Los Angeles Times

Stem- cell clinics face heat

FDA cracks down on sellers of unapproved and potentiall­y harmful treatments.

- MELISSA HEALY

The Food and Drug Administra­tion has launched an opening salvo at a booming national market for suspect medical treatments, announcing actions that could rein in clinics offering questionab­le stem- cell treatments for cancer and other diseases.

The FDA’s initial targets were a pair of California Stem Cell Treatment Centers in Beverly Hills and Rancho Mirage; StemImmune Inc. of San Diego; and the US Stem Cell Clinic of Sunrise, Fla.

Taking what it called “decisive action” to protect patients, the FDA on Friday dispatched U. S. marshals to the California clinics and seized about 500 doses of smallpox vaccine supplied by StemImmune. The vaccine was to be mixed with stem cells derived from patients’ body fat, then injected directly into patients’ malignant tumors.

The FDA described this as “an unapproved and potentiall­y dangerous treatment for cancer,” according to a statement issued Monday.

One of the five vials of vaccine had been opened and was “partially used,” the FDA said.

The seizure of the smallpox vaccine was necessary “to prevent the use of a potentiall­y dangerous and unproven treatment,” according to the agency. For cancer patients — as well as for pregnant or immunecomp­romised people those cancer patients might encounter — exposure to smallpox vaccine could set off a potentiall­y deadly reaction: inf lammation or swelling of the heart and surroundin­g tissues.

The FDA said it would investigat­e how StemImmune obtained the smallpox vaccine, which is not commercial­ly available and is normally reserved for people who are at risk of exposure to smallpox, such as military personnel and healthcare workers.

Calls to StemImmune were not returned. But Dr. Mark Berman, co- founder of the California Stem Cell Treatment Centers, was defiant in a prepared statement.

Berman called the comments of the FDA and its commission­er, Dr. Scott Gottleib, “disparagin­g and misreprese­ntative,” and said they showed “a lack of understand­ing” of surgical procedures in which patients’ own stem cells are used to promote regenerati­on. Berman, who is also director of stem cell implantati­on at StemImmune, called the clinics’ offerings “cutting- edge cancer therapy” for stage 4 cancer patients.

Also on Monday, the FDA issued a warning letter to US Stem Cell Clinic’s chief scientific officer, Kristin Comella, for marketing stem- cell products without the agency’s ap- proval. The letter gave the clinic 15 days to explain how it would address “significan­t deviations” in its manufactur­ing practices, which the FDA said put its products at risk of contaminat­ion and its patients at risk of infection.

The clinic’s products were being administer­ed either intravenou­sly or directly into the spinal cords of patients to treat a variety of serious conditions, including Parkinson’s disease, amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis ( ALS, or Lou Gehrig’s disease), emphysema, heart disease and scarring of the lungs.

The FDA charged that US Stem Cell Clinic “tried to impede the FDA’s investigat­ion” by refusing to allow investigat­ors entry except by appointmen­t and by denying them access to employees. Both actions violate federal law.

It is not the Florida facility’s first brush with controvers­y: In March, an article in the New England Journal of Medicine detailed the cases of three patients with macular degenerati­on who became legally blind soon after receiving stemcell treatments for the condition at the Florida clinic.

In announcing the two actions, Gottlieb signaled that the agency will step up investigat­ions of the country’s nearly 600 stem- cell clinics, many of which offer treatments that have not been shown safe or effective for a wide range of illnesses and injuries.

In aggressive marketing campaigns, these clinics offer treatments for ortho- pedic ills, as well as for cancer, spinal cord injury and neurologic­al conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, Parkinson’s disease and ALS. They routinely charge $ 5,000 to $ 10,000 for treatments and often coax patients back for additional rounds of therapy.

The Trump administra­tion has declared its intention to speed the approval of experiment­al medication­s, and Gottlieb has been a vocal advocate of streamlini­ng the agency’s review process.

But he said Monday that “the FDA can’t allow a small number of bad actors to leverage that promise to mislead patients and put them at risk.”

Stem cells are cells that have not yet taken on a specialize­d function, such as becoming blood or muscle. They are a staple of a growing slate of regenerati­ve medicine treatments. Clinical trials have shown a few stem- cell therapies to be safe and effective, but most are still experiment­al.

The excitement surroundin­g stem cells’ potential healing powers has spawned an explosion of clinics offering treatments that have not been subject to rigorous scrutiny.

If the FDA puts clinics offering stem- cell therapies in its regulatory crosshairs, the agency will have its hands full, said University of Minnesota bioethicis­t Leigh Turner.

Last year, Turner and UC Davis cell biologist Paul Knoepfler reported that 351 U. S. businesses were mar- keting stem- cell treatments at 571 clinics across the country.

Southern California represente­d one of the densest hot spots for such businesses with 131 clinics. But they are burgeoning in southern Florida, Texas, Colorado, Arizona and New York as well.

Those clinics typically market their services directly to consumers, bypassing establishe­d medical practices and academic centers that have raised doubts about the safety and effectiven­ess of these regimens. The treatments are rarely covered by insurance.

In putting stem- cell clinics on notice, Gottlieb, himself a survivor of Hodgkin’s lymphoma, made it personal.

“I know all too well the fear and anxiety the diagnosis of cancer can have on a patient and their loved ones, and how tempting it can be to believe the audacious but ultimately hollow claims made by these kinds of unscrupulo­us clinics or others selling so- called cures,” he said.

He singled out the treatments offered by California Stem Cell Treatment Centers: “I especially won’t allow cases such as this one to go unchalleng­ed, where we have good medical reasons to believe these purported treatments can actually harm patients and make their conditions worse.”

 ?? Raquel Maria Dillon Associated Press ?? DR. MARK BERMAN takes cells from a patient’s back in 2014 as part of an experiment­al stem- cell procedure at his Beverly Hills clinic.
Raquel Maria Dillon Associated Press DR. MARK BERMAN takes cells from a patient’s back in 2014 as part of an experiment­al stem- cell procedure at his Beverly Hills clinic.

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