18.06.2007 11:30:00
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StemCells, Inc. Announces Important Milestone in Batten Disease Clinical Trial
StemCells, Inc. (NASDAQ: STEM) today announced that the Phase I clinical
trial of its proprietary HuCNS-SC™ product
candidate (purified human neural stem cells) has successfully completed
enrollment of the low-dose cohort and will proceed to the high-dose
cohort. This trial is designed to evaluate the safety and preliminary
efficacy of the HuCNS-SC product candidate as a treatment for infantile
and late infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL), also often
referred to as Batten disease. To date, three patients out of a planned
total of six have been transplanted with HuCNS-SC cells. A review of the
trial data to date, conducted by an independent Data Safety Monitoring
Committee comprised of experts in pediatric neurosurgery, pediatric
neurology, solid organ transplantation, and genetics, has identified no
safety issues that would preclude advancing the trial to the next dose
level.
"This is a significant milestone for the trial
and StemCells, Inc. We are halfway through the planned enrollment in the
first FDA-approved clinical investigation of purified human neural stem
cells. The first patient enrolled in the trial has now reached the
halfway point of the study and completed a number of important
assessments. To date, all three patients have tolerated the
transplantation and have returned home,” said
Stephen Huhn, M.D., F.A.C.S., F.A.A.P., Vice President and Head of the
Neural Program of StemCells, Inc. "We are
encouraged by the progress of the trial, but remain mindful of the
difficult challenges involved with the development of novel
therapeutics. We are also grateful for the participation of the families
in this study and the commitment of the research staff at OHSU. Batten
disease is a terrible affliction, and this trial is the first step on
the path toward a treatment for this devastating disease and potentially
other lysosomal storage disorders.”
The clinical trial is being led by co-principal investigator Robert
Steiner, Vice Chairman of Pediatric Research at Doernbecher Children's
Hospital, and Professor of Pediatrics and Molecular & Medical Genetics
in the OHSU School of Medicine; co-principal investigator Nathan Selden,
Campagna Associate Professor of Pediatric Neurological Surgery and Head
of the Division of Pediatric Neurological Surgery, Doernbecher and OHSU
School of Medicine; co-investigator Thomas K. Koch, M.D., F.A.A.P.,
F.A.A.N., Director of Pediatric Neurology and Professor of Pediatrics
and Neurology at Doernbecher, OHSU School of Medicine; and
co-investigator Amira Al-Uzri, M.D., M.C.R., associate professor of
pediatrics (pediatric nephrology and hypertension), and director of the
pediatric kidney transplant program at Doernbecher Children's Hospital,
OHSU School of Medicine.
About Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis (Batten Disease)
Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis is a fatal neurodegenerative disorder
brought on by inherited genetic mutations. The disorder afflicts infants
and young children, and the three most common forms of NCL—infantile,
late infantile and juvenile onset—are often
referred to as Batten disease. All forms have the same basic cause—lack
of a lysosomal enzyme—and have similar
progression and outcome. Children with NCL suffer seizures, progressive
loss of motor skills, sight and mental capacity, eventually becoming
blind, bedridden and unable to communicate.
Infantile or late infantile NCL is brought on by inherited mutations in
the CLN1 gene, which codes for palmitoyl-protein thioesterase 1
(PPT1) or in the CLN2 gene, which codes for tripeptidyl peptidase
I (TPP-I), respectively. The consequence of these gene mutations is
either a defective or missing enzyme that leads to accumulation of
lipofuscin-like fluorescent inclusions in various cell types. These
non-degraded lysosomal inclusions accumulate to the point of
interference with normal cellular function and ultimately lead to the
pathological manifestations of the disease. One way to treat the disease
is to provide the brain with a replacement source of functional enzyme
that can be taken up by the enzyme-deficient cells.
About HuCNS-SC™ Cell-Based Therapeutic
StemCells’ HuCNS-SC cell-based therapeutic
product candidate is purified human neural stem cells prepared under
controlled conditions. When HuCNS-SC cells are transplanted into the
brain of a mouse model developed to mimic the human form of infantile
NCL, the cells spread throughout the brain and produce the missing
lysosomal enzyme. The enzyme level increases and continues to do so over
time after the transplant. Thus, placement of HuCNS-SC cells in
appropriate places in the brain provides the prospect of long-term
delivery of the missing lysosomal enzyme. In laboratory studies,
HuCNS-SC cells also produce the lysosomal enzyme missing in late
infantile NCL, the other subtype being studied in the clinical trial.
The production of both enzymes by HuCNS-SC cells provides a scientific
rationale for enzyme replacement and cellular rescue in these two
subtypes of NCL.
About StemCells, Inc.
StemCells, Inc. is a clinical-stage biotechnology company focused on the
discovery, development and commercialization of cell-based therapeutics
to treat diseases of the nervous system, liver and pancreas. The Company’s
programs seek to repair or repopulate neural, liver or other tissue that
has been damaged or lost as a result of disease or injury. StemCells has
pioneered the discovery and development of HuCNS-SC cells, its highly
purified population of human neural stem cells. The cells are expandable
into cell banks for therapeutic use, which offers the potential of using
normal, non-genetically modified cells as cell-based therapeutics.
StemCells owns or has exclusive rights to more than 50 issued or allowed
U.S. patents and more than 150 granted or allowed non-U.S. patents.
Further information about the Company is available on its Web site at www.stemcellsinc.com.
About OHSU and Doernbecher Children’s
Hospital
Oregon Health & Science University is the state’s
only health and research university, and Oregon’s
only academic health center. OHSU is Portland’s
largest employer and the fourth largest in Oregon (excluding
government), with more than 12,000 employees. OHSU’s
size contributes to its ability to provide many services and community
support activities not found anywhere else in the state. It serves
189,000 patients annually, and is a conduit for learning for more than
3,400 students and trainees. OHSU is the source of more than 200
community outreach programs that bring health and education services to
every county in the state.
As a leader in research, OHSU earned $294 million in research funding in
fiscal year 2006. OHSU serves as a catalyst for the region’s
bioscience industry and is an incubator of discovery, averaging one new
breakthrough or innovation every three days, with more than 3,500
research projects currently under way. OHSU disclosed 116 inventions in
2006 alone, and OHSU research resulted in 28 new spinoff companies since
2000, most of which are based in Oregon.
Doernbecher Children’s Hospital, a division
of Oregon Health & Science University, is a world-class academic health
center that each year cares for more than 56,000 patients from across
the United States. In the most patient- and family-centered environment,
children receive outstanding cancer treatment, specialized neurology
care, highly sophisticated heart surgery, and care in many other
pediatric specialties. In addition to several locations in the Portland
metropolitan area, Doernbecher’s pediatric
experts travel throughout Oregon and southwest Washington providing
pediatric specialty care at 13 outreach clinics.
Apart from statements of historical facts, the text of this press
release constitutes forward-looking statements regarding, among other
things, the future business operations of StemCells, Inc. (the "Company”)
and its ability to conduct clinical trials as well as its research and
product development efforts. The forward-looking statements speak only
as of the date of this news release. StemCells does not undertake to
update any of these forward-looking statements to reflect events or
circumstances that occur after the date hereof. Such statements
reflect management’s current views and are
based on certain assumptions that may or may not ultimately prove valid.
The Company’s actual results may vary
materially from those contemplated in the forward-looking statements due
to risks and uncertainties to which the Company is subject, including
uncertainty as to whether results obtained in the animal models of
infantile NCL, spinal cord injury, or other diseases and conditions will
be able to be translated into treatment for humans; uncertainty as to
whether the FDA or other applicable regulators or review boards will
permit the Company to continue clinical testing in NCL or in future
clinical trials of proposed therapies for other diseases or conditions
despite the novel and unproven nature of the Company’s
technology; uncertainties regarding the timing and duration of, and
enrollment of patients in, any clinical trials; uncertainties regarding
the Company’s ability to obtain the increased
capital resources needed to continue its current research and
development operations and to conduct the research, preclinical
development and clinical trials necessary for regulatory approvals;
uncertainty regarding the validity and enforceability of the Company’s
patents; uncertainty as to whether HuCNS-SC and any products that may be
generated in the future in the Company’s stem
cell programs will prove safe and clinically effective and not cause
tumors or other side effects; uncertainty as to whether the Company will
achieve revenues from product sales or become profitable; and
other factors that are described under the heading "Risk
Factors” in Item 1A of the Company’s
Annual Report on Form 10-K.
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