Grey's Anatomy Sneak Peek: Watch the First Six Minutes of the Intense Season Finale

The Grey’s Anatomy finale is upon us, but we still have time to speculate. So who could be the doctor that kicks off in the finale? Lexie (Chyler Leigh) sure doesn’t look good under that airplane. But could a plane crash be a distraction for a bigger crisis back in Seattle? Are all the originals really safe from the Grim Reaper?

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Was that sneak peek crazy? Or was it crazy? Vote in our poll, and if your best guess isn’t in the choices, let us know who you think the Grim Reaper is after in the comments!

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Grey's Anatomy Sneak Peek: Watch the First Six Minutes of the Intense Season Finale

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Grey's Anatomy's Chandra Wilson Warns About "Sad" Season Finale—Is Anyone Safe?

We caught up with Grey’s star Chandra Wilson as she teamed up with Downy Touch of Comfort to deliver handmade quilts to children in Montefiore Hospital in the Bronx, N.Y. Wilson warns us that the finale will be traumatic: “Grey’s is known for the way we end our seasons, and this will certainly continue that tradition. It will compare as far as how dynamic it is, but the ride is even harder. Even harder.”

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'Grey's Anatomy': Your take?

Image Credit: ABC

Greys Anatomy didnt waste much time making good on that promise to kill a well-loved member of the gang. In fact, it came about 20 minutes into the hour. And the 40 minutes that followed? Possibly the most anxiety-ridden moments of my television life.

Read on for more if youve seen the episode: [Spoilers below!]

Heres the rundown: Lexie died in the plane crash but not before sharing an emotional goodbye with Mark, who by the end of the episode was near death himself. Derek possibly ruined his hand forever after he had to mangle himself to get free after being trapped under debris. Arizona injured her leg badly and was coughing up blood status: TBD. Meredith got stabbed in the leg and had a head injury but was stable enough to help others. And Cristina hurt her arm. Oh, she also lost her shoe but she found it. Truly, that was one of the brightest spots of the episode.

Well, that and Bailey getting engaged to her boyfriend Ben. Yup, while part of the gang was at the crash site, everyone at the hospital had no idea what was going on. I both hated and was thankful for every cut-away back to the hospital. Hated it because it took us away from the crash site; thankful for the same reason.

But now we step away from the crash site for three months. Yup, nothing was really resolved with the crash docs and, as of the end of the episode, help is NOT on the way.

All I can say is this: Hopefully I will have resumed breathing by the time September rolls around.

REMINDER: Come back later for Tanner Stranskys full recap of the ep!

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Grey's Anatomy Season Finale Redux: Which Beloved Doctor Died?

MORE: Fall TV 2012: The Complete Network Schedule

MORE: CW First Look: Check Out Arrow, Beauty and the Beast and Emily Owens, M.D.!

Who will survive to the next season? Are you heartbroken by tonight’s episode? Still praying for a smoke monster? Hug it out or rage away in the comments!

PHOTOS: Grey’s Anatomy’s OMG Moments!

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Anatomy of a campaign ad: "Steel"

The Obama campaign releases an ad labeling his GOP challenger Mitt Romney as a “vampire” who “sucked the life” — and jobs — out of a thriving steel company

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'Grey's Anatomy' season finale recap: A Grey Goes Down

DEREK IN DISTRESS Derek (Patrick Dempsey) found himself stranded and hurt in the forest, after the plane he was traveling on with five other Seattle Grace surgeons crashed

The anticipation of a death is an unsettling experience — even if that death is of a character on television. We viewers went into last nights episode of Greys Anatomy, titled Flight, much like the family member of a cancer patient goes into the hospital for the last time: with complete and utter dread, knowing the end is near. We had the knowledge that one major character wasnt going to be alive at the end of the hour, per interviews that series boss Shonda Rhimes gave. And a plane crash at the end of last weeks episode all but spelled out that the victim would be one of the six doctors on the flight: Meredith Grey, Derek Shepherd, Cristina Yang, Mark Sloan, Arizona Robbins, or Lexie Grey.

Then, last week, Ellen Pompeo, Patrick Dempsey, and Sandra Oh resigned their contracts for next season, so the field of possibilities narrowed to just Arizona, Mark, or Lexie. Seeing as how Arizona and wifey Callie had been put through so much last season with that horrific car wreck, it was basically boiled down to one half — or both? — of will-they-or-wont-they couple Mark and Lexie. It was only about 20 minutes into the episode, then, that it became clear the victim was Lexie, who had been crushed under part of the plane that crashed in the woods.

This being the often-overwrought Greys Anatomy, Lexies final few minutes were full of the requisite melodrama. After it became clear that Mark wasnt going to be able to move the debris off Lexie and save her, he sat with her as she passed away, the bottom-half of her body crushed by the plane. Mark, she told him, despite his disbelief, Im dying. And she made a final request of Mark, the man she had just professed her love to: Please, tell Meredith that I love her and that she was a good sister. Please, tell my dad But Mark didnt want to believe what was happening in front of him: No, youre not dying. You dont die today. But he couldnt stop the inevitable. Were gonna have the best life, you and me. Were gonna be so happy, he told her, obviously responding to her confession from last week. So you cant die, okay? You cant die. Because were supposed to end up together. Were meant to be. And then she passed away, with Mark closing her eyes.

It was an intense death. I mean, how awful was it to watch one of Greys longest-running characters pass away so quickly — and rather unceremoniously? I get that Ms. Rhimes had to do what she had to do — and every show needs to be shaken up once in a while — but I dont love that Lexie was the one to die. Could it have been someone less important somehow? I guess it would have been too obvious to do Kepner. And you probably just dont kill off a hottie like Mark Sloan, right?

NEXT: More on the big crash, Lexie’s death

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Who's Going to Die on the Grey's Anatomy Season Finale?

Grey’s Anatomy

Who’s going to die on the Grey’s Anatomy eighth season finale?

Six doctors Meredith, Derek, Cristina, Mark, Lexie and Arizona crash-landed somewhere in the woods on their way to Boise. Though we’d like to think that April (Sarah Drew), who failed her boards, would kill herself and save us the torment of a more shocking loss the promos seem to indicate that it’s one of the Stranded Six who won’t make it out alive.

Grey’s Anatomy Exclusive Finale Scoop: A Seattle Grace exodus and a “dark and twisty” event

So which character bites the dust? We weigh the pros and cons for each potential Seattle Grace casualty in order from most to least likely to die:

1.Lexie Grey (Chyler Leigh) Why She Will Die: We have come to love Little Grey, so when Shonda Rhimes told us the prospect of a reunion with Mark might be “bittersweet or painful,” we were worried. Our guess? They finally reconcile just in time for one of them to die, which is why they’re both at the top of this list. Why She Won’t: Meredith has already stated that Lexie is one of the reasons she’d stay, so if the writers are planning to keep Mer at Seattle Grace, then why would baby sis have to die?

2. Mark Sloan (Eric Dane) Why He Will Die: Let’s face it, Mark is only interesting when he’s in a relationship with Lexie, and it’s been an entire season since they were dating. And anyway, we’re sick of the will-they-won’t-they dynamic for a couple that was already together! Also: Rhimes’ bittersweet comment above could also apply to Mark. Why He Won’t: Slexie fans would be furious if the duo never did get back together. Plus: Do we really want to see Lexie have another mental breakdown like she did after the shooting?

Exclusive Grey’s Anatomy Video: Which doctors will be leaving Seattle Grace?

3. Arizona Robbins (Jessica Capshaw) Why She Will Die: When Arizona cried to Callie (Sara Ramirez) about the impending loss of her friend Nick, she begged Callie to never leave, but moments later, Arizona was the one who took Alex’s spot on the plane and flew off to Boise. When writers use the old foreshadowing technique like that, we get anxious. Also, how poetic would it be if the one person who wasn’t supposed to be on the plane ended up dying? Writers love that! Why She Won’t: Rhimes might fear the wrath of the LGBT community with whom she works closely with and is receiving a GLAAD award from should she kill off one of the few lesbian characters on network television.

4. Derek Shepherd (Patrick Dempsey) Why He Will Die: His death would singlehandedly reinvigorate the series because it would be a rebirth for Meredith. Sure, she would be sad and go through yet another long “dark and twisty” phase, but to see her come out the other side “bright and shiny” and single again would be a fun journey. (We’ll be expecting your hate mail soon!) Why He Won’t: He just finished the McMansion! In all seriousness, the likelihood of Derek being killed off is slim considering Dempsey, Ellen Pompeo, Sandra Oh, Justin Chambers, Chandra Wilson and James Pickens Jr. all reportedly signed two-year contracts last week, which Dempsey later confirmed at least for himself.

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Grey's Anatomy Finale Shocker: Shonda Rhimes Confirms Two Stars Are "Definitely" Gone for Good

Did you know it's really hard to type when you are ugly crying? Grey's Anatomy's season finale rocked fans to the core tonight, as a certain fan favorite met a gruesome,…

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Cell Signaling Breakthrough May Help Melanoma Treatment

Featured Article Main Category: Melanoma / Skin Cancer Also Included In: Dermatology;Cancer / Oncology Article Date: 16 May 2012 – 10:00 PDT

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A key discovery made by scientists from the Texas University Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) Medical School reveals that cell signaling plays an important role in the fight against melanoma and various other fast-spreading tumors.

The study is published online ahead of the June 5 edition of Current Biology.

About 9,000 people die each year from melanoma (skin cancer), according to the American Cancer Society. The researchers have now discovered the reason as to why BRaf inhibitors, which are frequently used for the treatment of skin cancers do not always work, and most significantly, how these drugs can possibly speed up the growth of cancer in certain patient populations.

Senior author John Hancock, M.B, B.Chir, Ph.D., a John S. Dunn Distinguished University Chair in Physiology and Medicine and chairman of the Department of Integrative Biology and Pharmacology, who is also interim director of the Brown Foundation Institute of Molecular Medicine for the Prevention of Human Diseases at the UTHealth Medical School declared:

A chain of proteins that forms a signaling pathway transmits growth signals from a cell’s surface to the nucleus, whilst the command for dividing cells in order generate new cells is relayed by a chain of four proteins, namely RAS, BRaf, MEK and ERK. This pathway is shared by all cells and is generally very effective, yet difficulties occur when one of the first proteins in the chain is mutated, as both proteins lock the pathway in the ‘on’ position.

BRaf inhibitors are drugs that block the signaling from the second protein, and are successful in treating melanomas with mutant BRaf proteins. However, so far, there are no inhibitors available that can block the first protein (RAS). The team conducted in vivo studies to explore what happens when BRaf inhibitors are applied to human cancer tissues with Ras mutations.

Kwang-jin Cho, Ph.D., the study’s lead author and research fellow at the UTHealth Medical School declared:

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Behavior problems & cell phones linked?

NEW HAVEN, Conn., (WPRI) – A new study links radiation from cell phones to behavioral problems in the offspring of pregnant mice.

The study does not say whether or not cell phone radiation may also be dangerous for pregnant women.

A professor at the Yale School of Medicine in New Haven, Dr. Hugh Taylor, led a team of researchers who studied pregnant mice and their babies. They wanted to find out what happens to mice whose mothers were exposed during pregnancy to electro magnetic radiation from a cell phone.

We had a control (group) that had a cell phone on top of the cage that was turned off, and the experimental group had a cell phone on top of the cage that was turned on, Dr. Taylor explained.

Researchers learned that the offspring of the pregnant mice exposed to radiation developed behavioral problems. They also learned that the longer the mice were exposed to radiation, the more problems they developed.

They were more hyperactive. They were running around the cage a lot more than the mice that weren’t exposed to cell phones, said Dr. Taylor.

Dr. Taylor and his team of researchers did not learn whether or not the radiation that hurt pregnant mice would hurt pregnant women.

Dr. Taylor characterized the results as a warning that we should be careful and investigate it further. It’s not saying this definitely occurs in women or humans, but it may.

Yale’s researchers have advised pregnant women to keep their cell phones away from their bodies, especially their abdomens, because the radiation weakens dramatically after only small distances. For example, moving a cell phone four feet away makes the radiation it emits 16 times weaker. At eight feet away, its 64 times weaker, and so on.

The researchers also want pregnant women to know that cell phones emit radiation when they’re turned on, regardless of whether anyone is talking.

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Aastrom Biosciences to Present at World Stem Cells & Regenerative Medicine Congress

ANN ARBOR, Mich., May 17, 2012 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Aastrom Biosciences, Inc. (Nasdaq:ASTM – News), the leading developer of patient-specific expanded multicellular therapies for the treatment of severe chronic cardiovascular diseases, today announced that company president and CEO Tim Mayleben will be presenting at the World Stem Cells & Regenerative Medicine Congress at the Park Plaza hotel in London, UK. The presentation entitled “Phase 3 Development of a Cellular Therapy Product” will take place on Monday, May 21, 2012 at 4:40 pm (BST).

The Aastrom presentation will cover the benefits of a special protocol assessment and offer insights on achieving manufacturing readiness. The presentation will also address the role of clinicians and patients in the Phase 3 development process.

About Aastrom Biosciences

Aastrom Biosciences is the leader in developing patient-specific, expanded multicellular therapies for use in the treatment of patients with severe, chronic cardiovascular diseases. The company’s proprietary cell-processing technology enables the manufacture of ixmyelocel-T, a patient-specific multicellular therapy expanded from a patient’s own bone marrow and delivered directly to damaged tissues. Aastrom has advanced ixmyelocel-T into late-stage clinical development, including a Phase 3 clinical program to study patients with critical limb ischemia and a planned Phase 2b clinical trial in patients with ischemic dilated cardiomyopathy. For more information, please visit Aastrom’s website at www.aastrom.com. For more information on the pivotal REVIVE Phase 3 clinical trial, please visit the trial website at www.revivecli.com.

The Aastrom Biosciences, Inc. logo is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/prs/?pkgid=3663

This document contains forward-looking statements, including, without limitation, statements concerning clinical trial plans and progress, objectives and expectations, clinical activity timing, intended product development, the performance and contribution of certain individuals and expected timing of collecting and analyzing treatment data, all of which involve certain risks and uncertainties. These statements are often, but are not always, made through the use of words or phrases such as “anticipates,” “intends,” “estimates,” “plans,” “expects,” “we believe,” “we intend,” and similar words or phrases, or future or conditional verbs such as “will,” “would,” “should,” “potential,” “could,” “may,” or similar expressions. Actual results may differ significantly from the expectations contained in the forward-looking statements. Among the factors that may result in differences are the inherent uncertainties associated with clinical trial and product development activities, regulatory approval requirements, competitive developments, and the availability of resources and the allocation of resources among different potential uses. These and other significant factors are discussed in greater detail in Aastrom’s Annual or Transition Report on Form 10-K or 10-K/T, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q and other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These forward-looking statements reflect management’s current views and Aastrom does not undertake to update any of these forward-looking statements to reflect a change in its views or events or circumstances that occur after the date of this release except as required by law.

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Industry Consultant Gregory Bonfiglio Joins California Stem Cell Board of Directors

IRVINE, Calif.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–

California Stem Cell, Inc. (CSC) announced today that well-known stem cell & regenerative medicine industry veteran Gregory A. Bonfiglio, J.D. has joined its Board of Directors.

Gregory Bonfiglio has over 25 years of experience working with technology companies, and was an early investor in the stem cell industry. He is Managing Partner of Proteus Venture Partners, an investment & advisory firm he founded in early 2006 to provide venture funding and strategic advisory services in the stem cell & regenerative medicine space. Mr. Bonfiglio is on the Boards of VistaGen Therapeutics and StemCyte, Inc.; he is the Chairman of the Board of the Centre for Commercialization of Regenerative Medicine (RM Translation Center in Toronto, Canada). In addition, Mr. Bonfiglio sits on the Advisory Board and Finance Committee of the International Society for Stem Cell Research (ISSCR); he is on the Commercialization Committee of the International Society for Cellular Therapy (ISCT).

Mr. Bonfiglio brings to CSC an extensive background in strategic consulting, having held partnership positions with various legal and venture firms, and having successfully led a team that took pioneering stem cell company Advanced Cell Technology public in early 2005. Were thrilled to welcome to our board someone with the breadth of industry experience that Greg has, and are very much looking forward to his participation in the continued growth of this Company, said COO Chris Airriess.

This appointment coincides with a ramp up of commercial product sales as well as advancements of CSCs active Phase II clinical trial in metastatic melanoma.

About California Stem Cell

California Stem Cell Inc. (CSC) is an Irvine, CA based company which has developed proprietary methods to generate human stem cell lines, expand them to clinically and commercially useful numbers, and differentiate them at extremely high purity using fully-defined, proprietary media and GMP processes. CSC is able to supply its human cell populations to companies and institutions worldwide for use in the development of therapies, efficacy screening or the creation of toxicity profiles for candidate drugs, and experimental research tools.

CSC is focused on the development of stem cell based therapies for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS, or Lou Gehrigs Disease), and metastatic cancers.

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Osiris stem-cell therapy wins Canadian approval

BOSTON (MarketWatch) — Shares of Osiris Therapeutics jumped 14% to $5.60 in after-hours trading Thursday on news that Canadian regulators have approved its product Prochymal for the treatment of acute graft-vs-host disease, or GVHD, in children. GVHD is a life-threatening complication associated with such procedures as bone-marrow transplantation. Osiris added it was the world's first …

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Canada approves stem cell therapy

Osiris Therapeutics Inc says Canadian health regulators have approved its treatment for acute graft-versus host disease in children, making it the first stem cell drug to be approved for a systemic disease anywhere in the world.

Osiris shares rose 14 percent to $6.00 in extended trading after the news was announced.

Graft versus host disease (GvHD) is a potentially deadly complication from a bone marrow transplant, when newly implanted cells attack the patient’s body. Symptoms range from abdominal pain and skin rash to hair loss, hepatitis, lung and digestive tract disorders, jaundice and vomiting.

The disease kills up to 80 percent of children affected, Osiris said. To date there have been no approved treatments for the disease. Canadian authorities approved the therapy, Prochymal, for use in children who have failed to respond to steroids.

Prochymal was approved with the condition that Osiris carry out further testing after it reaches the market. C. Randal Mills, the company’s chief executive, said in an interview that could take three to four years.

Some investment analysts have been skeptical about Prochymal’s future. In 2009, two late-stage clinical trials failed to show the drug was more effective overall than a placebo in treating the disease, though it showed promise in certain subgroups of patients.

Since then, the company has mined data from all its clinical trials to show that in patients with severe refractory acute GvHD — those who have more or less failed all other therapies — Prochymal demonstrated a clinically meaningful response at 28 days after therapy began in 61-64 percent of patients.

In addition, treatment with Prochymal resulted in a statistically significant improvement in survival when compared with a historical control population of pediatric patients with refractory GvHD.

The Canadian authorities approved the drug on the basis of that data, the company said.

FDA SUBMISSION THIS YEAR

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Canada OKs Osiris drug; first stem cell therapy

BOSTON (Reuters) – Osiris Therapeutics Inc said on Thursday that Canadian health regulators have approved its treatment for acute graft-versus host disease in children, making it the first stem cell drug to be approved for a systemic disease anywhere in the world. Osiris shares rose 14 percent to $6.00 in extended trading after the news was announced. Graft versus host disease (GvHD) is a …

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Osiris Wins Canadian Approval for First Stem-Cell Therapy

By Meg Tirrell – 2012-05-17T20:35:40Z

Osiris Therapeutics Inc. (OSIR) said it won the worlds first approval for a stem-cell drug, gaining clearance in Canada to sell Prochymal for a disease that can attack patients who received bone-marrow transplants.

Prochymal was approved for the treatment of acute graft versus host disease in children for whom steroids havent worked, the Columbia, Maryland-based company said today in a statement. Steroids have a 30 percent to 50 percent success rate, and severe GvHD can be fatal in 80 percent of cases, according to the company.

The therapy uses mesenchymal stem cells derived from bone marrow that can take on different forms, to combat the immune reaction that causes patients to literally peel out of their skin and shed their intestinal lining, Osiris Chief Executive Officer Randal Mills said in a telephone interview. The disease has no equal.

The company hasnt sought approval for this indication in the U.S., where regulators asked for more data before considering whether to allow sales of the drug, Mills said. Prochymal already is used in eight countries, including the U.S., on an expanded-access program basis, which allows patients to receive experimental medicines without participating in clinical trials.

This is the first regulatory approval of a stem-cell drug — where the active ingredient of the drug is a stem cell — in the world, Mills said. Its a huge deal for us and a huge deal for the entire field of stem-cell therapy.

Osiris fell less than 1 percent to $5.26 at the close of trading in New York. The shares have declined from an all-time high of $28.56 in 2007 as Osiris faced clinical setbacks, including two studies in 2009 that failed to show statistical improvement of Prochymal versus placebo.

The Canadian approval was based on data showing a clinically meaningful response 28 days after starting therapy for 61 percent to 64 percent of patients treated, Osiris said in the statement.

Prochymal may draw $16.7 million in revenue next year with Canadian approval, estimated Edward Tenthoff, an analyst with Piper Jaffray & Co. He said that while Prochymal, if successful in Canada, would be the first stem-cell drug to receive approval, other regenerative products used for wound-healing that employ stem cells are already on the market, such as Carticel from Sanofis Genzyme unit. That treatment uses a patients own cells to repair cartilage injuries in the knee, and is implanted with surgery, whereas Prochymal is an intravenous, off-the-shelf therapy. The stem cells are derived from bone marrow donations from healthy donors.

Progress in stem-cell research has been halting. Geron Corp. (GERN), based in Menlo Park, California, started the first U.S.- approved trial of human embryonic stem cells before ending the program last year because of research costs and regulatory complexities.

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World's First Approved Stem Cell Drug; Osiris Receives Marketing Clearance from Health Canada for Prochymal

COLUMBIA, Md.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–

Osiris Therapeutics Inc. (NASDAQ:OSIR – News) announced today it has received market authorization from Health Canada to market its stem cell therapy Prochymal (remestemcel-L), for the treatment of acute graft-vs-host disease (GvHD) in children. The historic decision marks the worlds first regulatory approval of a manufactured stem cell product and the first therapy approved for GvHD a devastating complication of bone marrow transplantation that kills up to 80 percent of children affected, many within just weeks of diagnosis.

“I am very proud of the leadership role Canada has taken in advancing stem cell therapy and particularly gratified that this historic decision benefits children who would otherwise have little hope,” said Andrew Daly, M.D., Clinical Associate Professor, Department of Medicine and Oncology at the University of Calgary, Canada and Principal Investigator in the phase 3 clinical program for Prochymal. “As a result of Health Canada’s comprehensive review, physicians now have an off-the-shelf stem cell therapy in their arsenal to fight GvHD. Much like the introduction of antibiotics in the late 1920′s, with stem cells we have now officially taken the first step into this new paradigm of medicine.”

Prochymal was authorized under Health Canada’s Notice of Compliance with conditions (NOC/c) pathway, which provides access to therapeutic products that address unmet medical conditions and which have demonstrated a favorable risk/benefit profile in clinical trials. Under the NOC/c pathway, the sponsor must agree to carry out confirmatory clinical testing.

Today is not only a great day for Osiris, but for everyone involved in the responsible development of stem cell therapies, said C. Randal Mills, Ph.D., President and Chief Executive Officer of Osiris. Most importantly, today is a great day for children and their families who bravely face this horrific disease. While today marks the first approval of a stem cell drug, now that the door has been opened, it will surely not be the last.

Health Canadas authorization was made following the recommendation of an independent expert advisory panel, commissioned to evaluate Prochymal’s safety and efficacy. In Canada, Prochymal is now authorized for the management of acute GvHD in children who fail to respond to steroids. The approval was based on the results from clinical studies evaluating Prochymal in patients with severe refractory acute GvHD. Prochymal demonstrated a clinically meaningful response at 28 days post initiation of therapy in 61-64 percent of patients treated. Furthermore, treatment with Prochymal resulted in a statistically significant improvement in survival when compared to a historical control population of pediatric patients with refractory GvHD (p=0.028). The survival benefit was most pronounced in patients with the most severe forms of GvHD. As a condition of approval, the clinical benefit of Prochymal will be further evaluated in a case matched confirmatory trial and all patients receiving Prochymal will be encouraged to participate in a registry that will monitor the long-term effects of the therapy.

Refractory GvHD is not just deadly to the patients it afflicts, but is devastating for the family, friends, and caregivers who watch helplessly as the disease progresses, said Joanne Kurtzberg, MD, Head of the Pediatric Bone Marrow Transplant Program at Duke University and Lead Investigator for Prochymal. “I have personally seen Prochymal reverse the debilitating effects of severe GvHD in many of my patients and now, after nearly two decades of research, the data demonstrating consistently high response rates, a strong safety profile and improved survival clearly support the use of Prochymal in the management of refractory GvHD.”

Prochymal is currently available in several countries, including the United States, under an Expanded Access Program (EAP). Prochymal will be commercially available in Canada later this year.

Today Osiris turns the promise of stem cell research into reality, delivering on decades of medical and scientific research, said Peter Friedli, Chairman and Co-founder of Osiris. It took 20 years of hard work and perseverance and I want to personally thank everyone involved for their dedication to this important mission.

In addition to the extensive intellectual property protection Osiris has around Prochymal, which includes 48 issued patents, Health Canada’s decision will also provide Prochymal with regulatory exclusivity within the territory. Canada affords eight years of exclusivity to Innovative Drugs such as Prochymal, and an additional six-month extension is available since it addresses a pediatric population.

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Osiris stem cell therapy approved in Canada

Osiris Therapeutics Inc. said Thursday that Canadian regulators approved its stem cell therapy Prochymal, which is intended to treat a deadly side effect of bone marrow transplants.

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Cytomedix Announces Expansion of Phase 2 Study to Treat Post-Acute Ischemic Stroke at Up to 15 U.S. Clinical Sites

GAITHERSBURG, MD–(Marketwire -05/16/12)- Cytomedix, Inc. (OTC.BB: CMXI) (the “Company”), a regenerative therapies company commercializing and developing innovative platelet and adult stem cell technologies for wound and tissue repair, announced that the independent Data Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB) reviewing the safety data from the ongoing RECOVER-Stroke trial has recommended that the Phase 2 trial of ALD-401, a unique and differentiated stem cell population derived from patients’ own bone marrow, can continue as designed. This determination follows a review of the clinical safety data on the first 10 patients that were treated post-acutely for ischemic stroke.

The double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of 100 patients is designed to assess the safety and efficacy of ALD-401 to improve clinical outcomes in patients with unilateral, cerebral ischemic stroke with an NIH stroke scale score of between 7 and 22 when administered between 13 and 19 days post the ischemic event. The primary endpoint of the study is safety and the secondary efficacy endpoint is neural function based on the modified Rankin Scale assessed at three months following treatment.

Currently being conducted at three clinical sites, the trial will now expand up to a total of approximately 15 U.S. clinical sites with this clearance by the DSMB. The study has gained Investigation Review Board (“IRB”) approval from a number of leading healthcare institutions under the guidance of key opinion leaders in the field of ischemic stroke. Additional DSMB reviews are scheduled at 30 and 60 patients per the clinical protocol.

Commenting on the clearance to continue the Phase 2 trial, Martin P. Rosendale, Chief Executive Officer, stated, “We are very encouraged by the decision of the DSMB to recommend the continuation of the RECOVER-Stroke trial and look forward to expanding this important trial to additional leading stroke clinical sites across the U.S. The only currently approved treatment options (tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) and mechanical retrievers) must be used within a very short time frame from the onset of the stroke. Consequently, less than 5% of stroke patients receive any approved treatments. ALD-401 is being delivered to patients suffering from the often devastating effects of ischemic stroke approximately two weeks following the stroke.

“Strokes remain one of the leading causes of long-term disability. With the majority of strokes occurring in patients 65 years and older, it is also a major financial burden for our healthcare system. Preclinical research with ALD-401 has shown improvements in motor function, in mitigation of the decrease in brain volume, the reversal of decline in stroke-induced cell viability, and improved blood flow in the brain. We are hopeful that ALD-401 will continue to demonstrate these regenerative activities in this trial and look forward to advancing its clinical development,” added Mr. Rosendale.

“We are grateful to our early investigators, which include the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Duke University Medical Center, and the Los Angeles Brain and Spine Institute, for their support and guidance through the early enrollment of this trial. We also look forward to working with a number of premier academic and private health leaders as we expand the study. Importantly, we want to recognize the care and thoughtful guidance received from our independent DSMB,” commented James Hinson, M.D., Cytomedix’ Chief Medical Officer. “We just concluded an Investigator’s Meeting and were especially pleased and encouraged to see the underlying enthusiasm for this potential treatment option among leading clinicians in stroke treatment and research.”

About Stroke

According to the American Stroke Association, stroke is a disease that affects the arteries leading to and within the brain. It is the fourth leading cause of death and a leading cause of disability in the United States. A stroke occurs when a blood vessel that carries oxygen and nutrients to the brain is either blocked by a clot or bursts. When that happens, part of the brain cannot get the blood and oxygen it needs, so it starts to die. Strokes are typically classified into two major categories: ischemic and hemorrhagic. Approximately 800,000 patients in the United States suffer a stroke each year and approximately 87% of these strokes are ischemic.

About ALD-401

ALD-401 is the population of ALDHbr stem cells produced using Cytomedix’ proprietary technology to sort a specified quantity of bone marrow collected from the patient receiving the therapy. These adult stem cells express high levels of the enzyme ALDH, and preclinical research suggests that they may promote the repair of ischemic tissue damage. This is tissue damage caused by inadequate blood flow resulting from the obstruction of blood vessels supplying blood to the tissue. Investigators have completed preclinical research showed improvements in motor function, improvements in the slowing of decrease in brain volume, the reversal of decline in stroke-induced cell viability, and improved blood flow, or perfusion, in the brain.

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Cytomedix Announces Expansion of Phase 2 Study to Treat Post-Acute Ischemic Stroke at Up to 15 U.S. Clinical Sites

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Vet undertakes stem cell surgery

Animal stem cell regenerative therapy is the newest service at the Animal Hospital of Tiffin.

“We are the official first site for the therapy in Ohio,” said veterinarian Bob McClung.

The technology uses an adult animal’s stem cells to heal itself.

Veterinarian Mike Brothers performed the surgery Monday on his dog, Tucker, a 2-year-old labrador retriever. It was the second surgery performed at the clinic.

Brothers said his dog’s joint problems are hereditary and he’s had problems since he was a puppy.

“What we’ve been able to do is slow down the arthritis,” Brothers said. The cause of the degeneration will continue, but the fatty tissue removed from the dog can be used for future treatments.

From a piece of fatty tissue of the size removed from Tucker, McClung estimated $3.2 billion stem cells were harvested.

Each injection uses about 90 million cells, so there will be enough of the material for future treatments.

“We have basically 2 billion cells to bank,” he said. “We use cryo-preservation.”

In the freezing process, the cells are gradually cooled to prevent damage and stored in liquid nitrogen at temperatures of minus 80 to minus 90 degrees Fahrenheit.

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Vet undertakes stem cell surgery

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