What happens next with FDA & stem cells: lower your expectations?

FDA stem cell meetingIn the total the FDA has held 3 days of public meetings on stem cells in the last few weeks ranging from science to policy and hearing from many parties including patients and even stem cell clinics so the big question now is, “what happens next?”

The FDA has 4 draft guidances pertaining to investigational stem cell clinical procedures and these were the subject of the second meeting that last a couple of days. Soon the FDA’s online commenting period related to these issues will close (you can still make comments here, but don’t expect the comment to appear quickly as I submitted mine 4-5 days ago and it’s still not up).

Once that is done, can we expect the FDA to finalize those guidances? And if it does, will the guidances change at all due to the meetings or online comments on the docket? My sense is that the FDA will take at a minimum months to consider the comments at the meeting and those submitted online so it’ll be 2017 most likely before they are even close to taking a next step at all.

I do not expect the guidances to change substantially. As a stem cell biologist, I didn’t hear anything at the meetings in terms of science or data that provided a compelling rationale to change the guidances. The FDA should base its decisions on the biomedical science.

There were a variety of ideas presented at the meeting for changes or new elements to the stem cell clinical arena including a “middle ground” that would get stem cell therapies to patients more quickly, but the trade-off there is that there would be far less data to support the potential safety and effectiveness of those stem cell products. On the whole this would simply put more patients at risk in my view.

Several speakers mentioned starting a registry for stem cell clinics, but I don’t see that as having a major positive impact as there are too many unknowns and complexities. Who would run the registry and pay for it? Who would oversee it (the FDA?) and what would happen if commercial entities were noncompliant with participating in the registry? What about the already existing clinicaltrials.gov?

A big meme at the FDA meeting was the idea of very widespread functional homology of fat stem cells throughout the body via paracrine signaling. Yes, the heterogeneous cells within “fat stem cell” products do make many growth factors that could act in a paracrine manner, but I don’t buy the idea that this makes them homologous to many diverse tissues in the body and I don’t expect the FDA will either.

The future

The FDA could never finalize the guidances, resulting in either the status quo continuing of thorough oversight of the good citizens of the field and little-to-no action on the stem cell clinics. Or even without finalizing the guidances, the FDA could step up its oversight of stem cell clinics, which would be helpful given that there are around 600 of them in the U.S. operating without FDA approval and the FDA has been issuing <=1 warning letter per year lately.

If the guidances remain (finalized or not) and are the basis for the FDA’s current thinking moving forward, then most adipose stem cell clinics should be subject to FDA action given that they are using more than minimally manipulated cells and hence drugs in an unapproved manner and they are almost always using the cells in a non-homologous manner.

Perhaps in the short run the most likely thing is that nothing will happen. As my state’s governor Jerry Brown once famously said to voters, “lower your expectations” and perhaps that can be applied to the FDA on stem cells. However, I’m not going to do it. I’m going to keep my expectations high on this.

4 thoughts on “What happens next with FDA & stem cells: lower your expectations?”

  1. @Admin So you agree that flap reconstructive breast surgery for cancer patient who have had a mastectomy should be banned?

    http://rickjaffeesq.com/2016/09/16/scariest-attack-personal-freedom-youve-never-heard-big-takeway-fda-gets-way-popular-post-mastectomy-breast-reconstruction-procedure-will-become-illegal/

    “But here is the most egregious example that shows the abject stupidity of what the FDA is trying to do:

    Flap reconstructive breast surgery takes fat (usually belly fat) and builds up the breast. Under the guidance documents, the main function of fat is structural. The main function of a breast (in a woman) is lactation. (Some presenters of the female persuasion who presented at the stem cell public hearing were really annoyed about that characterization). Lactation is a different function than the function of belly fat (structural). Therefore the use the flap procedure is non-homologous, which means the use has to obtain full FDA approval before it can be used outside of FDA approved clinical trials. Many of the presenters used this as an example of why the draft guidelines are wrong. (more details in my last post: http://rickjaffeesq.com/2016/09/13/fda-draft-stem-c…ss-public-policy/ ‎)

    The fact that tens of thousands of women have had this procedure and are walking around feeling better about themselves is irrelevant to the FDA.

    I’d like to meet the idiot who came up with this. Better still, I’d like to put him/her/them in a room with a few mastectomy patients who need the flap surgery, and let them explain to the patients why their belly fat and breasts are any of the FDA’s business.”

    1. @Bill,
      I can see how breast construction using adipose cells might be homologous use. If the fat involved is “boosted” with adipose stem cells or SVF, it could potentially be homologous use there too. However, a lot will depend on if the FDA defines SVF as more than minimally manipulated because if it does (as seems likely based on its draft guidance indicating that as an example), then the SVF is a drug no matter if it is used in a homologous fashion or not. Paul

      1. I understand all that but my question was, “Do you agree that flap reconstructive breast surgery for cancer patient who have had a mastectomy should be banned?”

        That’s a bit leading so I will restate it: “Do you think that flap reconstructive breast surgery for cancer patients who have had a mastectomy using fat tissue from another part of the their own body, not enhanced with SVF, should be regulated by the FDA?”

  2. I agree with your view. Since the cells themselves are considered as a therapeutic means that can be assimilated to “substances” e. g., drugs, they are to comply to a safety standard. Now, that’s something that requires time to define, starting from evaluation measures and criteria.

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