Scientists in a lab celebrating conditional approval of iPS cell products for treating Parkinson's and heart disease.
Scientists in a lab celebrating conditional approval of iPS cell products for treating Parkinson's and heart disease.
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Health ministry panel conditionally approves iPS cell products

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A health ministry expert panel has conditionally approved two regenerative medicine products derived from induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells for treating Parkinson's disease and severe heart disease. This marks a potential world first in commercializing Nobel Prize-winning stem cell technology. The approval, based on small-scale clinical trials confirming safety and presumed efficacy, requires post-market verification within seven years.

On February 20, 2026, an expert panel under Japan's Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry approved the manufacture and sale of two induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cell-derived regenerative medicine products on a conditional and time-limited basis. These include Amchepry, a nerve cell product for Parkinson's disease developed by Sumitomo Pharma in partnership with Kyoto University, and a cardiomyocyte patch for severe heart failure developed by Cuorips Inc. from Osaka University.

Parkinson's disease, caused by a decline in dopamine-producing brain neurons, affects an estimated 250,000 people in Japan with symptoms like tremors and walking difficulties. In clinical trials at Kyoto University, iPS-derived nerve cells transplanted into the brains of six patients produced dopamine in all cases, with four showing clinical improvements in motor function. Results included enabling a patient who needed assistance to walk to live independently, outcomes not achieved by conventional methods.

The heart patch targets ischemic cardiomyopathy, where heart function deteriorates due to arteriosclerosis or heart attacks, potentially benefiting 3,000 patients in Japan. In Osaka University's trials on eight participants, exercise function indicators improved in four.

Kyoto University Emeritus Professor Shinya Yamanaka, who won the 2012 Nobel Prize for iPS cell research, stated: “I am very happy to have taken a major step forward at this 20-year milestone since the debut of iPS cells. However, to establish this as a medical treatment, a process to confirm safety and efficacy in more cases is essential.” Kyoto University's Professor Atsushi Takahashi, director of the Center for iPS Cell Research and Application, said: “The result of our deliberations is a major step forward. We will make every effort to ensure these treatment methods become common options that are fully trusted as soon as possible.”

The approval is conditional: companies must gather post-market data on safety and efficacy and reapply for full approval within seven years, expanding from small trials to dozens of cases. Failure to demonstrate efficacy could halt production and sales. A previous example is a 2015 conditionally approved heart treatment using thigh muscle cells, based on seven cases, whose approval was suspended in 2024 after failing to meet requirements despite a three-year extension.

Regenerative products are costly due to cell cultivation and quality control; a similar thigh muscle patch cost ¥14.76 million, partially covered by insurance. Fujita Health University Professor Yoshimi Yashiro noted: “The fact that iPS cells, which didn’t exist on earth, have been commercialized in about 20 years is certainly a rapid development. Now that these first approvals have been issued, I think it’ll become easier for various companies to enter the sector and to attract more investment.” However, Arthur D. Little consultant Ryo Hanamura warned: “Prices will be the biggest focus of attention. If the price is too low from a business’ perspective, subsequent companies won’t enter the market.”

The government invested ¥110 billion in regenerative medicine research over 10 years from fiscal 2013. The world's first iPS cell transplant for an eye disease in 2014 showed no cancerous changes after 10 years, advancing confidence in the technology.

Was die Leute sagen

X users largely celebrate Japan's conditional approval of iPS cell therapies for Parkinson's disease and severe heart failure as a world-first milestone in regenerative medicine, crediting Nobel laureate Shinya Yamanaka's technology. Politicians and biotech leaders express optimism for global patient benefits, while regular users share excitement and personal stories of hope. A minority voice skepticism about small trial sizes and rushed processes, emphasizing the need for post-market verification.

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Illustration of USC researchers preparing dopamine-producing stem cell implants for early-stage Parkinson’s trial.
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Keck Medicine of USC researchers are testing an experimental approach to Parkinson’s disease that implants lab-grown, dopamine-producing cells into a movement-control region of the brain. The early-stage Phase 1 REPLACE trial involves up to 12 people with moderate to moderate-severe Parkinson’s disease, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has granted the study fast-track designation.

Japan's health ministry panel on Thursday approved the commercialization of two regenerative medicine products derived from iPS cells, marking a global first. These treatments target patients with severe heart failure and Parkinson's disease, under a conditional approval requiring data collection for up to seven years. Shinya Yamanaka, pioneer of iPS cell research, expressed delight at this milestone.

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Doctors at Keck Medicine of USC are implanting lab-grown, dopamine-producing cells into the brains of people with Parkinson’s disease in an early-stage clinical trial that will enroll up to 12 participants across three U.S. sites.

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Scientists at the University of British Columbia report a method to consistently produce human helper T cells from pluripotent stem cells by carefully adjusting the timing of a developmental signal known as Notch. The work, published in Cell Stem Cell, is positioned as a step toward scalable “off-the-shelf” immune-cell therapies for cancer and other diseases.

Stanford Medicine researchers report that blocking the enzyme 15-PGDH reversed age-related cartilage loss in older mice and reduced osteoarthritis-like damage after ACL-like knee injuries. In lab experiments, cartilage taken from knee replacement surgeries also showed early signs of regeneration after exposure to the inhibitor, findings published in *Science*.

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Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory researchers report that engineered anti-uPAR CAR T cells cleared senescence-linked cells in mice, improving intestinal regeneration, reducing inflammation and strengthening gut barrier function. The approach also aided recovery from radiation-related intestinal injury and showed regenerative signals in experiments using human intestinal and colorectal cells, raising the possibility of future clinical trials.

 

 

 

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