They reduce supporting cells instead of duplicating them.Why?
I also hear unconfirmed claims that the hair cells regenerated do not have the same natural shape/structure as natural ones.
They reduce supporting cells instead of duplicating them.Why?
So why don't they get a move on it, yesterday. Allo."The results so far are promising. "There have been a couple patients with hearing improvement, so we are definitely encouraged."
You just gotta keep killing your hair cells.If you activate a gene that produce hair cells, it will produce hair cells all the time which can lead to a tumour,
Three questions:
- Trial updated 12th Nov. Anybody know what was updated? https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02132130
- If the trials are recruting, is anybody here trying to get in?
- Does this method "use up" the supporting cells that FX322 is targeting? Meaning you will not get help from Fx322 to restore more hearing if you have used this drug already
Do you know what trial they're on?Here are the changes from previous version:
1)They added following under Study Design:
Allocation: Non-Randomized
2) Changed wording of 2nd point of inclusion criteria (looks like pure technical change)
3) Changed 4th point of inclusion criteria. Here is old version:
Candidate ear ("study ear"): Pure tone audiometric thresholds of ≥50 dB HL for each testable octave frequency of 0.125 and 0.250 kHz, ≥ 70 dB HL for each testable octave frequency from 0.5 through 8 kHz and sentence recognition scores ≤50% at screening. Subject responses will be monitored for vibrotactile sensation, particularly for the low-frequency stimuli (e.g., 125 and 250 Hz). A frequency that elicits vibrotactile responses at levels below 70 dB HL will be considered "not testable" for hearing threshold and only those frequencies that are testable for hearing threshold will be considered for patient inclusion/exclusion in the study.
4) Added new location:
Oregon Health & Sciences University Recruiting
Portland, Oregon, United States, 97239
Contact: Eleni O'Neill 503-494-3569 oneilele@ohsu.edu
Principal Investigator: Timothy Hullar, MD
Finally some good news from this trial. They were in talks with FDA to ease inclusion criteria, apparently this is a result. I think very strict inclusion criteria where the major hurdle in the trial.
Hope they can make it work, at least I have more hope in CFG166(with Novartis behind it), then in Frequency Tx(20 employee garage company, where half of the employees are on their web page with all the fancy job titles, like CEO, CMO, CFO and so on). That would be a real miracle if FX could deliver any drug to the market.
(sorry for the off-topic, and not that I don't want them to succeed, but I just cannot stand constant haling of FX in every thread with no factual basis whatsoever).
"The procedure involves going down the ear canal and detaching the tympanic membrane (ear drum) to reach the cochlea. A laser is used to create a hole in the cochlea to deliver the CGF166"
Yeah, also sounds like relatively large risk of lasting conductive damage.That sounds like it hurts.
This is interesting. I work with Timothy Hullar MD.Here are the changes from previous version:
1)They added following under Study Design:
Allocation: Non-Randomized
2) Changed wording of 2nd point of inclusion criteria (looks like pure technical change)
3) Changed 4th point of inclusion criteria. Here is old version:
Candidate ear ("study ear"): Pure tone audiometric thresholds of ≥50 dB HL for each testable octave frequency of 0.125 and 0.250 kHz, ≥ 70 dB HL for each testable octave frequency from 0.5 through 8 kHz and sentence recognition scores ≤50% at screening. Subject responses will be monitored for vibrotactile sensation, particularly for the low-frequency stimuli (e.g., 125 and 250 Hz). A frequency that elicits vibrotactile responses at levels below 70 dB HL will be considered "not testable" for hearing threshold and only those frequencies that are testable for hearing threshold will be considered for patient inclusion/exclusion in the study.
4) Added new location:
Oregon Health & Sciences University Recruiting
Portland, Oregon, United States, 97239
Contact: Eleni O'Neill 503-494-3569 oneilele@ohsu.edu
Principal Investigator: Timothy Hullar, MD
Finally some good news from this trial. They were in talks with FDA to ease inclusion criteria, apparently this is a result. I think very strict inclusion criteria where the major hurdle in the trial.
Hope they can make it work, at least I have more hope in CFG166(with Novartis behind it), then in Frequency Tx(20 employee garage company, where half of the employees are on their web page with all the fancy job titles, like CEO, CMO, CFO and so on). That would be a real miracle if FX could deliver any drug to the market.
(sorry for the off-topic, and not that I don't want them to succeed, but I just cannot stand constant haling of FX in every thread with no factual basis whatsoever).
This is interesting. I work with Timothy Hullar MD.
I work with him at OHSU. I'm not a patient of his. I didn't know he was involved with this."Work with" as he is your doctor, or "Work with" as in a professional setting?
If you can glean anything from him many here would appreciate it (Like results so far)
Yeah, also sounds like relatively large risk of lasting conductive damage.
They "detach the tympanic membrane", I would think that something as drastic as that would carry relatively high risk of at least some permanent conductive damage. Even common grommets (which seems less impactful than eardrum detachment, though I could be wrong) have a minor controversy about causing a (relatively small) amount of conductive HL (http://mobile.nytimes.com/2006/08/15/health/15brody.html).Why?
I work with him at OHSU. I'm not a patient of his. I didn't know he was involved with this.
They "detach the tympanic membrane", I would think that something as drastic as that would carry relatively high risk of at least some permanent conductive damage. Even common grommets (which seems less impactful than eardrum detachment, though I could be wrong) have a minor controversy about causing a (relatively small) amount of conductive HL (http://mobile.nytimes.com/2006/08/15/health/15brody.html).
I'm talking permanently. Here's the relevant quote from the article I linked:Where, in the article you quoted, does it say that grommets cause permanent conductive HL?
Are you talking about "while you have the tympanostomy tubes in" or "permanently" (ie after the tubes are gone and the drum has healed)?
I'm talking permanently. Here's the relevant quote from the article I linked:
"According to a new long-term study by Dr. Stenstrom and colleagues, when young children were randomly assigned to receive ear tubes or to be treated daily with antibiotics, those with ear tubes suffered greater damage to their eardrums and had, on average, poorer hearing 6 to 10 years after the tubes were removed."
Well, according the quote from the NYT article the control group was treated with antibiotics, although yeah it's unclear how often.It would have been good if the study also took a look at the effects of constant antibiotic use for the subset that did not undergo tube insertion, because that's a parameter that is important for the trade-off: we were giving our daughter antibiotics over and over again,
Is your concern with antibiotics potential ototoxicity?
Here are the changes from previous version:
1)They added following under Study Design:
Allocation: Non-Randomized
2) Changed wording of 2nd point of inclusion criteria (looks like pure technical change)
3) Changed 4th point of inclusion criteria. Here is old version:
Candidate ear ("study ear"): Pure tone audiometric thresholds of ≥50 dB HL for each testable octave frequency of 0.125 and 0.250 kHz, ≥ 70 dB HL for each testable octave frequency from 0.5 through 8 kHz and sentence recognition scores ≤50% at screening. Subject responses will be monitored for vibrotactile sensation, particularly for the low-frequency stimuli (e.g., 125 and 250 Hz). A frequency that elicits vibrotactile responses at levels below 70 dB HL will be considered "not testable" for hearing threshold and only those frequencies that are testable for hearing threshold will be considered for patient inclusion/exclusion in the study.
4) Added new location:
Oregon Health & Sciences University Recruiting
Portland, Oregon, United States, 97239
Contact: Eleni O'Neill 503-494-3569 oneilele@ohsu.edu
Principal Investigator: Timothy Hullar, MD
Finally some good news from this trial. They were in talks with FDA to ease inclusion criteria, apparently this is a result. I think very strict inclusion criteria where the major hurdle in the trial.
Hope they can make it work, at least I have more hope in CFG166(with Novartis behind it), then in Frequency Tx(20 employee garage company, where half of the employees are on their web page with all the fancy job titles, like CEO, CMO, CFO and so on). That would be a real miracle if FX could deliver any drug to the market.
(sorry for the off-topic, and not that I don't want them to succeed, but I just cannot stand constant haling of FX in every thread with no factual basis whatsoever).
What trial are they on?I am calling the Oregon Contact tomorrow. It states the trials are recruiting, but I can't find any additional evidence of that on the web.
I think phase 3, but I will find the info and report back.What trial are they on?
Thank you! God I hope it is phase 3.I think phase 3, but I will find the info and report back.
I think it's tranche 3 of Phase 1/2. Reason for the tranches is probably so the FDA can sharply monitor the trial. There have been issues with gene therapy trials in the past.Thank you! God I hope it is phase 3.
How many more trials are needed until it can be released onto the market??I think it's tranche 3 of Phase 1/2. Reason for the tranches is probably so the FDA can sharply monitor the trial. There have been issues with gene therapy trials in the past.
Usually they do a Phase 1 (or Phase 1/2), then Phase 2a, 2b and 3. There's also a Phase 4, where they have to monitor the drug after it's released on the market.How many more trials are needed until it can be released onto the market??