Subscribe to daily environment news





 

Click for news Click for pictures
National Tree Day

Planet Ark Home


Stem Cell Therapy Will Need Watchdogs - Scientists
Mail this story to a friend | Printer friendly version

UK: November 16, 2005


LONDON - Regulatory agencies will be needed to oversee the use of stem cells when current experimental therapies are ready to be tested in humans, scientists said on Tuesday.


They told a meeting on the ethical, legal and social issues surrounding stem cell research that the potential new treatments for illnesses ranging from heart disease and diabetes to Alzheimer's and Parkinson's are still 5 to 15 years away.

But how stem cell therapy will be used in humans and its safety and therapeutic benefits must be looked at very carefully.

"You need to have regulation that is appropriate," said Dr Stephen Minger, a leading stem cell researcher at King's College London.

"It needs to be assessed rigorously long before we go into human patients simply because it is an unproven technology and we have no experience putting these cells into patients," he added.

Professor Martin Evans, of the University of Cardiff in Wales said an international, rather than local or national agencies, may be needed.

Stem cells are master cells in the body that can develop into any cell type. Scientists believe they could act as a type of repair system for the body.

But their use is controversial because the most promising stem cells for treating human diseases are derived from very early human embryos left over from fertility treatments.

Embryonic stem cell research involves the destruction of embryos. In the United States, federal funds for experiments using embryonic stem cells are restricted.


EXPORT SPARE EMBRYOS

Professor Jan Helge Solbakk, of the University of Oslo in Norway, told the meeting of researchers, patient groups and policy makers that countries which allow fertility treatments but ban embryonic stem cell research should export their spare embryos to nations that do.

"My message to these countries ... is that one cannot continue to ban this research while at the same time silently accepting it will import any future therapies. That is a kind of double standard," said Solbakk.

Minger said he supported Solbakk's suggestion.

"Embryos are in short supply. That is one of the major stumbling blocks in the research," he added.

The sourcing of donated embryos and eggs to create cloned human embryos for stem cell research is a sensitive issue.

Professor Kwang Woo-suk, the scientist at Seoul National University in South Korea who created stem cells with a patient's specific genetic material from cloned embryos, said on Monday his work met government guidelines on ethics.

His comments followed US newspaper reports saying a US scientist suspended collaboration with him over rumours that he had used eggs in the ground-breaking research from a junior scientist in his lab.

Professor Peter Braude, of King's College London, said sourcing of donated eggs for stem cell research poses questions of supply and ethics that need to be addressed.


Story by Patricia Reaney


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE



© 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
top

 
16 NOV 2005
ENVIRONMENT
NEWS

BELGIUM:
EU Court Says Austrian Lorry Ban Illegal

CHINA:
Bird Flu Outbreak Confirmed in Western China

COLOMBIA:
Colombia Recommends Evacuation of Town Near Volcano

EUROPE:
FACTBOX - All About REACH, The EU Chemical Reform Bill

FRANCE:
France Takes New Steps To Fight Global Warming

FRANCE:
EU Commission Backs Chemical Bill Compromise

FRANCE:
Grape Biofuel May Lift Spirits of French Vintners

INDONESIA:
Jakarta Court Dismisses Newmont Civil Suit

NIGERIA:
Nigeria Can't Stop Flaring Right Now, Industry Says

NORWAY:
Norway Takes Oil Bids For Barents Sea Frontier

SIERRA LEONE:
Sierra Leone Soldiers Kill Deadly Six-Foot Leopard

SOUTH KOREA:
INTERVIEW - Indonesia, Vietnam Need Resources to Fight Bird Flu

SWITZERLAND:
Swiss to Vote November 27 on Five-Year GMO Ban

UK:
Stem Cell Therapy Will Need Watchdogs - Scientists

UK:
UK Lakes and Rivers Recovering From Acid Rain

UK:
ANALYSIS - Red Tape Slows Kyoto Pollution Credit Scheme

USA:
Male Fish With Eggs in Sewage off California Coast

USA:
INTERVIEW - WHO Pressing Africa to Prepare For Bird Flu

USA:
FACTBOX - Bird Flu Questions and Answers

USA:
NY Museum Says Darwin's Theory Never More Relevant

USA:
Rebounding US Grizzly Bear May Lose Protection

USA:
Judge Blocks California Sequoia Logging Project

USA:
Montana Revives Bison Hunt After 15-Year Ban

USA:
FBI Settles with Wrongly Accused Environmentalist

VIETNAM:
Vietnam Culls Poultry as Asia Battles Bird Flu



previous day
today's news
next day


This site developed by Frontline, and managed by Planet Ark using RPM-NT.

Site designed by Jon Dee @ Planet Ark.

Radiant