Health panel approves coverage for iPS cell-derived Parkinson’s disease treatment

A Japanese health panel has approved national health insurance coverage for Sumitomo Pharma's Amchepry, an iPS cell-derived treatment for Parkinson’s disease. The move makes it the world's first commercialized medical product from iPS cells.

The approval came from a panel under the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare. It covers Sumitomo Pharma's Amchepry for use in treating Parkinson’s disease.

Amchepry is produced from induced pluripotent stem cells. The decision positions the product as the first such therapy to reach commercial status worldwide.

The panel's action clears the way for broader patient access through Japan's national health care system.

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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.

Following an expert panel's recommendation last month, Japan's Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry on March 6 conditionally approved two iPS cell-derived regenerative medicines—the world's first commercialized such treatments—for severe heart failure and Parkinson's disease. The products carry conditions and time limits, with pricing and insurance coverage decisions next; sales could begin as early as summer 2026.

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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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PhilHealth has expanded its Z Benefits Package to cover at least 10 rare genetic conditions. The benefits include case rates ranging from roughly P99,000 to P739,000. This move supports ongoing efforts to improve care for rare disease patients in the Philippines.

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