«Weiss is not following the usual steps of clinical studies," Meredith Cohn reports for the Baltimore Sun. «Among other things, he didn’t test his treatment theories first on lab animals or using computer models, or randomise his trials by using either stem cells or placebos in study participants. He didn’t test the procedure for safety on a small group before moving to a larger trial.»
Essentially, the 'traditional route' of lab-to-animals-
All he had to do was register his human trials with the US National Institutes of Health (NIH), which usually requires approval from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) before any new or established drugs can be tested on humans.
The catch is that stem cells aren’t classified as a drug — they’re extracted from a patient’s body, go through very little processing, and are used on that same patient, so Weiss was able to bypass FDA approval to register his NIH trials. He did need approval and oversight from an ethics review panel, and got his from the International Cellular Medicine Society, an independent,
So Weiss, who is practicing independently of any university or research institution, is now free to charge around US$20,000 per patient to perform his stem cell treatment, and offers no promises of a cure to his patients.
But according to Cohn, Weiss reports that 60 percent of his 278 patients — who have gone blind because of diseases such as macular degeneration and glaucoma — have regained some sight following the procedure. He’s published a case study on Belton in the journal Neural Regeneration Research.
Belton lost her sight in a matter of weeks in 2009 due to a severe case of optic neuritis — inflammation of an optic nerve that causes progressively blurred vision because the nerve could no longer communicate with the brain. Until recently, dark shadows were the only thing should could make out, and she used a cane and various technological devices to help her function.
After undergoing Weiss’s 4.
We should point out that the procedure is by no means a cure — Belton is still considered to be legally blind, and rather than seeing everything now, she can only make out 'islands' of sight in a sea of nothing, Cohn reports. But you’d be
The problem — likely confounded by the fact that Weiss cut so many corners — is that no one can explain how the treatment actually works.
For example, how does he explain the fact that Belton has regained sight in both her eyes, despite the fact that the stem cells were injected into her right eye’s retina and left eye’s optic nerve? Does that mean it doesn’t matter where the stem cells are injected into the eye, and if that’s the case, how does that even work?
Weiss says he or someone else will figure that out eventually, but previous research points to two possibilities — either the injected stem cells revive malfunctioning stem cells in the eye, or they replace them.
«We didn’t know how penicillin worked for many years, but it saved many lives in the meantime," Weiss told the Baltimore Sun. «It is hubris to think that something can’t work until you understand how it does. … It is more important what the patient sees, not what I see.»
Right now, there are a number of clinical studies in the US that are also investigating the potential of stem cell treatments, but the earliest results of those are not expected until later this year. And late last year, we reported on the first person in the UK to receive stem cell treatment for their blindness (the results are still yet to be announced), so we are definitely going to hear much more about this in the near future.
What other researchers in the field are really hoping for is a proper report on Weiss’s 278 patients, so it can be
Another drawback of pursuing results before fully understanding the science is that it’s not clear if further treatment will hurt or hinder Belton and Weiss’s other patients’ progress. Belton’s scheduled to receive more stem cell injections, but has been warned that while it could give her more sight, it could also take away the sight that’s been restored.
Source: http://www.vtapersolution.com/avoid/?gclid=CK2K5cPTpMsCFYF5cgod_4oIaw