Stem cell therapies opportunities for ensuring the quality and safety of clinical offerings : summary of a joint workshop

"Stem cells offer tremendous promise for advancing health and medicine. Whether being used to replace damaged cells and organs or else by supporting the body's intrinsic repair mechanisms, stem cells hold the potential to treat such debilitating conditions as Parkinson's disease, diab...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stem Cell Therapies: Opportunities for Ensuring the Quality and Safety of Unregulated Clinical Offerings (Workshop) (corporate author, -)
Corporate Authors: Stem Cell Therapies: Opportunities for Ensuring the Quality and Safety of Unregulated Clinical Offerings (Workshop) Corporate Author (corporate author), Institute of Medicine (U.S.). Board on Health Sciences Policy, originator (originator), National Research Council (U.S.). Board on Life Sciences, originator
Other Authors: Berger, Adam C., reporter (Reporter), Beachy, Sarah H., reporter, Olsen, Steven, reporter
Format: eBook
Language:Inglés
Published: Washington, District of Columbia : The National Academies Press 2014.
Edition:1st ed
Subjects:
See on Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull:https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009820287606719
Description
Summary:"Stem cells offer tremendous promise for advancing health and medicine. Whether being used to replace damaged cells and organs or else by supporting the body's intrinsic repair mechanisms, stem cells hold the potential to treat such debilitating conditions as Parkinson's disease, diabetes, and spinal cord injury. Clinical trials of stem cell treatments are under way in countries around the world, but the evidence base to support the medical use of stem cells remains limited. Despite this paucity of clinical evidence, consumer demand for treatments using stem cells has risen, driven in part by a lack of available treatment options for debilitating diseases as well as direct-to-consumer advertising and public portrayals of stem cell-based treatments. Clinics that offer stem cell therapies for a wide range of diseases and conditions have been established throughout the world, both in newly industrialized countries such as China, India, and Mexico and in developed countries such as the United States and various European nations. Though these therapies are often promoted as being established and effective, they generally have not received stringent regulatory oversight and have not been tested with rigorous trials designed to determine their safety and likely benefits. In the absence of substantiated claims, the potential for harm to patients - as well as to the field of stem cell research in general - may outweigh the potential benefits. To explore these issues, the Institute of Medicine, the National Academy of Sciences, and the International Society for Stem Cell Research held a workshop in November 2013. Stem Cell Therapies summarizes the workshop. Researchers, clinicians, patients, policy makers, and others from North America, Europe, and Asia met to examine the global pattern of treatments and products being offered, the range of patient experiences, and options to maximize the well-being of patients, either by protecting them from treatments that are dangerous or ineffective or by steering them toward treatments that are effective. This report discusses the current environment in which patients are receiving unregulated stem cell offerings, focusing on the treatments being offered and their risks and benefits. The report considers the evidence base for clinical application of stem cell technologies and ways to assure the quality of stem cell offerings."--
Item Description:Description based upon print version of record.
Physical Description:1 online resource (109 p.)
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN:9780309303033
9780309303019