Showing posts with label coverage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coverage. Show all posts

Friday, December 12, 2014

San Francisco Business Times: CIRM 2.0 is 'Business-Friendly,' 'All-Out Charge' for Stem Cell Cures

Official approval yesterday of the California stem cell agency’s new, $50 million fast-track research effort has generated a lengthy piece in the San Francisco Business Times, a weekly newspaper that circulates widely in an area known for its biotech enterprises.

Ron Leuty authored the article, which could be considered an anniversary overview of the agency as much as anything else. The springboard was the CIRM board action yesterday on CIRM 2.0. Kathy Robertson of the Sacramento Business Journal also had a piece albeit briefer.

Leuty described the plan as “business friendly” and critical to the agency’s future if it is to secure funding beyond 2020.  He wrote,  
“CIRM leaders always stressed that the road from research to the clinic would is unavoidably long and winding. But now, as they talk of seeking another round of cash — possibly asking taxpayers for $5 billion to make its mission permanent — they realize that a high-profile medical victory in the next 24 months may be the only realistic way to make their case.”
Leuty said that Randy Mills, who has served as president of CIRM only since May, “is leading an all-out charge to make the agency more responsive with its remaining six years of cash — and to show the results that could convince others that CIRM must continue to be a long-term stem cell research player.”

Leuty continued,
“Plans for a warp-speed CIRM is not without its critics. 
“Some researchers think the agency should be investing more in basic stem-cell research that may provide the progress that could give private investors confidence. They include people like Dr. Arnold Kriegstein, director of the stem cell program at the University of California, San Francisco.
 "'A modest investment in basic science will pay greater dividends,’ Kriegstein said.
 "A speed-focused CIRM may also not be best for taxpayers, said John Simpson, an advocate with Consumer Watchdog and a frequent CIRM critic.
 "’I understand that they want to be more efficient,’ Simpson said. ‘I question whether they can do it with the necessary and thorough vetting of proposals.’" 
Leuty also had this from Kriegstein: 
"Even in pharma, with all the experience and depth, the likelihood of success is relatively small. The stem cell pathway is less certain. There's bound to be more risk." 
The California Stem Cell Report would like to note that the California stem cell community has been all but silent on the Mills’ CIRM 2.0 plan. The agency has had four hearings on the matter since September. The number of persons from the research community commenting at those sessions has numbered less than 10, perhaps less than five. Kriegstein was not on the scene nor was Simpson.

We should also note that researchers, with a few notable exceptions, have rarely appeared before the the CIRM board over the last 10 years as it has set its priorities and established the rules for the funding that have had a major impact already on hundreds of California scientists.

The California stem cell agency offers a valuable opportunity for researchers to influence decision-making and priorities. They should take advantage of it. Coming before the board after the fact and complaining about this or that flaw in CIRM processes is far too late.

Sunday, October 26, 2014

California's Alpha Stem Cell Clinics Garner Little News Coverage

The California stem cell agency’s $34 million Alpha clinic venture last week received minimal attention from the mainstream media.

The effort was also was subordinated by the agency itself, which issued a press release that focused heavily instead on the plan by its new president, Randy Mills, to improve operations at the agency.

News stories, however, led with the action on the Alpha clinics. Articles appeared by Bradley Fikes in the San Diego U-T, Rebecca Kheel in the Orange County Register and in The Sacramento Bee by yours truly. John Schreiber of City News Service in Los Angeles also wrote a brief article that was picked up by smaller outlets.

The occasion was approval of the first stage of the Alpha clinic plan, which was originally budgeted for $70 million by former agency president Alan Trounson and the agency board.

Last Thursday, the agency’s board handed out three awards of $8 million each, trimming the applicants’ proposals by as much as 26 percent.  Next year, the agency is expected to add a $10 million information/data center to the Alpha effort. The center was cut from $15 million earlier this year.

The winners last week were the City of Hope, Duarte, Ca.; UC San Diego and UCLA/UC Irvine. The latter two issued press releases quickly (see here and here), but the City of Hope has still not issued one.

The press releases provided a few more details about the research, including the names of the principal investigators. At UC San Diego, it is Catriona Jamieson, deputy director of the Sanford Stem Cell Clinical Center. For the UCLA/Irvine effort, it is John Adams, a member of the UCLA Broad Stem Cell Research Center and professor in the department of orthopaedic surgery. Donald Kohn and Antoni Ribas are directing the two clinical trialsNormally the stem cell agency identifies the principal investigators in a press release following board action but did not do so in this case.

(An earlier version of this incorrectly said Kohn and Aribas were the principal investigators for UCLA-Irvine.)

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Sacramento Bee and IOM: Restructuring Needed at California Stem Cell Agency

The Sacramento Bee today praised the Institute of Medicine (IOM) recommendations for wide-ranging changes at the $3 billion California stem cell agency.

The newspaper's editorial and an earlier one in the San Francisco Chronicle come as the IOM formally presents its findings this morning to CIRM directors, some of whom would likely lose their seats if the recommendations are implemented.

The Bee said that for years “numerous outside critics” have recommended similar changes at the state agency to avoid conflicts of interest and possible misuse of public funds. The Bee wrote,
“Instead of listening, leaders of this institute(CIRM) – a poster child of how ballot initiatives can be manipulated to create quasi-public institutions with little public oversight – have been consumed by a siege mentality that has prevented any real introspection.”
The Bee noted that about 90 percent of the $1.7 billion handed out by the eight-year-old agency has gone to institutions connected to members of the 29-member governing board. One of the IOM recommendations would bar the board from voting on individual grant applications. Instead, the applications would be voted on as a block.

The Bee continued,
“It is to CIRM's credit that it solicited the Institute of Medicine report last year. Although some taxpayers may blanch at the report's $700,000 price tag, it will be worth the cost if it leads to a restructuring of how CIRM operates. 
“Of course, if it fails in that task, it will only affirm the view of many voters that they should never again endorse a California research initiative, especially one like Prop. 71 that lacks proper controls and accountability over taxpayer dollars.”


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