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$36 Million Recruitment: Names of Researchers Being Lured to California

May 26th, 2013 3:08 am

Here are the names of the researchers being recruited to California by the California stem cell agency with $36 million in awards. The sixth asked not to be revealed since he/she has yet to tell the current institution and are in
negotiations with their new institution

·      Hiromitsu
Nakauchi
of the University of Tokyo, who would be moving to Stanford
University
·      Barry
R. Stripp
of Duke moving to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
·      Richard
Gregory
of Harvard and Children’s Hospital, Boston moving to UC
Santa Cruz
·      Eric
Ahrens
of Carnegie Mellon moving to UC San Diego

Source:
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/uqpFc/~3/Kbc3TScH6ds/36-million-recruitment-names-of.html

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California Stem Cell Agency to Court Patient Groups This Summer

May 26th, 2013 3:08 am

Jonathan Thomas, chairman of the California stem cell agency, said this morning that he and a team from the agency will begin a round of meetings this summer with patient advocate groups throughout the state.

He said the effort is aimed at keeping the groups up to speed on developments at CIRM. While Thomas did not mention it to the agency's governing board, it is also critical that the agency have strong support from patient advocate groups as it tries to develop new sources of funding, either public or private.

The agency will run out of cash for new grants in 2017 and hopes to have a plan for the future before the board later this year. Its initial assumptions include as much as $200 million in onetime public funding with more cash coming from the private sector.

Currently the agency is funded by state bonds at a cost of about $6 billion, including interest. It spends roughly $300 million a year on grants and loans for research.Source:
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/uqpFc/~3/lra474LHezU/california-stem-cell-agency-to-court.html

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Grant Reviewer Conflict in $40 Million Round at California Stem Cell Agency

May 26th, 2013 3:08 am

Internationally renown scientist Lee
Hood
, winner of a National Medal of Science, violated the conflict of
interest policies of the California stem cell agency earlier this
year when he was involved in reviewing applications in a $40 million round to create genomics centers in California.

Lee Hood
Institute of Systems Biology photo
The agency quietly disclosed the
February violation in letters dated April 2 to the leadership of the
California Legislature. The letter (full text below)
said that Hood “agreed that there was a conflict of interest that
he had overlooked.”
The conflict of interest involved a $24
million application that included participation by another eminent
scientist, Irv Weissman of Stanford University, and funding for facilities at
Stanford.
Hood owns property jointly with
Weissman in Montana. In 2008, San Francisco Magazine, in a well-reported piece on the ballot measure that created the stem cell
agency, described the property as a ranch and Hood as Weissman's
“good buddy.” Hood has co-authored research papers with
Weissman. Both are on the scientific advisory board of Cellerant
Therapeutics, Inc.
, of San Carlos, Ca., a firm co-founded by
Weissman. Hood's nonprofit firm, Institute for Systems Biology in
Seattle, lists Stanford as a partner in the genetics of aging in humans. At Stanford, Weissman is director of the Institute
for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine
, whose research
involves aging. Weissman also serves on the Hood's institute's scientific advisory board.
Hood has not responded to an inquiry
yesterday by the California Stem Cell Report for his perspective on
the conflict of interest matter.
The conflict was not discovered by the
agency during the review. It was raised by another reviewer at the
end of the review, which, for the first time in CIRM history, failed
to conclude with a decision supporting any of the proposals.
Reviewers' comments have been sent back to applicants with another
review scheduled for November. The agency said Hood will not take
part in that session.
CIRM spokesman Kevin McCormack said
today that Hood's conflict was “clearly a case of a new reviewer
making an innocent error.” McCormack said it was not a violation of
the state's conflict of interest law. The agency's conflict policies
go beyond economic issues and deal with personal and professional
conflicts. 
The agency's letter to the state legislative leadership said,

“Dr. Hood had not previously
participated in a meeting of the GWG(grant review group), and as a
result, he was not familiar with CIRM’s conflict of interest
policy, particularly the policy’s inclusion of 'personal' conflicts of interest.  Thus, when he completed the conflict of
interest form for the Genomics Awards review, he inadvertently
neglected to indicate that he had a personal relationship with an
investigator who was involved in one component of a joint application
submitted by two institutions. Dr. Hood and the investigator are
close personal friends and their families own vacation property
together. Because of his personal relationship with the
investigator, Dr. Hood had a conflict of interest with respect to the
joint application under CIRM’s conflict of interest policies.”

The agency's letter said that Weissman would have received $11,000 over five years under the terms of the application, but that it also involved  "creation of a data center at one institution and three research projects that would be undertaken at (Weissman's) institution (Stanford). 
The California Stem Cell Report asked the agency about the involvement of CIRM President Alan Trounson, who has
been a guest at the Montana ranch, and whether he recruited Hood as a
reviewer. Last year, Trounson excused himself from participating in
public discussion of another application involving Weissman.
McCormack said,

“Alan helps recruit many reviewers,
including in this case Dr. Hood, but he is not involved in assigning
reviewers to individual applications.”

The conflict of interest involving Hood
was easily detectable in routine searches on the Internet, including
a Google search on the search term “lee hood irv weissman.” The first
two entries in that search yesterday turned up serious red flags.
Asked whether the agency performed “any
sort of serious examination” of the confidential statements of
interests filed by reviewers prior to review sessions, McCormack said,

“Yes, we do a serious examination of
statements of interest from all our reviewers. However, this conflict
was not identified by the reviewer either in the financial disclosure
statement or identified in the conflict of interest list. Normally we
do not check Google for all possible combinations of 15 GWG reviewers
times about 200 individuals listed in these applications. That would
be about 3000 independent Google searches to identify a possible
conflict.”

The agency's legislative letter said
that it plans to “amend its regulations to add greater clarity in
an effort to prevent future conflicts from arising and to augment its
efforts to educate reviewers, particularly new reviewers.”
Our take?
This is the latest in a series of
questionable activities involving the stem cell agency, which is
trying to come up with a plan to sustain itself after its state
funding runs out in 2017(see here, here and here). The agency is
giving more-than-serious consideration to an effort to raise funds
from the private sector, which can lead to new and more difficult
ethical considerations than a state-funded agency would normally face.
What these questionable activities
demonstrate is that the $3 billion agency needs to give much more
thought, to put it mildly, to its policies ranging from conflicts of
interest to incompatible employee/director activities to the conduct
of top management in providing special treatment for donors.
It also is clear that the statements of
interests of reviewers are not examined closely for their accuracy by
CIRM staff and attorneys. McCormack's remarks clearly indicate that
the agency does not think it has time to be sure that no conflicts
exist among its plethora of reviewers. That is precisely the reason
reviewers' statements of interests – economic, professional and
personal – should be made public rather than kept under wraps
by CIRM. Then, interested parties, presumably mainly applicants, can
check a panel of reviewers, if they wish, for conflicts in a
particular round. Obviously, the agency can and should withhold the
names of reviewers examining a specific application – the release
of the names on the panel in a given review session is sufficient.
Tomorrow the CIRM governing board's
evaluation subcommittee meets privately to discuss Alan Trounson's
performance. It appears to be the second part of an evaluation
process that began last October. Trounson's involvement with Weissman
and Hood -- and his actions in connection with a $21,630 gift from a member of the public, albeit a not-so-ordinary member of the public
-- should also be on the evaluation subcommittee agenda.

Source:
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/uqpFc/~3/mIVQtkph_JQ/grant-reviewer-conflict-in-40-million.html

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Nature Reports on Lee Hood Conflict Case

May 26th, 2013 3:08 am

The journal Nature and genomeweb.com
today picked up the story from the California Stem Cell Report about
the conflict of interest case at the California stem cell agency involving renown scientist Lee Hood of
Seattle, Wash.

Science news aggregators on the
Internet also relayed various versions of the story. The facts were
first reported on this blog yesterday. The matter involved a $24
million application for a genome project involving Irv Weissman of
Stanford. Hood was one of the reviewers in the round. Hood and
Weissman are longtime friends and own property together in Montana.
They have also have a number of professional relationships.
In piece by Ewen Callaway, Nature
additionally referred to ongoing conflict of interest issues at the agency,
including the findings of an Institute of Medicine study. Harold Shapiro, head of the study, said the agency directors make "proposals to themselves, essentially, regarding what should be funded. They cannot exert independent oversight." 
The genomeweb item was also brief and
did not mention the IOM study.

Source:
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/uqpFc/~3/xBpF71FS1Ys/nature-reports-on-lee-hood-conflict-case.html

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Text of CIRM Comments on Lee Hood Questions

May 26th, 2013 3:08 am

Here is the full text of the statement
today by Kevin McCormack, senior director for public communications
at the California stem cell agency, in connection with the conflict
of interest issue involving Lee Hood, president of Institute for
Systems Biology
of Seattle, Wash. See here for a story on the matter.

McCormack's comments came in response
to the following questions from the California Stem Cell Report.

“Did (CIRM President Alan) Trounson
recruit Hood to serve on the grants working group?

“Does CIRM perform any sort of
serious examination of the statements of interests of its scientific
reviewers prior to specific review sessions. The conflict involving
Weissman and Hood was easily detected by a Google search. The first
two entries on the search term "lee hood irv weissman"
raise serious red flags. Additionally, I imagine it is more than
common knowledge among many in the scientific community that
these two scientists are longtime friends.”

Here is McCormack's reply,

“Alan helps recruit many reviewers,
including in this case Dr. Hood, but he is not involved in assigning
reviewers to individual applications. Furthermore he expects all
reviewers to declare whatever conflicts they have.  

“Yes, we do a serious examination of
statements of interest from all our reviewers. However, this conflict
was not identified by the reviewer either in the financial disclosure
statement or identified in the conflict of interest list. Normally we
do not check Google for all possible combinations of 15 GWG reviewers
times about 200 individuals listed in these applications. That would
be about 3000 independent Google searches to identify a possible
conflict. While this relationship may be known to some it certainly
was not known to the CIRM staff who checked the conflicts. If it had
been they would have raised it before the meeting.

“It's also important to point out
that Dr. Hood was a new member of this review panel and was not
familiar with our conflict of interest rules. This was clearly a case
of a new reviewer making an innocent error.

“Finally, CIRM’s rules are stricter
than state law, and this would not have been a conflict under
California conflict of interest law.”

Source:
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/uqpFc/~3/1ndmVIt2OlQ/text-of-cirm-comments-on-lee-hood.html

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Adult Stem Cells Knee – Video

May 26th, 2013 12:45 am


Adult Stem Cells Knee
This patient had a devastating distal quadriceps disruption which occurred spontaneously in a body builder. The spontaneous nature of the disruption indicated that after years of weight lifting...

By: William Bennett

Visit link:
Adult Stem Cells Knee - Video

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Adult Stem Cells Anti Aging – Video

May 24th, 2013 1:43 pm


Adult Stem Cells Anti Aging
The evolution of Jeunesse and the scientific breakthrough in Anti Aging using Adult Stem Cells. For more info visit: http://www.adultstemcellsantiaging.com or Like us on Facebook: http://on.fb.me/12irwrI.

By: HumanCellsAntiAging

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Adult Stem Cells Anti Aging - Video

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Wow! Another source of fat stem cells – Video

May 24th, 2013 1:42 pm


Wow! Another source of fat stem cells
http://www.stemcellsarthritistreatment.com A recent study by Koh and colleagues published in the journal Arthroscopy highlighted another source of stem cells...

By: Nathan Wei

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Wow! Another source of fat stem cells - Video

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FDA Has Seized Control of Your Stem Cells – Video

May 23rd, 2013 11:58 am


FDA Has Seized Control of Your Stem Cells
This is the history of how FDA made your own adult stem cells subject to the same regulations as pharmaceuticals, without input from patients and their docto...

By: Mesen Chymal

See the original post here:
FDA Has Seized Control of Your Stem Cells - Video

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History of Cancer Stem Cells – Video

May 23rd, 2013 11:58 am


History of Cancer Stem Cells
Otolaryngology Grand Rounds - 5/9/2013 Speaker: Aggie Janisiewicz, MD, Chief Resident, Otolaryngology, Stanford Hospital Clinics.

By: Lane Library

Original post:
History of Cancer Stem Cells - Video

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Stem Cell Therapy Worldwide – Video

May 23rd, 2013 11:56 am


Stem Cell Therapy Worldwide
http://www.placidway.com/ - Looking for best and affordable stem cell therapy? Placidway offers best and most affordable stem cell therapy with the top docto...

By: placidways #39;s channel

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Stem Cell Therapy Worldwide - Video

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LaViv stem cell therapy for acne scars – Video

May 23rd, 2013 11:56 am


LaViv stem cell therapy for acne scars
Dermatologist and cosmetic surgeon Dr. Melanie Palm of http://www.artofskinmd.com discusses and demonstrates the use of LaVIV, the first available personalized stem...

By: melaniepalm

Read the rest here:
LaViv stem cell therapy for acne scars - Video

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Italy approves controversial stem cell therapy

May 23rd, 2013 10:42 am

(MENAFN - AFP) Italian lawmakers on Wednesday gave their final approval to a law that allows limited use of a controversial type of stem cell therapy which has been condemned by many scientists but has given hope to families of terminally-ill children.

The law gives the go-ahead for therapy being carried out by the Stamina Foundation on dozens of patients to continue, and allows for an 18-month period of clinical trials for the procedure, which had previously been blocked by Italian authorities.

The bill was amended from an earlier version and states the therapy must be carried out under regulatory oversight and using cells made according to the Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) which the Stamina Foundation has not adhered to.

The Stamina Foundation says its treatment is based on mesenchymal stem cells and could treat diseases like spinal cord injury and motor neurone disease.

But leading scientists have warned that there is no evidence to suggest the treatment could work and no way to know that it will not cause harm.

Patients lobbied for the therapy to be given the go-ahead, receiving support from various celebrities including actress Gina Lollobrigida.

At one demonstration, protesters wore T-shirts with the slogan: "Yes to Stamina, Yes to Life".

The association Stem Cell Research Italy has branded the new law as "unacceptable" saying the therapy was not backed up by clinical data published in peer-reviewed academic journals.

US journal Nature said it was a "rogue" therapy.

Here is the original post:
Italy approves controversial stem cell therapy

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Italy approves law on controversial stem cell therapy

May 23rd, 2013 10:42 am

Italian lawmakers on Wednesday gave their final approval to a law that allows limited use of a controversial type of stem cell therapy which has been condemned by many scientists but has given hope to families of terminally-ill children.

The law gives the go-ahead for therapy being carried out by the Stamina Foundation on dozens of patients to continue, and allows for an 18-month period of clinical trials for the procedure, which had previously been blocked by Italian authorities.

The bill was amended from an earlier version and states the therapy must be carried out under regulatory oversight and using cells made according to the Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) which the Stamina Foundation has not adhered to.

The Stamina Foundation says its treatment is based on mesenchymal stem cells and could treat diseases like spinal cord injury and motor neurone disease.

But leading scientists have warned that there is no evidence to suggest the treatment could work and no way to know that it will not cause harm.

Umberto Galderisi from the University of Naples and president of Stem Cell Italy, is among critics of the bill.

He said the clinical trials would "never have been allowed" if scientific accepted practice had been followed.

"This is legislating on the basis of public opinion. It means exploiting suffering. Patients are not lab rats," he told AFP, adding there were "no scientific certainties" the therapy could work.

"We do not want Italy to become one of those countries like China or Ukraine where there are untested scientific trials," he said.

Patients lobbied for the therapy to be given the go-ahead, receiving support from various celebrities including actress Gina Lollobrigida.

See the original post:
Italy approves law on controversial stem cell therapy

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Join our study on Osteoarthritis treated using Stem Cells. This dog was treated using our technology – Video

May 22nd, 2013 12:50 pm


Join our study on Osteoarthritis treated using Stem Cells. This dog was treated using our technology
http://GeckoJointandSpine.com After completing multiple animal studies using autologous adipose cells, We received approval for the conduct of clinical inves...

By: Dr. John Lieurance, DC ND

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Join our study on Osteoarthritis treated using Stem Cells. This dog was treated using our technology - Video

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Are blood stem cells effective? – Video

May 22nd, 2013 12:50 pm


Are blood stem cells effective?
http://www.stemcellsarthritistreatment.com Which stem cells are most effective for treating osteoarthritis? A study published in the journal Arthroscopy by Saw and colleagues has drawn some...

By: Nathan Wei

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Are blood stem cells effective? - Video

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Maria’s Adult Stem Cells Anti Aging Testimonial – Video

May 22nd, 2013 12:50 pm


Maria #39;s Adult Stem Cells Anti Aging Testimonial
Adult Stem Cells Anti Aging have the highest percentage of growth factor complex to super-charge cell renewal. Maria is part of this scientific breakthrough ...

By: HumanCellsAntiAging

Go here to see the original:
Maria's Adult Stem Cells Anti Aging Testimonial - Video

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Scientists successfully clone stem cells-Microblog buzz-May 20, 2013-BON TV China – Video

May 22nd, 2013 12:50 pm


Scientists successfully clone stem cells-Microblog buzz-May 20, 2013-BON TV China
Could you believe that one day you can be cloned with the fast development of technology? Recently researchers from Oregon Health and Science University have...

By: bontvchina

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Scientists successfully clone stem cells-Microblog buzz-May 20, 2013-BON TV China - Video

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Cloning stem cells: What does it mean? – Video

May 21st, 2013 9:46 am


Cloning stem cells: What does it mean?
http://www.cnn.com Cloning stem cells: What does it mean?

By: Joe Marmot

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Cloning stem cells: What does it mean? - Video

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Embryonic Stem Cells Generate Immune System – Video

May 21st, 2013 9:45 am


Embryonic Stem Cells Generate Immune System
Researchers at UC San Francisco have developed thymus tissue from human embryonic cells and used it to generate an immune system in mice. The achievement has...

By: UCSFPublicAffairs

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Embryonic Stem Cells Generate Immune System - Video

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