May 8, 2024 #1 Local News, Information and Event Source for the Century City/Westwood areas.

Cedars-Sinai Develops New Gene Therapy to Combat Lou Gehrig’s Disease

Cedars-Sinai announced Thursday its regenerative medicine investigators have received approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to test a combination stem cell-gene therapy they developed to stall the progression of Lou Gehrig’s disease.

The approval allows patients to receive a new investigational drug in a few months when the study begins at the Cedar-Sinai Board of Governors Regenerative Medicine Institute.

This will be the first clinical trial to test the safety of this type of therapy, developed with the intention of preserving leg mobility in patients with Lou Gehrig’s disease, also called amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, which attacks motor neurons, cells that control muscles.

Enrollment could begin by the end of this year.

There is no effective treatment for the disease, only medications to alleviate symptoms, such as muscle spasms, or mechanical devices to help patients breathe. As a result, this clinical trial is seen by many as significant.

“Any time you’re trying to treat an incurable disease, it is a long shot, but we believe the rationale behind our new approach is strong,” said Clive Svendsen, director of the Cedars-Sinai Board of Governors Regenerative Medicine Institute, who has spent a dozen years developing the new approach.

The new approach, funded by the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine and outlined in a 4,600-page application to the FDA, involves engineering stem cells to produce an important protein — glial cell line derived neurotrophic factor. The stem cells producing GDNF then can protect the motor neurons that allow impulses to pass from the brain or spinal cord to a muscle.

When a healthy person wants to move a leg, for example, the brain sends a signal along that pathway to the motor neuron that enables the movement. Patients with ALS develop progressive paralysis as the disease causes motor neurons to die.

Motor neurons that die in ALS don’t exist in a vacuum — they have support cells called glia that enable the motor neurons to live and operate,” said Svendsen, the Kerry and Simone Vickar Family Foundation Distinguished Chair in Regenerative Medicine.

“What we and others have found in ALS is that the support cells become sick and lack certain proteins that keep motor neurons alive. When the support cells die, the motor neurons also die, causing paralysis that gets worse and worse until the patient can no longer move.”

Svendsen and his team reasoned that if they could keep motor neurons alive by providing the supporting glial cells that make the necessary protein, then perhaps they could improve leg mobility.

Their theory spurred the team to develop this combined stem cell and gene therapy approach. The stem cells engineered to produce GDNF are replicated until billions of cells are formed.

When the protein-enhanced stem cells are infused into the patient’s spinal cord, they generate glial support cells that produce GDNF. The hope is that these support cells will, in turn, keep the motor neurons alive.

“This is a highly innovative approach to a disease that has mystified medicine for generations,” said Dr. Shlomo Melmed, Cedars-Sinai executive vice president for Academic Affairs, dean of the medical faculty and the Helene A. and Philip E. Hixon Distinguished Chair in Investigative Medicine.

The combination of cutting-edge stem cell science, developing a new device to inject the cells, our outstanding research laboratories and the direct involvement of neuroscientists, neurosurgeons and neurologists made this CIRM-funded project possible.”

The stem cell implantations for ALS patients involved in the clinical trial could begin by the end of the year, Svendsen said.

Participants will come from the ALS Clinic at Cedars-Sinai, and the trial will be led by Dr. Robert Baloh and Peggy Allred. The neurosurgical team will be led by Dr. J. Patrick Johnson.

Patients eligible to be considered for the trial must be experiencing ALS-caused weakness in their legs. Cell implantations will take place during a five-hour surgical procedure in which a neurosurgeon will remove a piece of bone in the lumbar region of the patient’s lower back.

Using an investigational device developed specifically for this trial, the surgeon will inject the stem cells directly into the patient’s spinal cord in a section that governs movement on only one side of the body.

Neither the patients nor the physicians caring for the patients will know which side has received the stem cells.

“We will follow the patients for a year and measure the strength in each leg,” Svendsen said.

“In ALS, usually the legs lose strength at the same time. This is a small safety trial to ensure the cells releasing GDNF do not have any negative effects on leg function. If safe, we plan a larger future trial to see if this therapy can improve strength in the treated leg.”

Patients seeking information about potentially participating in the clinical trial should call (310) 423-1791.

The research leading to the clinical trial has been funded by a $16.8 million grant from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine.

 

Cedars-Sinai

Related Posts

(Video) Taste of the Nation Culver City to Benefit the Charity No Child Hungry

May 8, 2024

May 8, 2024

Delicious food and drink from local restaurateurs for a great cause. @centurycitywestwoodnews Taste of the Nation Culver City to Benefit...

Brentwood Couple Sues City of Los Angeles Over Marilyn Monroe Home Demolition

May 7, 2024

May 7, 2024

Legal Battle Begins as Owners Seek to Raze Iconic Residence The owners of a Brentwood property, once inhabited by Hollywood...

Ariana Madix and Katie Maloney Set Opening Date for Sandwich Shop ‘Something About Her’

May 7, 2024

May 7, 2024

Katie Maloney Shares Intriguing Instagram Story Teasing the Restaurant Opening After facing two years of hurdles, including permit issues, and...

UAW Local 4811 Authorizes Strike Vote Over UCLA and UCSD Administrations’ Actions

May 7, 2024

May 7, 2024

Union Urges Vote in Favor of Strike Authorization After Student and Worker Injuries The UAW Local 4811 has authorized a...

San Gabriel Valley Man Sentenced to 20 Years for Murder-For-Hire Plot Against Brentwood Resident

May 7, 2024

May 7, 2024

Arthur Raffy Aslanian found guilty in federal court; co-conspirator faces sentencing A man from the San Gabriel Valley received a...

UCLA Chancellor Announces Investigation Into Attack on Student Encampment

May 7, 2024

May 7, 2024

Chancellor Block’s Statement Comes Five Days After Violent Assault on Campus A full five days after the terrifying events of...

Mass Arrest of UCLA Students and Journalists Creates Uproar and Criticism of UCLA

May 7, 2024

May 7, 2024

Students, Journalists, and Former Mayoral Candidate Among Those Detained UCLA’s Parking Structure 2 was the site of another mass arrest...

UCLA Faculty Members Stage Protest at Hammer Museum Gala

May 6, 2024

May 6, 2024

Demand Amnesty for Pro-Palestinian UCLA Students Twenty UCLA faculty members staged a protest Saturday night outside the UCLA Hammer Museum’s...

UCLA Chancellor to Establish New Campus Security Office Amid Criticism and Independent Review

May 5, 2024

May 5, 2024

Block Faces Backlash for Handling of Pro-Palestine Encampment Attack and LAPD Raid In the aftermath of the four-hour attack on...

Hammer Museum Gala Honors Director Ann Philbin in Star-Studded Event

May 5, 2024

May 5, 2024

Sold Out Gala Raises Record-Breaking Funds for Museum On Saturday, May 4, 2024, the Hammer Museum rolled out the red...

Brentwood, Palisades, and West LA Branch Libraries Weekly Events Update

May 5, 2024

May 5, 2024

Check Out This Week’s Schedule of Activities and Storytimes Brentwood Branch Library is gearing up for a quiet Wednesday this...

Wise & Healthy Aging Goes Gray on Denim Day

May 3, 2024

May 3, 2024

In observance of April’s Sexual Assault Awareness Month, a nonprofit that advances the dignity and quality of life for older...

Kesha to Headline WeHo Pride Presents Friday Night at OUTLOUD Music Festival

May 3, 2024

May 3, 2024

West Hollywood Gears Up for a Weekend of Electrifying Performances The City of West Hollywood has announced that pop sensation...

An Interview With the Owners of Tito’s Tacos, Lynne Davidson and Wirt Morton

May 3, 2024

May 3, 2024

New Menu Items, This Year’s Fiesta Mexicana and a New Documentary By Dolores Quintana With the new chicken burrito slated...

CDC Investigates E. coli Outbreak Linked to Organic Walnuts Distributed on the Westside

May 3, 2024

May 3, 2024

Walnuts From Gibson Farms Have Sickened Six People in California Health officials from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention...