日本批准利用干细胞疗法治疗眼部疾病
时间:2013-07-26 阅读:3084
日本研究人员获得批准,可以开展利用干细胞疗法治疗老年性黄斑变性(age-related macular degeneration,AMD),一种引起老年人视力下降的主要疾病。日本的研究人员诱导AMD患者身上取下的皮肤细胞使其处于一种类似于干细胞的状态后再将其转至患者,以达到治疗效果。
干细胞具有广泛的性,具有广泛的医疗前景。去年,Kyoto University的Shinya Yamanaka即凭借干细胞领域的研究获得诺贝尔奖。
详细英文报道:
Japanese researchers have won permission to embark on a pioneering clinical study of a stem cell therapy for age-related macular degeneration, a major cause of vision loss in aging patients. The planned trial is being hailed as the first human test of a stem cell therapy made from patients' own cells.
Japan provides an appropriate proving ground for induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cell therapies. Last year professor Shinya Yamanaka of Kyoto University won a piece of a Nobel Prize for his work on converting adult cells into stem cells. The stem cells have broad potential in medicine because they can evolve into a variety to cell types with the potential to repair diseased or damaged organs, and they skirt the political quagmire of harvesting stem cells from human embryos.
As AFP reported, researchers in the Japanese study plan to take skin cells from AMD patients, coax the cells into a stem-like state, and then reintroduce them to the patients. The study calls for testing the therapeutic approach in 6 patients, with the trial set to begin next year in Kobe. Applications to conduct the trial came from the Riken Center for Developmental Biology and the Institute of Biomedical Research and Innovation.
Stem cells offer a whole new way to treat vision problems. Today, AMD patients take injected therapies such as Eylea and Lucentis to combat the disease by inhibiting VEGF to stymie the formation of leaky blood vessels, which lead to deterioration of the eye tissue that is key to central vision.
However, with pioneering clinical trials comes great risk. As professor Chris Mason of University College London noted to the BBC, researchers lack evidence on the safety of iPS cells in humans. The hope is that using patients' own cells to generate the therapies could reduce the risk of their bodies rejecting the stem cells.