PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Stem cell transplant clears clinical safety hurdle for the treatment of wet age-related macular degeneration

Stem cell transplant clears clinical safety hurdle for the treatment of wet age-related macular degeneration
2025-02-27
(Press-News.org) Age-related macular (AMD) degeneration is a leading cause of vision impairment and blindness in the elderly population. In so-called wet AMD, new, abnormal blood vessels grow in the central part of the retina called macula, which is required for high-acuity central vision, leading to fluid and blood leakage and macular damage or dysfunction. Although wet AMD accounts for a minority of AMD cases, 90% of AMD-related cases of blindness are due to wet AMD.

Wet AMD in its early stages can be treated with drugs to reduce the formation of new blood vessels, but this treatment is inefficient in cases where blood vessel formation is already in its advanced stages. A new, alternative treatment for those patients may be surgical removal of the abnormal blood vessels followed by the transplantation of stem cell-derived retinal cells, according to a recent study led by Yong Liu and colleagues from Third Military Medical University Southwest Hospital, China, published in the journal Stem Cell Reports.

In their clinical study, involving 10 patients with wet AMD, the researchers first developed a method for safely removing the newly formed blood vessels followed by the transplantation of stem cell-derived retinal cells to replace the patients’ damaged or lost retinal cells. The retinal structure improved in those patients where blood vessel patches were completely removed during surgery, suggesting that the transplanted cells survived and repaired the damaged retina. Further, visual acuity remained stable or improved in those patients during the 12-months follow-up, with limited side effects. In contrast, patients where the blood vessel patches could only partially be removed experienced persistent bleeding and inflammation in the eye and an incomplete regeneration of the retina, and vision did not improve in those patients. The researchers concluded that complete and safe removal of the blood vessel patches prevents inflammation and generates a milieu favorable for transplant survival and integration. Follow up studies with larger groups of patients are required to confirm the clinical efficacy and favorable safety profile of this type of treatment.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Stem cell transplant clears clinical safety hurdle for the treatment of wet age-related macular degeneration

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

MSU forges strategic partnership to solve the mystery of how planets are formed

MSU forges strategic partnership to solve the mystery of how planets are formed
2025-02-27
EAST LANSING, Mich. – Astronomers have long grappled with the question, “How do planets form?” A new collaboration among Michigan State University, Arizona State University and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory will seek to answer this question with the help of a powerful telescope and high-performance computers.   The team of researchers will use 154 hours on the James Webb Space Telescope, or JWST, to probe the atmospheres of seven planets beyond our solar system – all of which were formed less than 300 million years ago, around the time dinosaurs roamed ...

AAIF2025 conference: International actin conference with comprehensive topics

2025-02-27
Since the discovery of actin in relation to muscle function more than 80 years ago by Albert Szent-Gyorgyi in Szeged, Hungary, actin research has become extremely diverse and now extends to plants and prokaryotes, as well as biochemical, biophysical, molecular, and cellular biology fields. The need for an international actin conference with comprehensive topics, where the latest results and research directions are presented, is critical for the community. Therefore, we decided to bring together the best experts in actin biology from across the world to build research synergies to tackle long-standing questions ...

ASU forges new strategic partnership to solve the mystery of how planets are formed

ASU forges new strategic partnership to solve the mystery of how planets are formed
2025-02-27
Astronomers have long grappled with the question, “How do planets form?” A new collaboration among Arizona State University (ASU) , Michigan State University (MSU) and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) will seek to answer this question with the help of a powerful telescope and high-performance computers.  The team of researchers will use 154 hours on the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), to probe the atmospheres of seven planets beyond our solar system – all of which were formed less than 300 million years ago, around the time dinosaurs roamed the Earth. In conjunction with JWST, this collaboration, called the KRONOS program, will use computers ...

Researchers demonstrate laser writing with unprecedented speed and resolution

Researchers demonstrate laser writing with unprecedented speed and resolution
2025-02-27
WASHINGTON — For the first time, researchers have used high-speed laser writing to create lines spaced just 100 nm apart on a glass substrate. The optimized printing approach could enable super-resolution 3D direct laser writing (DLW) of microlenses, photonics crystals, micro-optical devices, metamaterials and more. DLW is an additive manufacturing technique that uses a focused laser beam to selectively solidify, or polymerize, a material with nanoscale precision. DLW typically uses multi-photon polymerization to polymerize materials in a precise, ...

New combination treatment strategy dramatically increases cell death in leukemia

New combination treatment strategy dramatically increases cell death in leukemia
2025-02-27
Scientists at VCU Massey Comprehensive Cancer Center have identified an innovative combination of treatment strategies that work collaboratively to effectively kill acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells, a frequently incurable form of cancer. New research findings — published in the Nature family journal Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy — suggest that a class of drugs known as MCL-1 (myeloid leukemia cell-1) inhibitors interact with a type of kinase inhibitor that targets the SRC gene to efficiently trigger cell death in AML cells. “Results from this research could add another approach ...

Patients with depression from wealthier areas more likely to use telehealth for mental health care

2025-02-27
A new study led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health found that mental health visits for patients with depression from high-wealth neighborhoods in Maryland were significantly more likely to happen via telehealth compared to patients with depression from low-wealth neighborhoods in Maryland from mid-2021 through mid-2024. Telehealth visits by phone or web-based teleconferencing became popular during the COVID-19 pandemic after in-person health care options were scaled back and telehealth restrictions relaxed. The researchers investigated how mental health care visits changed from before and over the course ...

A versatile AI system for analyzing series of medical images

A versatile AI system for analyzing series of medical images
2025-02-27
A new AI-based system for analyzing images taken over time can accurately detect changes and predict outcomes, according to a study led by investigators at Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell’s Ithaca campus and Cornell Tech. The system’s sensitivity and flexibility could make it useful across a wide range of medical and scientific applications. The new system, termed LILAC (Learning-based Inference of Longitudinal imAge Changes), is based on an AI approach called machine learning. In the study, which appears Feb. 20 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers developed the system and demonstrated it on diverse time-series of images—also ...

Breakthrough study discovers genetic mutation could be basis for novel treatment of rheumatoid arthritis

2025-02-27
TORONTO, Feb. 27, 2025 – Research led by York University’s Faculty of Health reveals how a specific mutation in a protein called TRAF1 can shut down an overactive immune response, dramatically reducing inflammation in mice. Lead researcher Ali Abdul-Sater says this discovery could pave the way for a new class of drugs to treat rheumatoid arthritis.   “Rheumatoid arthritis is a common health condition which can interfere with many aspects of daily life and based on the limited efficacy ...

Texas-France space hub aims to innovate space commerce and research

Texas-France space hub aims to innovate space commerce and research
2025-02-27
A new trans-Atlantic space initiative has launched, linking Texas and France in an ambitious effort to fuel startup growth, drive research and forge international partnerships. Announced at the 2025 ASCENDxTexas event Feb. 27, the Texas-France Space Hub aims to unite academic institutions and private enterprises, expanding commercial space presence in both countries. The three-year initiative fosters global partnerships in aerospace, bringing together Rice University, Stellar Access and Houston Spaceport in Texas with France’s space agency CNES and ...

Young star clusters give birth to rogue planetary-mass objects

2025-02-27
Planetary-mass objects (PMOs) are cosmic nomads: they drift freely through space, unbound to any star, and weigh less than 13 times the mass of Jupiter. While they have been spotted in abundance in young star clusters such as the Trapezium Cluster in Orion (Fig. 1), their origin has puzzled scientists. Traditional theories have suggested that they might be failed stars or planets ejected from their solar systems. An international team of astronomers, in collaboration with the University of Zurich (UZH), has used advanced simulations to demonstrate that these enigmatic objects can form directly from the violent interactions of disks around young stars. “PMOs don’t ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Consequences of overplanting rootworm-resistant maize in the US Corn Belt

The distinct role of Earth’s orbit in 100-thousand-year glacial cycles

Genome-based phylogeny resolves complicated Molluscan family tree

Studying locusts in virtual reality challenges models of collective behavior

ACC, AHA issue new acute coronary syndromes guideline

Scientists match Earth’s ice age cycles with orbital shifts

Quantum interference in molecule-surface collisions

Discovery of a common ‘weapon’ used by disease-causing fungi could help engineer more resilient food crops

University of Oklahoma researcher to create new coding language, computing infrastructure

NASA’s Hubble provides bird’s-eye view of Andromeda galaxy’s ecosystem

New ocelot chip makes strides in quantum computing

Computing leaders propose measures to combat tech-facilitated intimate partner violence, human trafficking, and child exploitation

Sometimes, when competitors collaborate, everybody wins

EU Flagship project DORIAN GRAY to use pioneering AI and avatar technology to uncover links between cardiovascular disease (CVD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) to improve healthy ageing and survi

SHEA encourages rescheduling postponed Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) Meeting

Study proposes a new theoretical framework for understanding complex higher-order networks

Archaeology: Vesuvian ash cloud turned brain to glass

When birds lose the ability to fly, their bodies change faster than their feathers

Genetic switch could help control leaf growth in poor soils

Virtual breastfeeding support may expand breastfeeding among new mothers

Homicide rates across county, race, ethnicity, age, and sex in the US

Prevalence and control of diabetes among US adults

Sleep trajectories and all-cause mortality among low-income adults

The invisible complication: Experts at ACS Summit address surgical adhesions and their hidden costs

Stem cell transplant clears clinical safety hurdle for the treatment of wet age-related macular degeneration

MSU forges strategic partnership to solve the mystery of how planets are formed

AAIF2025 conference: International actin conference with comprehensive topics

ASU forges new strategic partnership to solve the mystery of how planets are formed

Researchers demonstrate laser writing with unprecedented speed and resolution

New combination treatment strategy dramatically increases cell death in leukemia

[Press-News.org] Stem cell transplant clears clinical safety hurdle for the treatment of wet age-related macular degeneration