Obviously more hoops to jump through, but i shall live in hope and i thought this announcement was worth sharing.
It was on the morning TV news todayIf this was a true breakthrough, it would not be only reported by a science journalist at the Telegraph but make headlines all over the world.
So I won't hold my breath here but only say hmm ...
annelise
I haven't read the journal article yet. I'll try and find it later.
Producing sufficient working cells is absolutely a breakthough Sadly it is only part of the problem. We already know that the results of transplanting donor cells are not a cure.
Here is a summary of the steps needed according to another researcher in the field (slides from Univ. Copenhagen Global Diabetes Mooc_
View attachment 7375
So not only do you have to produce the stem cells, you either have to encapsulate them to prevent the autoimmune attack or you have to find another way to prevent it entirely. You then have to test on non primates/ test on large mammals (pigs) test on primates and then on humans. Finallly you have to be able to create a manufacturing facility that can reliably turn out the quantities needed.
So if this guy has sucessfully managed the first part we need to hang out the flags, it's important.
(if nothing else they may be able to be used as donor cells are at the moment . These certainly alleviate the problems with a proportion of people with very brittle diabetes even if most have to go back to taking some insulin sooner or later.)
Cure... well those other bridges have to be crossed/
Another article here - http://www.independent.co.uk/life-s...ing-cells-in-medical-gamechanger-9785410.html
Indeed as you clearly show there are other hurdles, but i'd always believed the mass production of beta cells to be the most difficult and pivitol step in effectively finding a cure. In the 15 years i've followed research this is probably the most promising announcement i've seen.
The independent article talks about "producing “scalable” quantities of beta pancreatic cells from stem cells in industrial-sized bioreactors and then transplant them into a patient within an implant to protect them from immune attack."
Obviously more hoops to jump through, but i shall live in hope and i thought this announcement was worth sharing.
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