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Eyestem Set to Commence Clinical Trials for Groundbreaking Eye Disorder Therapy

Eyestem, a cell therapy company, on Tuesday announced that it has received approval from India’s Central Drugs Standards Control Organisation (CDSCO) to commence human trials for Eyecyte RPE.

According to the company’s press statement, the therapy is aimed at combating geographic atrophy arising from dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD).

“The commencement of human trials represents a significant and proud moment for all of us at Eyestem. Being a purpose-driven company, our commitment is to ensure that Eyecyte RPE reaches a much larger patient base than most cell and gene therapies worldwide. Our cell therapy platform has the ability to create products of the highest quality at scale, and we look forward to validating this hypothesis with our flagship product,” Dr. Jogin Desai, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Eyestem said.

Dry AMD, a leading cause of vision loss in the aging population of people over 50, has long been a challenge due to the limited availability of effective treatments and the high costs associated with emerging therapeutic options.

However, Eyestem’s Eyecyte RPE therapy, which aims to replace lost or damaged retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells, represents a transformational shift in aiming to tackle the disease. It aims to preserve and potentially improve sight for patients in the early stages of dry AMD and arrest vision loss for those in the later stages.

“It is not every day that one can be associated with a true innovation that goes from bench to bedside. Today is a momentous day for us as we take the first iPSC-derived cell therapy solution from India onwards into the clinic,” added Dr. Rajarshi Pal, Chief Scientist, Eyestem. “There is no treatment for GA secondary to dry AMD anywhere in the world that can offer the potential of improvement in vision. I am hopeful that we will be able to demonstrate safety/efficacy for our product and eventually bring succour to millions of patients in India and abroad,” Dr. Rajani Battu, Chief Medical Officer, Eyestem said.

India has 40 million patients who suffer from dry age-related macular degeneration (dry AMD). The number of dry AMD patients is about 170M. The more severe version of this disease is geographic atrophy, which is one of the largest causes of legal blindness for people over 50 years of age across the world. As of now, no therapy is available that can aim to arrest and reverse the loss of vision associated with the same, the company claimed.

Source: https://www.financialexpress.com/

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