The macula is the spot in the center of your eye's retina. When  that tissue begins to thin and break down, this is referred to as  macular degeneration, a blurring of the sharp central vision  necessary for driving, reading and other close-up work. Most  people develop this disease as they age.
  For the latest study, researchers led by Dr. Michiko Mandai of  the laboratory for retinal regeneration at RIKEN Center for  Developmental Biology in Japan tested an experimental stem cell  treatment on a 77-year-old woman diagnosed with "wet," or  neovascular age-related, macular degeneration.
  The "wet" form of the disease involves blood vessels positioned  underneath the pigment epithelium (a layer of retinal cells)  growing through the epithelium and harming the eye's  photoreceptor cells. In Japan, wet age-related macular  degeneration is the most common form, but in Caucasian  populations, only about 10% of people with age-related macular  degeneration gets that form.
    The "dry" form involves the macula breaking down without growth    of blood vessels where they're not supposed to be.  
    To stop the progress of wet macular degeneration, the    researchers performed surgery to transplant a sheet of retinal    pigment epithelial cells under the retina in one of the    patient's eye.  
    The transplanted cells had been derived from autologous induced    pluripotent stem cells, which are reprogrammed cells. They were    created using cells from the connective tissue of the woman's    skin.  
    One year after surgery, the transplanted sheet remained intact,    and there was no evidence of lasting adverse effects. Although    the patient showed no evidence of improved eyesight, her vision    had stabilized.  
    "This research serves multiple purposes," wrote Peter    Karagiannis, a science writer, in an email on behalf of Dr.    Shinya Yamanaka, the Nobel Prize-winning co-author of the study    and director of the Center for iPS Cell Research and    Application at Kyoto University. From the patient's    perspective, the study shows that induced pluripotent stem    cells can alleviate the problems associated with age-related    macular degeneration.  
    "From a greater medical perspective, however, the bigger impact    is that it shows iPS cells can be used as cell therapies," the    email said, adding that newly initiated stem cell research    applications at the center include Parkinson's disease and    thrombocytopenia, a lack of platelets in the blood.  
    The American story, like the Japanese story, begins with    patients slowly losing their sight as a result of macular    degeneration -- in this case, three women ages 72 to 88, two of    whom had the "dry" form.  
    Each patient paid $5,000 for the procedure at an unnamed clinic    in Florida, the authors noted. Some of the patients, including    two of the three women described in the paper, learned of the    so-called clinical trial on ClinicalTrials.gov, a registry    database run by the US National Library of Medicine. However,    the consent form and other written materials did not mention a    trial.  
    The procedure took less than an hour and began with a standard    blood draw and the removal of fat cells from each patient's    abdomen. To obtain stem cells, the fat tissue was processed    with enzymes, while platelet-dense plasma was isolated from the    blood. The stem cells were mixed with the plasma and injected    into both eyes.  
    Complications may have been caused by contamination during stem    cell preparation, or the stem cells might have changed into    myofibroblasts, a type of cell associated with scarring, after    injection, the authors wrote.  
    Before the surgery, the women's vision ranged from 20/30 to    20/200. After treatment and complications, the patients were    referred in June 2015 to two university-based ophthalmology    practices, including the University of Miami, where lead author    Dr. Ajay E. Kuriyan was practicing.  
    "Many stem-cell clinics are treating patients with little    oversight and with no proof of efficacy," Kuriyan and his    co-authors wrote in the paper, acknowledging that it is    difficult for patients to know whether a stem cell therapy --    or a clinical trial -- is legitimate.  
    One red flag is that the patients were required to pay for    their procedure; another is that both eyes were treated at    once, the authors said. Legitimate clinical trials do not    require payment, and for any experimental treatment of the    eyes, a good doctor would observe how one eye responds before    attempting the second eye.  
    Another problem for unsavvy patients: Listings on    ClinicalTrials.gov are not fully scrutinized for scientific    soundness, noted the authors.  
    Today, the clinic is no longer performing these eye injections,    the authors said, but it is still seeing patients. In October    2015, months after the procedures had been performed, the Food    and Drug Administration released more specific guidelines for    stem cell treatments.  
    Writing on behalf of the FDA in an editorial alongside the    paper, Drs. Peter W. Marks, Celia M. Witten and Robert M.    Califf say there's an absence of compelling evidence, yet some    practitioners argue that stem cells have a unique capacity to    restore health because of their ability to differentiate into    whatever cell is necessary for repairing a defect. Another    argument is that clinical trials are too complex for all except    large industrial sponsors.  
    Despite the shadow cast by some stem cell experiments, the    Japanese study earned praise from the scientific community.  
    Michael P. Yaffe, vice president of scientific programs at the    New York Stem Cell Foundation Research Institute, said the    RIKEN study was "incredibly thorough, careful and    well-documented."  
    "Many experts in the field of regenerative medicine believe    that the treatment of macular degeneration and other retinal    diseases will be among the first areas of success in the use of    stem cell-derived tissues," said Yaffe, whose foundation was    not involved in the RIKEN study.  
    Yaffe said this optimism stems from preliminary studies using    retinal cells derived from stem cells in animals. Scientists    are also hopeful because the procedures to generate pure cells    of the correct type and surgical techniques necessary for    transplantation have already been developed.  
    "A number of research groups are moving toward developing stem    cell-based treatments for age-related macular degeneration and    other retinal diseases," Yaffe said.  
    The National Eye Institute at the National Institutes of Health    is planning a similar study using patient-specific pluripotent    stem cells, according to Kapil Bharti, a Stadtman Investigator    in the Unit on Ocular Stem Cell & Translational Research at    the institute. After getting approval to conduct a phase I    safety trial, the institute will treat 10 to 12 patients to    check safety and tolerability of stem cell-based eye tissue    transplants.  
    "Data from 10 to 12 patients is needed to show that the    implanted cells are indeed safe," he said, adding that the    trial is likely to begin in 2018.  
    "While researchers have used embryonic stem cell derived cells    to treat age-related macular degeneration, (the RIKEN study) is    the first study that used induced pluripotent stem cells," said    Bharti, who was not involved in the research.  
    Both induced pluripotent stem cells and embryonic stem cells    can be used to make other kinds of cells of the body, explained    Bharti. However, induced pluripotent stem cells can be derived    from adult skin or blood cells, rather than from embryos.  
    "Another big scientific advantage with induced pluripotent stem    cells is that they can be made patient-specific (because it's    the patient's own cells), reducing the chances of tissue    rejection," he said.  
    P. Michael Iuvone, a professor of ophthalmology and director of    vision research at Emory University School of Medicine, also    noted the importance of using the patient's own stem cells.  
    Past studies have used embryonic stem cells to treat    age-related macular degeneration, but there were problems    related to rejection, when the body refuses to accept a    transplant or graft, explained Iuvone, who was not involved in    the latest study. In the new RIKEN study, the researchers took    the patient's own cells and converted them into retinal cells    to avoid these complications.  
    "The results from the standpoint of the graft taking and    surviving without any signs of any kind of toxicity or    tumorigenicity are very positive," Iuvone said. "But the    weakness is, they only had one patient, and it's very difficult    to make any conclusions from one patient."  
    He noted that the RIKEN researchers planned to work with more    patients, but in 2014, the Japanese government passed a law    that said regenerative medicine clinical trials could be    performed only at medical institutions, not at research    institutions such as RIKEN.  
    Though the experiment was performed on a woman with wet    age-related macular degeneration, it also might be useful for    "dry" age-related macular degeneration, which is more common in    the United States, according to Iuvone.  
    Currently, there are some effective treatments for age-related    macular degeneration.  
    "The standard of care in most cases is to give injections of    drugs that inhibit the growth hormones that is called vascular    epithelial growth factor, or VEGF," Iuvone said. "For most    people, it at least slows the progression and in some cases    actually improves visual acuity."  
    Laser treatments have also been used but are on the decrease    because of side effects. "Given the fact that the VEGF    treatments seem to be effective, I think that most clinicians    have turned to that," Iuvone said.  
    Bharti believes the RIKEN study is a major milestone in the    field. "We and others are learning from the Japan study," he    said.  
    Susan L. Solomon, CEO of the New York Stem Cell Foundation    Research Institute, agrees.  
    "This study represents a fundamental advance in regenerative    medicine, in the use of stem cell-derived tissues and in the    treatment of eye disease," she said. However, additional work    and many more studies are needed, she said, before a safe and    efficacious stem cell-based treatment will be available "to the    broad and growing population with retinal disease" -- all of    us, growing older.  
The rest is here:
One stem cell treatment stabilizes macular degeneration, another blinds 3 patients - CNN