Vancouver Sun

Medical research policy a ‘game changer’

Work to repair damaged tissue and nerves may find way to market sooner, firms hope

- NATASHA KHAN

HONG KONG — On a cloudy Wednesday morning in the Tokyo suburb of Tsukuba, Yoshiyuki Sankai points excitedly to a slide of severed spinal cords. They belong to rats, and he’s used cell technology to help reconnect the nerves.

A multimilli­onaire whose robot company, Cyberdyne Inc., went public last year, Sankai is researchin­g ways to repair damaged body tissue. The 57-year-old scientist’s vision: to treat patients with spinal injuries by using stem-cell related technology to repair nerve connection­s and robotic suits that aid movement.

His plans are getting a boost from new policies promoted by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who led a liberaliza­tion of approval rules to make Japan one of the world’s quickest places to get a regenerati­ve therapy on the market. Now, Japanese corporatio­ns spanning the pharmaceut­ical and industrial sectors have regenerati­ve medicine on their agenda. Industry groups estimate the domestic market for these therapies could top $25 billion US by 2050.

Investors are putting money into research that explores the potential of cells to repair damaged organs and tissues, or reverse degenerati­ve diseases like Alzheimer’s. While scientists have worked for years in this field, treatments have been slow to come to market. But there’s a hope in Japan that without the political red tape, promising therapies will emerge faster and there will be speedier payouts.

“It’s a game changer, and we expect investment to keep pouring in to Japan,” said Sanjeev Kumar, a consultant at market research firm Frost & Sullivan.

Regenerati­ve medicine is a broad umbrella that includes treatments around stem cells and gene therapy that are intended to restore the function of damaged organs and tissues.

Sankai’s company Cyberdyne is setting its sights on better treating spinal injury patients by combining multiple approaches. It makes robot exoskeleto­ns for physical therapy, and these bionic suits can read bio-electric signals from the patient’s muscles, helping movement in the disabled. Sankai says his years of mapping out the brain’s nerve network for his robots fits with the research into repairing rat spines with stem cells and proteins. His hope is to eventually use various treatments together.

Japan’s Healios K.K. is developing a treatment for an eye disease called macular degenerati­on that causes vision loss. Electronic­s giant Hitachi Ltd. announced a joint research project in cell therapy for Parkinson’s Disease in July; while Australian developer of stem cell therapies Mesoblast Ltd. is looking at more partnershi­p deals in Japan after the regulatory changes, its CEO Silviu Itescu said.

 ?? YOSHIKAZU TSUNO/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Japanese robot venture Cyberdyne president Yoshiyuki Sankai, right, displays the new robot suits which are designed to aid movement.
YOSHIKAZU TSUNO/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Japanese robot venture Cyberdyne president Yoshiyuki Sankai, right, displays the new robot suits which are designed to aid movement.

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