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Bayer reports positive early data for Parkinson’s cell therapy

Farooqji profile image
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The therapy, developed by Bayer’s Bluerock Therapeutics subsidiary, appeared safe and well-tolerated in a 12-person clinical trial.

biopharmadive.com/news/baye...

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Farooqji profile image
Farooqji
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park_bear profile image
park_bear

Good results:

bluerocktx.com/bluerocks-ph...

"the high dose cohort showed an improvement of 2.16 hours in time spent in the “ON” state without troubling dyskinesia compared with baseline after one year. Time spent in the “OFF” state showed a corresponding decrease of 1.91 hours after one year. Participants in the low dose cohort showed an improvement of 0.72 hours in the “ON” state without troubling dyskinesia time compared with baseline and a corresponding decrease of 0.75 hours in “OFF” state time.

In the high dose cohort, a one-year measurement of the effects of bemdaneprocel using MDS-UPDRS Part III measured in the “OFF”-medication state, showed a reduction of 13.0 points compared with baseline. The low dose cohort showed a reduction of 7.6 points."

curlscurls profile image
curlscurls in reply to park_bear

What do you think of those results? Is 13 pts a lot on the UPDRS?

Farooqji profile image
Farooqji in reply to curlscurls

UPDRS reduction of 3.3 points or more is considered as clinically significant.

curlscurls profile image
curlscurls in reply to Farooqji

Thanks. How does it compare to feeling better? I don't have any sense of the scale compared to symptoms.

Farooqji profile image
Farooqji in reply to curlscurls

UPDRS score calculator assesses signs and symptoms of Parkinson's disease as part of diagnosis and progression monitoring

The Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) is a rating tool that includes series of ratings for typical Parkinson’s symptoms which result in the movement hindrances of this disease.

The UPDRS consist of four sections:

Mentation, Behavior And Mood

Activities Of Daily Living (for both “on” and “off”)

Motor Examination

Complications Of Therapy (In the past week)

mdapp.co/unified-parkinson-...

curlscurls profile image
curlscurls in reply to Farooqji

Thanks. The link goes into it a little bit. Thanks that's the first I've seen!

I was very surprised when I started searching that the range of results and more specifics of what it means, wasn't available in results that came up.

curlscurls profile image
curlscurls in reply to curlscurls

So since it doesn't specify which type of changes, it'd be 13 out of 199, so 6.5 % change in symptoms. Question would be whether those changes continue to increase.

Farooqji profile image
Farooqji in reply to curlscurls

Although the progression varies from person to person, the overall score of someone who is 5 ~ 6 years into the disease is around 20 ~ 25. UPDRS scores increased in a linear fashion over 5 years in patients. The reduction of score equal to 13 is quite significant. The improvement (change) in the Bluerock's trial will be clear with the passage of time (whether it further improves or remains constant )

curlscurls profile image
curlscurls in reply to Farooqji

That puts it in much better context. And sure 13 out of 20 to 25 is a huge change. It's still be a huge change at a later point too.

Well that's exciting. Though I agree that I'd much rather see how the stem cells from skin cells testing is doing. Taking immuno suppressant drugs is a big deal.

Thanks for explaining!

Obiora profile image
Obiora

Results look extremely promising

Farooqji profile image
Farooqji in reply to Obiora

Yes its so. But I am surprised that the Kyoto University trial is still under the carpet which was started in 2018. Japanese technology uses patient's own skin cells therefore chances of rejection by the immune system are very low. Bluerock uses Human Embryonic Stem Cell-Derived Midbrain Dopamine Neuron Cell Therapy (MSK-DA01) which necessitates the use of medicines for suppressing the immune system

jeffreyn profile image
jeffreyn in reply to Farooqji

"Japanese technology uses patient's own skin cells"

The Kyoto uni trial is using allogenic (donor-derived) iPSCs:

healthunlocked.com/cure-par...

The Aspen trial is using autologous iPSCs:

healthunlocked.com/cure-par...

Farooqji profile image
Farooqji in reply to jeffreyn

thanks for clarifying. I'll check again

MarionP profile image
MarionP in reply to Farooqji

This about Bluerock cell selection neccesitating having to use an immune suppressor because of host rejection of cells IN YOUR BRAIN??? Cell rejection in your brain. Not exactly the same as a kidney.

WinnieThePoo profile image
WinnieThePoo in reply to MarionP

There are some advantages. Cost and scalability is one. Screening for mutations and abnormalities is another. And building neurons from a different gene pool to the one which went wrong is another. Roger Barker of Cambridge did u very good presentation on the subject.This video was contemporary with my diagnosis. One of the first things my early research turned up. How lucky to be in that group of patients. By 2023 they would be cured. How many have had this surgery?

kpbs.org/news/evening-editi...

"if all goes well during the first trial in 2019..."

Edit: Jeanne Lorings video was from 2018. She is about to graft her first patient. Maybe. It's August 2023

jeffreyn profile image
jeffreyn

Study Record:

classic.clinicaltrials.gov/...

Gallowglass profile image
Gallowglass

I’m skeptical. Bayer = bad IMO. Will wait ten years to see the long term effects

Farooqji profile image
Farooqji in reply to Gallowglass

We should not speculate anything at this stage. Neither we should attach high hopes nor should we be pessimistic

LeharLover62 profile image
LeharLover62 in reply to Gallowglass

Some of us don’t have 10 years unfortunately.

Gymsack profile image
Gymsack

So your saying we should just ignore it ? hahahahahhaha

thanks for the post

Farooqji profile image
Farooqji in reply to Gymsack

Good point. Just keep an eye on it

Farooqji profile image
Farooqji

A very interesting commentary on this trial :

The small-scale trial, whose main aim was to demonstrate the safety of the approach, was sponsored by BlueRock Therapeutics, a subsidiary of the drug giant Bayer. The replacement neurons were manufactured using powerful stem cells originally sourced from a human embryo created an in vitro fertilization procedure.

These clues that the transplants helped came from brain scans that showed an increase in dopamine cells in the patients’ brains as well as a decrease in “off time,” or the number of hours per day the volunteers felt they were incapacitated by their symptoms.

However, outside experts expressed caution in interpreting the findings, saying they seemed to show inconsistent effects—some of which might be due to the placebo effect, not the treatment.

“It is encouraging that the trial has not led to any safety concerns and that there may be some benefits,” says Roger Barker, who studies Parkinson’s disease at the University of Cambridge. But Barker called the evidence the transplanted cells had survived “a bit disappointing.”

Because researchers can’t see the cells directly once they are in a person’s head, they instead track their presence by giving people a radioactive precursor to dopamine and then watching its uptake in their brains in a PET scanner. To Barker, these results were not so strong and he says it’s “still a bit too early to know” whether the transplanted cells took hold and repaired the patients’ brains.

technologyreview.com/2023/0...

jeffreyn profile image
jeffreyn in reply to Farooqji

Great article. Thanks.

See also this "backgrounder" from the same source.

After 25 years of hype, embryonic stem cells are still waiting for their moment:

technologyreview.com/2023/0...

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