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BioWorld - Friday, May 8, 2026
Home » iPSCs

Articles Tagged with ''iPSCs''

Stem cells

Japan endorses two iPSC drugs for approval under CEA pathway

Feb. 24, 2026
By Marian (YoonJee) Chu
No Comments
Japan is backing conditional approvals of Amchepry (raguneprocel, Sumitomo Pharma Co. Ltd./Racthera Co. Ltd.) and Reheart (Cuorips Inc.), positioning them to become the world’s first induced pluripotent stem cell-derived (iPSC) therapies to receive regulatory clearance.
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Stem cells

Japan endorses two iPSC drugs for approval under CEA pathway

Feb. 20, 2026
By Marian (YoonJee) Chu
No Comments
Japan is backing conditional approvals of Amchepry (raguneprocel, Sumitomo Pharma Co. Ltd./Racthera Co. Ltd.) and Reheart (Cuorips Inc.), positioning them to become the world’s first induced pluripotent stem cell-derived (iPSC) therapies to receive regulatory clearance.
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Koreabio Humanase KOH Sungho
Bio Korea 2025

FDA shift from animal testing fuels organoid, organ-on-chip demand

May 19, 2025
By Marian (YoonJee) Chu
The U.S. FDA’s decision to phase out animal testing for INDs is driving a new market of alternative, nonanimal testing technologies like organoids and organs-on-a-chip, speakers at Bio Korea 2025 said.
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Koreabio Humanase KOH Sungho
Drug design, drug delivery and technologies

FDA shift from animal testing fuels organoid, organ-on-chip demand

May 14, 2025
By Marian (YoonJee) Chu
The U.S. FDA’s decision to phase out animal testing for INDs is driving a new market of alternative, nonanimal testing technologies like organoids and organs-on-a-chip, speakers at Bio Korea 2025 said.
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Koreabio Humanase KOH Sungho
Bio Korea 2025

FDA shift from animal testing fuels organoid, organ-on-chip demand

May 13, 2025
By Marian (YoonJee) Chu
The U.S. FDA’s decision to phase out animal testing for INDs is driving a new market of alternative, nonanimal testing technologies like organoids and organs-on-a-chip, speakers at Bio Korea 2025 said.
Read More
Koreabio Humanase KOH Sungho
Bio Korea 2025

FDA shift from animal testing fuels organoid, organ-on-chip demand

May 13, 2025
By Marian (YoonJee) Chu
The U.S. FDA’s decision to phase out animal testing for INDs is driving a new market of alternative, nonanimal testing technologies like organoids and organs-on-a-chip, speakers at Bio Korea 2025 said.
Read More
Koreabio Humanase KOH Sungho
Bio Korea 2025

FDA shift from animal testing fuels organoid, organ-on-chip demand

May 9, 2025
By Marian (YoonJee) Chu
The U.S. FDA’s decision to phase out animal testing for INDs is driving a new market of alternative, nonanimal testing technologies like organoids and organs-on-a-chip, speakers at Bio Korea 2025 said.
Read More
3d illustration of ovarian cancer
Immuno-oncology

ERNA-101 extends survival in mice with ovarian cancer

Jan. 15, 2025
Eterna Therapeutics Inc. has released promising results from a preclinical study of its lead cell therapy product, ERNA-101, showing it reduced tumor burden and extended survival in mice with ovarian cancer.
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Cell research illustration
Musculoskeletal

ISSCR 2024: iPS cell line panels can be isogenic and diverse

July 15, 2024
By Anette Breindl
The big advantage of cell culture to model diseases is its throughput. “You can play the disease over and over again in the dish,” Clive Svendsen told the audience at the International Society of Stem Cell Research (ISSCR) Annual Meeting held in Hamburg last week. That high throughput, however, is not particularly useful if the cell lines themselves do not accurately model the disease. Cancer cell lines are used in many cell culture experiments far beyond cancer for their ability to grow. But they are “highly abnormal,” Bill Skarnes told the audience at an innovation showcase, as well as quite unstable. “I don’t think the [HEK-293] cell line is the same in your lab as it is in the lab next door,” Skarnes said.
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Colorful illustration of the heart
Cardiovascular

Human iPSCs restore muscle, function in monkeys with heart failure

May 7, 2024
By Tamra Sami
Japanese researchers have transplanted human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) in a primate model of myocardial infarction and were able to restore heart muscle and function in monkeys. Developed by Tokyo-based Heartseed Inc., the grafted iPSCs consist of clusters of purified heart muscle cells (cardiomyocyte spheroids) that are injected into the myocardial layer of the heart. Published in Circulation on April 26, 2024, the study showed that the cardiomyocyte spheroids survived long term and showed improved contractile function with low occurrence of post-transplant arrhythmias.
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