Tuesday, July 21, 2015

California Ready to Approve $243 Million for New Stem Cell Research

CIRM President Randy Mills uses a railroad analogy for therapy development

The California stem cell agency Thursday is set to approve $243 million to finance everything from testing therapies on patients to exposing high school students to research.

The multi-faceted effort will come before the 29 directors of the agency at their meeting on Thursday at the Oakland Marriot City Center. The initiatives have already cleared the directors’ Scientific Subcommittee.

The effort is the second installment in the CIRM 2.0 program begun earlier this year by the agency’s president Randy Mills. He assumed his post in May 2014 at the California Institute of Regenerative Medicine or CIRM, as the $3 billion agency is formally known.

Mills has described his changes as radical. He says they are aimed at improving the quality of applications and speeding development of therapies. He also has called for deeper involvement by the agency in the direction and work of researchers.

Mills, who has made his entire career in the biotech business, says he wants to provide a relatively smooth track, a “continuous, predictable pathway” from basic research to clinical applications. He uses a railroad analogy to illustrate the desired progression of research(see graphic above).

The $243 million up for approval this week is about 30 percent of the agency's remaining $800 million. However, the money will be spent over the next several years -- not just this year. Under Mills' spending projections, the agency will not run out of cash until 2020. 

The largest program coming before CIRM directors this week is $100 million during 2015-16 for more advanced research related to clinical development. Directors earlier approved $50 million for the effort for the first six months of this year. However, they have awarded only $25 million as of the end of June.

Another $53 million is set for a variety of mostly basic research, which Mills calls “discovery.” Requests for applications are scheduled to begin late this summer or fall. Some of the rounds will have application openings twice a year.  Cash is scheduled to flow to researchers within about 10 months of application.

Mills is also asking the board for substantial delegation of authority to him during the reviews and is calling for an “optimized review process” because of a high anticipated volume of applications in discovery.

Under the $40 million translation research round, Mills would also be delegated authority in the grant review process to pluck out applications and advance them even if reviewers disagreed. Applications will be accepted in September and March. Cash will flow to researchers about nine months after applications are submitted.

Both the discovery and translation rounds are open to both businesses and nonprofit enterprises.

A revised training program called “Bridges 2.0” for college level students is budgeted for $46 million over a five-year period. A training program for high school students, changed and rebranded as “Spark,” will receive $4 million over five years. Applications for that program are due Oct. 1. It is open to colleges, universities and non-profit academic institutions. 

Applications for the Bridges program are also due Oct. 1. They will be limited to “California public universities or colleges or private, nonprofit academic institutions, which did not receive a CIRM-funded Major Facility or Shared Research Laboratory Award (and, hence, do not have a major stem cell research program or a critical mass of stem cell researchers).”

In addition to the Oakland location of the directors' meeting, the public can participate at teleconference locations in San Diego, South San Francisco, Stanford and two in La Jolla. Addresses can be found on the agenda, which includes directions for listening to the Internet audiocast of the meeting.

Email comments for the CIRM directors on items on the agenda may be sent to mbonneville@cirm.ca.gov.

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