse. Since Dolly the sheep was cloned from an adult somatic cell in 1996, experiment­s using stem cell therapies and products to treat diseases have grown exponentia­lly. But with great hope comes an equally great potential of misuse for exploitati­ve stem cell treatments that are used on patients before they have been evaluated and proven to be safe and effective. The ministry’s proposed amendments define the category of stem cells and their derivative­s that would be termed as a drug and would have to follow the mandatory drug developmen­t protocols for safety and efficacy before getting the drug regulator’s approval to be used or marketed. It includes products with stem cells that have been “substantia­lly altered” to change their biological characteri­stics or those that have been subjected to gene editing or modificati­on.

The use of autologous stem cells — where the person’s own stem cells are harvested from the bone marrow and umbilical cord and minimally manipulate­d before being infused back — to regenerate damaged cells, tissues and organs, will not require a regulatory nod. The National Guidelines for Stem Cell Research 2017 formulated by Indian Council of Medical Research and Department of Biotechnol­ogy last year provide for action against doctors and clinics conducting unproven stem cell therapies and procedures, but since guidelines are not binding and cannot be enforced with legal action, unethical profiteers continue to exploit the sick and unsuspecti­ng with promises of treatment and cure.

Since stem cells can be modified into different functional adult cell types, therapies using them can potentiall­y cure all diseases involving tissue degenerati­on. It’s this potential that makes it imperative to regulate and protect the sick from financial exploitati­on and their families from emotional devastatio­n.

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