FDA 1. RSI 0. Regenerative Sciences (Regenexx) vs FDA (2012)
By Dr. Matthew Watson
As followers of this blog will know I've been blogging about Regenerative Sciences and predicting their eventual run-in with the FDA since my first post in September 2008 (Cell Therapy is Not the Practice of Medicine) and again in February 2009 (Regenexx vs the FDA 2009). When the FDA finally proceeded with an injunction against RSI in August 2010,I helped spread the news (here).
I've watched the development of the fight between RSI and the FDA with interest. In September 2001 I posted a rather lengthy commentary about the potential impact of the case (Potential far-reaching implications of the ongoing fight over point-of-care autologous cell therapy.
Since then I have welcomed other bloggers and commentators who are now following and commenting on the case much more closely and frequently than I including @LeighGTurner (on Twitter) and Paul Knoepfler (@PKnoepfler on Twitter and his Knoeplfer Lab Stem Cell Blog). Recently I enjoyed being interviewed by Paul on the issue of unregulated stem cell activity and touched on the case for his blog.
Consequently I read with interest yesterday's federal court ruling upholding the FDA's injunction against RSI and the immediate commentary from the New Scientist, Stanford's Scope Blog and Knopfler's multiple posts (here and here). As a long-term follower of this case, I've been asked to comment. Here is my brief reaction:
This is a case that was always destined for the appellate courts regardless of which way the initial court ruled. The fact the federal court ruled in the FDA's favor certainly now sets the onus on RSI and what is anticipated to be a gamut of intervenors but taking this case to the appellate courts is what the legal team have anticipated and legal arguments designed for all along.
This is just the beginning of what will be a long and interesting battle. The ruling was nothing more than the granting of an injunction in response to the government's motion for summary judgement. In granting the injunction the court agreed with the government's position that it was acting under the authority given it under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 21 U.S.C. § 321(g) but it provided little-to-no rationale for its ruling.
The court chose, in its wisdom, not to address the bulk of the RSI's legal arguments which are largely jurisdictional in nature. These are the kinds of arguments which the lower courts prefer be dealt with by appellate courts and frankly the judge did us all a favor by ruling quickly, succinctly and punting the case where we all knew it was inevitably headed.
In my opinion, other than chalking one up in the government's win column there is little to be gleaned from this ruling in terms of how RSI's arguments will be received in appellate court. The interesting day is yet to come.
In terms of a short-term practical impact, frankly I see very little. RSI has already ceased distributing Regenexx within the US so there will be little-to-no impact there. As for the potential impact on other companies or clinics who might be operating on the fringes of FDA regulation within the US, I suspect it will be business as usual.
Most of the clinics/companies offering cell-based treatments/products which are arguably in contravention of FDA regulation are operating under the clear knowledge of what they are doing and where the FDA stands with respect to the treatments/products they offer and yet they persist and continue.
For the truly fraudulent there is the risk of criminal charges and/or litigation but for those companies or practitioners who are operating in this shade of grey which are not shady (and they do exist), the risks associated with this practice are barely higher than in the routine practice of medicine.
In reality, with the exception of the most fraudulent examples, it takes a fair long-time for the FDA to catch up with these folks and there is good money to be made in the interim. When they get caught, they will stop. If they've recouped their initial investment (which is nominal and the margins are high) there is very little penalty to this course of action. Perhaps they set up shot elsewhere or simply enjoy the proceeds. I doubt we will see much of a slow-down of this kind of activity. Indeed it may strengthen the resolve of those committed to the cause.
In my opinion yesterday's ruling was in interesting and important milestone in a continuing evolution in the debate of how best to regulate the use of cells in treating people but I'm not sure it's the seminal pivot point that some believe. I suspect we will not see any radical shift in terms of FDA or industry activity until (if then) the appellate courts rule.
Just my two cents....
--Lee
Source:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/CellTherapyBlog
- Commercialization of Regenerative Medicine: Learning from Spin-Outs - April 28th, 2013
- 2013 Annual Regenerative Medicine Industry Report - April 21st, 2013
- Cell Therapy Blog welcomes 2013 - January 6th, 2013
- The Accuracy of Adipose Stem Cell Doses - December 23rd, 2012
- A proposed 6-step platform for the cell therapy industry to consider in combating non-compliant cell therapy treatments - December 16th, 2012
- The ROI on pant-wearing and other social media tips - December 16th, 2012
- Six steps to fighting non-compliant cell therapy treatments. --- The stuff of grey shades, spades, ivory towers and (ahem) balls. - December 2nd, 2012
- Cell Therapy Industry Group Welcomes its 4,000th member - November 11th, 2012
- GEN's "Cellular Therapy Wave Finally Cresting". An overview and data set. - November 4th, 2012
- CIRM addresses some tough questions. Is it all just glass towers and basic research? - October 21st, 2012
- Cell therapy portfolio outperforms major indices year-to-date - October 14th, 2012
- The cost of clinical trial data bias/loss, FDA's new job and the need for bold leadership. - September 30th, 2012
- Anticipated short-term cell therapy industry clinical milestones - September 30th, 2012
- Two lessons I learned this week. - September 16th, 2012
- Are some cell counts too good to be true? Why some companies' product data may mislead. - September 2nd, 2012
- Is the cell therapy sector outperforming the major indices? - August 12th, 2012
- Bioreactor Design and Bioprocess Controls for Industrialized Cell Processing - June 17th, 2012
- Industry-sponsored cardiovascular cell therapies. Some metrics. - May 27th, 2012
- Cell-based Cancer Immunotherapies. Some metrics.. - May 20th, 2012
- Another > $100M month for companies in the cell therapy space - May 6th, 2012
- Predicting the Success of the Late-Stage Cell-Based Cancer Immunotherapy Pipeline? - March 11th, 2012
- 2011 EMA Committee for Advanced Therapies (CAT) classification record. What can be learned? - January 1st, 2012
- Inactive and recently failed or terminated phase III or II/III cell therapy trials - December 18th, 2011
- Recently approved cell therapy products - December 18th, 2011
- Active phase III or II/III cell therapy trials - December 11th, 2011
- Sabrina Cohen Foundation Thanks Stem Cell Researchers - November 27th, 2011
- Commercializing Cell-based Regenerative Medicines - November 13th, 2011
- Cell Therapy & Regenerative Medicine Domains Available - September 25th, 2011
- Commercial-stage Cell Therapy Companies and Products - September 18th, 2011
- Potential far-reaching implications of the ongoing fight over point-of-care autologous cell therapy - September 18th, 2011
- Good Data? $100. Good Product Development? $100. Good Commercialization Strategy? Priceless. - August 14th, 2011
- Clinical trial costs - July 31st, 2011
- Cell Therapy's Got Talent Technology Showcase - A Call for Cell Therapy Manufacturing Technology Presentations - July 10th, 2011
- In vivo cell trafficking just took a leap forward - July 3rd, 2011
- Cell Therapies: Commercializing a New Class of Biopharmaceuticals - February 12th, 2011
- The LinkedIn Cell Therapy Industry Group - 1,000 members strong - January 15th, 2011
- Careers in cell therapy & regenerative medicine - October 11th, 2010
- FDA files injunction again Regenerative Sciences citing Regenexx violates regulations - August 12th, 2010
- The changing face of PR and why it matters to regenmed - June 12th, 2010
- Biotech tax credit appears perfectly designed for cell therapy companies to recoup research dollars spent in 2009-10 - May 22nd, 2010
- Google to Invest in Regenerative Medicine - May 5th, 2010
- Latest Cell Therapy Approval by FDA. Dendreon's Provenge. - April 30th, 2010
- Stem cells for a Webby! - April 28th, 2010