News    
    by DAVID JENSEN posted    05.23.2017  
    C. Randal Mills, the 45-year-old CEO of Californias $3 billion    stem cell research program, is a man who loves his milestones.  
    A private pilot, he charts his course in the air from one    specific point to the next. Three years ago, Mills brought that    same sort of navigation to the state stem cell agency. Miss one    of the agencys milestones, and  if youre a stem cell    scientist  you may not crash and burn, but you could lose    millions of dollars in research funding from the state.  
      Since the agencys inception, it has spent money at the rate      of $22,000 an hour. But it has yet to finance a stem cell      therapy that is available to the general public.    
    Mills has left an indelible stamp on the agency with his    emphasis on concrete, measurable results. But he is resigning    from the research program at the end of June in the midst of    what some say is its last stage. His surprise departure to    head the worlds largest bone marrow donor organization shocked    many in Californias stem cell community. And it added to the    unease about its future along with the future of possible stem    cell therapies.  
    The California Institute for    Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), as the agency is formally    known, expects to run out of cash for new awards in just three    years, which is a blink of an eye in biotech research. Since    the agencys inception, it has spent money at the rate of    $22,000 an hour. But it has yet to finance a stem cell therapy    that is available to the general public. Nonetheless, there is    talk of a new, $5 billion stem cell bond measure on the    November 2018 ballot.  
    CIRM was created by California voters in 2004 when they    approved a 10,000-word ballot initiative,     Proposition 71. Voters also provided the agency with $3    billion in borrowed money (state bonds) that flows directly to    the agency, untouched by the governor or the Legislature. The    bond financing roughly doubles the cost of the research because    of the interest expense.  
      Passage of the California initiative triggered a fresh wave      of optimism and headlines that spoke of a new California gold      rush  this time in biotech.    
    The $34 million ballot campaign 13 years ago generated    expectations that miraculous stem cell therapies were right    around the corner.     More than 40 Nobel Prize-winning scientists and actors such    as Michael J. Fox campaigned for it. Christopher Reeve, who    portrayed Superman but was later paralyzed in an accident, was    featured     in a TV ad that appeared after his death.  
    Stand up for those who cant, said Reeve from his wheelchair,    calling on voters to support Proposition 71.  
    The agency came into being at a low point for the field of stem    cell research. President George W. Bush had restricted federal    funding for research using human embryonic stem cells.    Researchers were disheartened. Younger scientists shied away    from the field because of the funding uncertainties.  
    Passage of the California initiative triggered a fresh wave of    optimism and headlines that spoke of a new California gold rush     this time in biotech. While the gold rush is yet to be seen,    the agency can point to a number of markers that it says show    the program was worth the effort.  
    What particularly excites Mills and patient advocates are the    dramatic and emotional stories of the handful of patients who    have benefited from CIRM-connected clinical trials.  
      Independent, authoritative voices assessing the performance      of the agency are almost non-existent. The Legislature has no      oversight of the enterprise nor does the governor    
    Evangelina Padilla Vaccaro is one. Evangelina is alive today as    the result of work at UCLA that has saved the lives of more    than 30 persons afflicted with a fatal, rare immune disorder.    She is perhaps the only four-year-old ever to address the    governing board of the stem cell agency.  
    Thank you, she     whispered to the board at a meeting last December.    Evangelinas mother said more, her voice cracking, Thank    you for keeping my family complete.  
    CIRM has pumped $52 million into the immune disorder research,    which had been already underway for decades. However, only a    handful of people can participate in the CIRM-connected    clinical trials, such as Evangelinas, because of their    experimental nature. Both the federal Food and Drug    Administration, which ultimately controls the trials, and    researchers move slowly to bring risky therapies to the general    public.  
    The December meeting highlighted the personal success stories    that can be found in the work financed by the agency. But four    months later the prestigious scientific journal Nature carried    a gloomier take. It published a piece on CIRM with a headline    that     described the agency as being in its last stage and facing    its final test.  
      CIRM has made California a world leader in stem cell      research, attracting some of the most talented scientists to      the state to develop new treatments and funding world-class      research facilities    CIRM    
    The agency, however, is not yet ready for hospice care.    Recently asked to cite the five most important things that    Californians should know about the agency and its future, Kevin    McCormack, senior director for communications, responded with    much more. (The complete text of his statement     can be found here.) His short list:  
    1) Research we have supported has cured more than 30    children of a fatal rare immune disorder. That same approach    has also cured a young man of another rare immune disorder and    is now being used to help find a cure for sickle cell anemia     a condition that affects more than 100,000 people in the US,    most of them African Americans.  
    2) We have funded 29 projects in clinical trials    for a variety of diseases including heart disease, cancer,    diabetes, HIV/AIDS, spinal cord injuries and the leading cause    of vision loss and blindness in the US.  
    3) We are focused on adding another 40 new clinical    trials by 2020, including rare diseases and those affecting    children.  
    4) We place patients at the heart of everything we    do and every decision we make. Nothing gets done at CIRM,    including what we fund and how clinical trials are designed,    without the input of patients and patient advocates. They know    best what needs to be done and their voices are essential in    making decisions about treatments that could change their    lives, even save their lives.  
    5) CIRM has made California a world leader in stem    cell research, attracting some of the most talented scientists    to the state to develop new treatments and funding world-class    research facilities in which the research is conducted free    from federal restrictions.  
    Independent, authoritative voices assessing the performance of    the agency are almost non-existent. The legislature has no    oversight of the enterprise nor does the governor, a condition    permitted legally by the ballot initiative. The initiative did    create a body called the Citizens Financial    Accountability and Oversight Committee, which meets once a    year to consider the agencys finances. In recent years, it has    been less than aggressive.  
    Jim Lott is a member of that group, which is chaired by the    state controller. Over the years, however, Lott has expressed    dissatisfaction with some aspects of the agency. Lott, who was    executive vice president for decades of the Hospital    Association of Southern California, said in an interview that    the agency has done a really good job in seeding programs.  
    But he also described the ballot initiative as a very    expensive tease. Lott said, They teased the public. They    teased us with with Proposition 71. And they did not deliver on    the tease, and I dont want them to be able to get away with    that again.  
      According to calculations by theCalifornia      Stem Cell Report, about 90 percent of the      agencysawards      have gone to institutionsthat are or have been      represented onthe governing board.    
    If CIRM is to continue, he said it should be wrapped into the    regular structure of state government and funded on a normal,    annual budget basis. He also said the governing board should    become advisory instead of currently making decisions on each    application for state money.  
    We need to do this in a more responsible and accountable way,    Lott said.  
    The most comprehensive review of the agency came in 2012 when    the Institute of Medicine (IOM) reported     the findings of its 17-month study of the agency. The IOM    is a highly regarded national organization that provides    studies on science, health and medical issues. The stem cell    agency governing board commissioned the study at a cost    of $700,000.  
    (The IOM has been renamed the Health and Medicine Division of    the National    Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.)  
    Harold Shapiro, former president of Princeton University and    chairman of the IOM study, said in 2012 that the agency has    done a remarkably good job overall in giving the state a    prominent position in regenerative medicine. But he said the    stem field has changed and the agency needed to change with it.  
      Currently, the top 10 recipients of CIRM largesse all have      ties to its governing board.    
    When Shapiro appeared before the board to present the findings,    some CIRM directors     bridled at the studys far-reaching recommendations, many    of which dealt with the built-in conflicts of interest on the    board. The IOM proposals would have removed all board members    from the grant review process and limited them to voting on a    slate of applications rather than individual applications. More    disclosure of personal conflicts of interest, including health    matters, was also recommended.  
    Far too many board members represent organizations that    receive CIRM funding or benefit from that funding. These    competing personal and professional interests compromise the    perceived independence of the ICOC (the CIRM governing board),    introduce potential bias into the boards decision making and    threaten to undermine confidence in the board, the IOM report    said.  
    According to calculations by the California Stem    Cell Report, about 90 percent of the agencys awards    have gone to institutions that are or have been represented    on the governing    board.  
    Currently, the top 10 recipients of CIRM largesse all have ties    to its governing board. The institutions are Stanford    University, $320 million; UCLA, $275 million; UC San Diego,    $177 million; UC San Francisco, $143 million; UC Davis, $129    million; USC, $110 million; UC Irvine, $106 million; City of    Hope, $72 million; Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, $62 million,    and Gladstone Institutes, $61 million.  
      We changed the way our board votes to ensure there would be      no more concerns about the perception of conflict of      interest.  CIRM    
    The ballot initiative gave virtually all the institutions that    were significant players in stem cell research a seat at the    board table. The 29 board members cannot vote on applications    from institutions that they are tied to. But they do set the    rules, standards and scope of the grant programs.  
    In response to the IOM, the board approved     what were termed dramatic changes in voting and other    procedures to ease the perception of conflicts of interest.    Shapiro called the changes significant.  
    The agency said last week,We changed the way our board votes    to ensure there would be no more concerns about the perception    of conflict of interest. By preventing heads of institutions    who could receive stem cell funds from voting on any funding    issue, we took that off the table so that we can focus on our    main goal, helping patients.  
    The conflict case that has attracted the most public attention,    however, did not involve directors, but Alan Trounson, Mills    predecessor as president of agency. Seven days after Trounson    left his CIRM post in 2014,     he was appointed to the board of StemCells, Inc., a Newark,    Calif. firm that was awarded more than $40 million in funding    while Trounson was president of the agency. Trounson     ultimately received $435,000 in total compensation for his    duties on the StemCells, Inc., board. Trounson has denied any    wrongdoing.  
    The Fair Political Practices Commission initiated an    investigation and said in a 2015 letter to Trounson there was    insufficient evidence to demonstrate a legal violation.  
    The loss of Mills has triggered concerns among some scientists    that more CIRM employees will begin to look for work elsewhere.    Mills has identified the risk of losing employees in his    strategic plan. He has talked about finding ways to keep people    on board, but nothing has been publicly disclosed.  
    On May 2, when Mills announced his coming departure to lead the    National Marrow Donor Program in Minneapolis, the agency    coupled the news with designation of an interim president,    Maria Millan. She is currently the CIRM vice president for    therapeutics. The agencys directors will discuss finding a    permanent replacement at a closed-door meeting in July.  
    Mills said in an interview that Millan, a physician who has    been with the agency since 2012, is the obvious choice to    succeed him. Prior to joining CIRM, she served as a vice    president and acting chief medical officer of StemCells, Inc.,    and was director of the pediatric organ transplant program at    Stanford.  
    CIRMs general counsel, James Harrison     is also leaving at the end of June. His announcement came    in March, prior to Mills resignation. Harrison is a partner in    the Oakland law firm of Remcho, Johansen & Purcell and    wrote part of the stem cell initiative. Harrison worked under a    contract between his firm and CIRM. He has been associated with    the agency since its inception and has been a key leader with    influence well beyond narrow legal issues.  
    Today CIRM is downto its last $650 million, having    committed $2.2 billion for awards with the remainder going for    operational expenses. The $650 million sounds ample, but when    clinical trials are receiving $20 million in a single award,    the money can go fast.  
    Coming to the financial rescue of CIRM may be Robert Klein, the    Palo Alto multimillionaire real estate investment banker who    led the 2004 campaign and became the agencys first chairman.    He says he is ready to back a $5 billion bond issue for    California voter approval in November of 2018. Americans for Cures, his    nonprofit group, which shares space in Kleins Palo Alto    headquarters, plans to poll California voters this fall, with    the expectation that 70 percent of them will back the agency.  
    Klein did not respond to emailed questions for this article.    But he     made an appearance earlier this year at a CIRM-related    event at the City of Hope in Duarte, Ca. Klein declared that a    medical revolution is underway. And he said that the state of    California now has the opportunity and privilege to lift the    human condition if it will continue support of its 12-year-old    stem cell research effort.        Eds Note: David Jensen has published more than 4,000    items since 2005 dealing with California stem cell matters on    his blog, the California Stem Cell Report. He formerly worked    for The Sacramento Bee, UPI and spent 1975-6 working as a press    aide for Gov. Jerry Brown in his first term in office.  
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California's stem cell agency confronts uncertain future - Capitol Weekly