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#31 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: London
Posts: 908
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#32 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: florida
Posts: 9,338
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more details.
Aug-01-2012 UM's Miami Project gets FDA approval for clinical paralysis trial The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis received permission from the FDA to begin a Phase I clinical trial to evaluate the safety of transplanting human Schwann cells to treat patients with recent spinal cord injuries (SCIs). Found mainly in the peripheral nervous system, Schwann cells are essential to sending appropriate electrical signals through the nervous system, and Miami Project scientists and supporters believe they are key to finding cures for paralysis. [1] His father, Nick Buoniconti, is a Hall of Famer who played football for the Miami Dolphins and Boston Patriots. He has worked tirelessly since his son was injured to find a cure for spinal paralysis. The two are the heads of the Miami Project to Cure Paralysis that tries to help the thousands suffering from spinal cord injuries in the U.S. The Buoniconti's finally heard good news when the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved a phase one trial to evaluate the safety of making transplants of human Schwann cells as a treatment for those with paralysis. It will be the world's first trial if its kind. One neurosurgeon on the team said the announcement today was as important for their field of study as was the first step taken on the moon to the NASA space program. [2] THE MIAMI PROJECT: In 1985, Barth A. Green, M.D., and NFL Hall of Fame linebacker Nick Buoniconti helped found The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis after Nick's son, Marc, sustained a spinal cord injury during a college football game. The Miami Project's Christine E. Lynn Clinical Trials Initiative will take discoveries found to be successful in laboratory studies and fast track them to human studies with the approval of the FDA. The Miami Project is well positioned and confident that we have the expertise, knowledge, and drive to navigate through the process and continue to initiate new clinical trials in the future. Since its inception, The Miami Project has worked carefully and diligently toward these goals and the results show that the time is right to make these important steps into humans. [3] "When we started The Miami Project, the short-term goal was to improve the quality of life of people living with paralysis, but the long-term goal remains re-establishing function and finding a cure. Today the scientists, clinicians, and technicians who have made this day possible have taken a giant leap forward. The hundreds of millions of dollars and incalculable hours of bench and clinical work invested in this goal have been well spent." "The FDA decision validates the commitment of a family who has turned their own tragedy into hope, and the vision of scientists who have never wavered in their quest to reverse the catastrophic consequences of spinal cord injury." Nick Buoniconti, Co-Founder of The Miami Project, said, "It has been 26 years since my family made a promise to Marc and all those living with paralysis that nothing will stand in the way of us finding a cure, absolutely nothing. FDA approval of this clinical trial is allowing us to follow through on this incredibly important commitment that impacts millions of families each day. This validation of the tireless efforts being undertaken at The Miami Project offers real hope and shows we are closer than ever to curing paralysis." [3] read... http://newsfeedresearcher.com/data/a...s-project.html Spinal-Cord Injury Therapy OK'd by FDA Could Lead to Cures Marc Buoniconti, got older like all of us. http://abcnews.go.com/Health/spinal-...ry?id=16889554 Last edited by manouli; 08-01-2012 at 10:18 AM. Reason: add 1 more article |
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#33 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Florida, USA
Posts: 2,014
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Quote:
I have this little SCI and my teenage daughter is totally insulin dependent as a result of Type I diabetes. I have chosen to support others in my giving to find a cure for SCI and Type I Diabetes, but at the same time I appreciate the efforts of MP and DRI and their donors, especially since I know both of them are rather small organizations founded and in part funded by families and people with SCI and Type I, respectively. I know they are real stakeholders and the folks running them actually have the injury/disease. They care. This is all I am saying. I am not really talking to you FPF.
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2012 SCINetUSA Clinical Trial Support Squad Member Please join me and donate a dollar a day at http://justadollarplease.org and copy and paste this message to the bottom of your signature. |
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#34 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 1,153
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__________________
JimmyMack Member: New Jersey Commission on Spinal Cord Reasearch http://www.state.nj.us/health/spinalcord/index.shtml |
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#35 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 17
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This is what Kimberly Anderson had to say about this step.
The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, a Center of Excellence at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, has received permission from the Food and Drug Administration to begin a Phase 1 clinical trial to evaluate the safety of transplanting human Schwann cells to treat patients with recent spinal cord injuries. We are not recruiting anybody until we obtain approval from our Institutional Review Board. This trial is just 1 brick in the wall. We will continue working with our scientific colleagues to test other “bricks” in the wall to ultimately develop a strong defense to prevent or reverse the many effects of paralysis. The approval to move forward with this trial should represent hope for all people living with SCI. There are so many scientists dedicated to developing safe and effective treatments for SCI; we at the Miami Project are but a few. We are all determined, however, to collaborate and move promising treatments forward in a safe and effective manner to ultimately benefit everyone with SCI. What is a brief overview of the trial? A potential subject would have to agree to participate within 5 days after his/her injury, which is considered the acute phase. At that point, he/she would have a biopsy of a nerve in one leg to obtain his or her own Schwann cells. The Schwann cells then need to grow in a culturing facility for 3 to 5 weeks to multiply in number and undergo purification. By the time the Schwann cells are actually transplanted into the site of spinal cord injury, the participant would actually be 26-40 days post-injury, which is considered the sub-acute phase. All procedures would be conducted in Miami at The Miami Project, the University of Miami Hospital, and at Jackson Memorial Hospital. We will be following participants for 1 year after the transplantation surgery and evaluating their neurologic status, medical status, pain symptoms, and muscle spasticity very closely. What is the goal of the clinical trial? Safety. The goal of every phase I clinical trial is to demonstrate safety. We have designed a clinical trial that will minimize risk and maximize evaluation of safety. Is this a cure for paralysis? No. The spinal cord is a very complex organ, after all it, in combination with the brain, controls every single aspect of our body. Hence, when the spinal cord sustains damage people lose more than just the ability to walk. Aside from the loss of movement and sensation, almost every single SCI results in the loss of bladder and bowel control. Depending on where in the spinal cord the injury occurs, there may be additional impairments in sexual function, loss of the ability to regulate body temperature and blood pressure, reduced breathing and coughing capacity, and inefficient metabolism of food. Inside the spinal cord, there is a multitude of damage. First, there is primary damage. In regard to traumatic injury, the primary damage is a direct result of the impact of whatever caused the injury (ex. fall, gunshot, car crash, etc.). Second, waves of biological events are triggered by the primary damage that ends up causing secondary damage. The main contributor to the secondary damage is the immune system. The end result is that spinal cord tissue that was not damaged by the primary impact ends up dying. Third, cells die in and around the injury site. These include motor nerve cells (motoneurons), sensory nerve cells (sensory neurons), relay nerve cells (interneurons), and multiple types of support cells called “glia” (astrocytes, oligodendrocytes). Fourth, individual nerve fibers (axons) running up and down the spinal cord get severed. The cell bodies of these severed axons are located away from the injury site and often remain alive; however, they can no longer communicate. Fifth, inhibitory scar tissue develops around the injured area. So, it does not make sense then, to expect one intervention to be able to repair all the different types of damage that occur and restore all of the different functions that are impaired. Schwann cells are one component of a multi-faceted cure. What age groups are included in the trial? 18-50 years old at the time of spinal cord injury What injury levels are included in the trial? T3 to T11, ASIA Impairment Scale grade A Will the trial need to include both men and women, or the first 8 who meet the criteria and consent? Men and women will be eligible for the trial, however, the first 8 people who meet all of the inclusion criteria, agree to participate, and undergo transplantation of their Schwann cells will be the participants. Will the people included in this trial be able to receive hypothermia? No, that would confound the interpretation of the results of this trial. What do we hope to learn from this study? Safety. First, we hope to demonstrate that we can insert a needle into the center of the spinal cord injury site without causing any damage. Second, we hope to demonstrate that transplanting one’s own Schwann cells into the thoracic cord does not cause additional damage. How long will it take to complete this trial? It could take 2-3 years from the time we enroll the first subject until the final subject is 1 year post-transplantation. Why does it take so long to complete the trial? There are many reasons. 1) Only about 25% of all spinal cord injuries are between T3-T11 and, of those, many sustain additional trauma during the accident, which will exclude them from this particular trial. 2) For the first 2 subjects, there is a 1 month waiting period between the time of transplantation surgery and enrollment of the next subject; this leads to about 2 ½ - 3 months between enrollments. Realistically, it could take 7 ½ - 9 months to enroll and transplant the first 3 subjects in the trial. After that, we can enroll 1 subject each month. So, best case scenario, it could take 12 – 15 months to get all 8 subjects enrolled and transplanted. 3) Each subject will be followed for 1 year following the transplantation procedure to analyze safety. Therefore, it could take 2 – 2 ½ years from enrolling the first subject to collecting the final data from the last subject. The data will then need to be analyzed and submitted to the FDA. In light of Geron shutting down their trial, what are the guarantees that the same will not happen to this trial? The Miami Project is committed to moving basic science discoveries forward into clinical trials for people living with spinal cord injury. Being based within an academic institution, the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, we are driven by factors different from corporations in the business world. Our goal is to translate safe, promising discoveries to clinical trials where they can be thoroughly evaluated and ultimately approved by the FDA for medical use. Why does this trial include only acutely injured people? The main reason we are doing new injuries first is because we had more animal data in that setting and it allowed us to seek FDA approval faster. Getting faster FDA approval means going into people faster, which means finding out about human safety faster. Will the trial eventually include chronically injured people? This specific clinical trial will not include chronically injured people. We are currently conducting more animal chronic transplantation preclinical studies and we will soon being a combined exercise and locomotor rehabilitation study for chronically injured people to determine the minimum exercise and rehabilitation needed to prepare people for transplantation surgery and to ensure that they are neurologically stable. We will take all of that data and design another clinical trial specifically for people with a chronic injury. We will submit that in addition to safety data generated by the acute trial to the FDA for approval. How can I get my loved one in this trial? First, we are actively seeking ethical approval by the University of Miami Institutional Review Board. Once we receive that we will begin recruitment for the trial. If you have a loved one who has had a thoracic spinal cord injury less than 5 days ago, call the Miami Project Education Department at 305-243-7108 for information and preliminary screening. If you or your loved one has a spinal cord injury that is more than 5 days old, we recommend staying healthy, being active, and participating in the studies that are currently approved, such as exercise, rehabilitation, spasticity, pain, etc. Think of this as our building block to developing the most effective treatments for people living with SCI. The best way for anyone to get access to these treatments fastest is to keep healthy and in very good condition so that he/she can qualify for clinical trials as they become available. For treatments to go all the way through multiple clinical trials and become mainstream medical practice in the “clinic”, it could take 10-15 years or more depending on the intervention being tested. Participating in clinical trials not only helps us move the field forward faster, but may also benefit the clinical trial participants faster than waiting. Kim Anderson-Erisman, Ph.D. Research Associate Professor, Department of Neurological Surgery Director of Education, The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis |
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#36 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 17
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I have participated in some trials at the miami project and i think i will continue to do so in the future, (hoping to do it for wise trails too if posible). I don't think anyone got the answers yet, but I do believe most people looking for a cure have the right intentions. Volunteering to their trials is for me a way to help the community.
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#37 |
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Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Wisconsin USA
Posts: 9,114
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If they aren't adding hypothermia are they treating the participants with methyprednisolone? I find it hard to believe they got FDA approval before IRR.
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Courage doesn't always roar. Sometimes courage is the quiet voice at the end of the day saying, "I will try again tomorrow." Disclaimer: Answers, suggestions, and/or comments do not constitute medical advice expressed or implied and are based solely on my experiences as a SCI patient. Please consult your attending physician for medical advise and treatment. In the event of a medical emergency please call 911. |
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#38 |
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Senior Member
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Nothing for chronics!
How can they look Mark in the face and tell him that they aren't doing chronic trials any time soon. All that money, all these years and still nothing for chronics. Makes you appreciate even more what Dr. Young is doing on a shoe-string budget.
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"And, in the end, the love you take is equal to the love you make." |
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#39 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: USA
Posts: 1,646
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You're right. Geron was only able to get the 5 and they had multiple sites available. The financial drain over such a long period helped bring the trial to a close.
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http://spinalcordresearchandadvocacy.wordpress.com/ |
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#40 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: PNW
Posts: 6,297
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Quote:
years, regardless of where they're at compared to other research. MP could still be in a safety phase for treadmill studies while a treatment for chronic sci is available, and they'd still probably receive support from the Buonicontis. I couldn't care less if MP has been misunderstood and they're sincerely working toward a cure for chronic sci or not. The fact remains that they're way behind and a treatment won't come to fruition on just good intentions. |
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