Marlborough Express

Stem cell therapy for heart disease

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failure, for which there is no cure.

Developed by Celixir, a Warwickshi­re-based biomedical firm, the treatment delivers stem cells into the organ via an injection which then regenerate­s the heart cells, restoring function.

The drug, called Heartcel, has been tried on 11 heart failure patients in Greece in 2012 and 2013, none of whom were expected to live more than two years.

Subsequent results showed the stem cells had rendered the hearts 78 per cent scar-free, meaning six years on all 11 are still alive and far more active than they previously were.

This week’s approval by the US Food and Drugs Administra­tion (FDA) means a co-ordinated internatio­nal trial can now begin. It will involve 250 European participan­ts spread across the Royal Brompton and two other undisclose­d hospitals in the UK and mainland Europe, as well as 250 patients at centres in the US. If the trial replicates the ‘‘astonishin­g’’ results seen in the first Greek cohort, Celixir could apply for permission to provide Heartcel widely in the UK by 2021, according to Ajan Reginald, the company’s chief executive.

‘‘It has taken a long time to get to this stage but getting approval . . . is absolutely massive for these patients. What is unique about Heartcel is that we are taking cells from a healthy donor and giving them to an unhealthy recipient, whereas previously people have tried using the patient’s own cells,’’ Prof Westaby said.

Heartcel takes bone marrow stem cells from a donor with no heart problems, making them into enough doses to treat thousands of patients.

During production it undergoes genetic engineerin­g making it ‘‘immune privileged’’, meaning it is biological­ly acceptable to all recipients and will not be rejected.

Previous trials at Barts and Great Ormond Street hospitals in London gave patients their own stem cells but were met with ‘‘modest results’’, said Prof Westaby.

Patients in the forthcomin­g Royal Brompton Hospital trial will be injected with Heartcel during the surgery they would have undergone anyway. – Sunday Telegraph

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