Brian Culley, CEO of Lineage Cell Therapeutics, describes his company’s approach as “replace and restore.”
In certain settings, replacing whole cells may provide restorative benefits that go beyond small molecule drugs, or even anti-VEGF therapies.
Replacing dysfunctional or lost cell types with manufactured cells of the same type can restore activity. That means a potential reversal of disease progression rather than a slower road to vision loss.
Lineage has taken this approach to develop a treatment for dry AMD. OpRegen is in a Phase IIa clinical trial to evaluate the cell therapy in patients with geographic atrophy secondary to AMD. OpRegen replaces the layer of damaged retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells with manufactured RPE cells via a single, 30-minute procedure.
With host Rob Rothman, MD, Culley shares Lineage’s two-step allogenic cell production process and how the company applies it to ophthalmology. They also discuss how this process got the attention of Roche and other strategic partners—a rare win for a cell therapy company.
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Resources
Lineage Cell Therapeutics https://lineagecell.com/
OpRegen https://lineagecell.com/products-pipeline/opregen/
Rob Rothman, MD https://ois.net/robert-rothman-md/