Category: News

Battling Blood Cancer at Ossium

September is Blood Cancer Awareness Month, a time to raise awareness about the many ongoing efforts to fight blood cancer and to remember the hundreds of thousands of patients who have passed away due to these devastating conditions. Blood cancer encompasses disorders that affect the blood, bone marrow, and lymphatic system. Depending on the type of cells affected, these cancers are called leukemia, lymphoma, myeloma, myelodysplastic syndromes, and myeloproliferative neoplasms. Someone in the U.S. dies from blood cancer every 9 minutes, and more than 1.5 million Americans are living with or in remission from blood cancer.

Blood cancer treatment usually starts with chemotherapy and can occur alone or with other drugs and treatments. Often, these treatments are designed to destroy the patient’s cancerous bone marrow. Other times, chemotherapy and radiation that kill circulating cancer cells in the blood also have an unfortunate side effect of destroying the patient’s bone marrow, where blood cells are made. The purpose of bone marrow transplants (also called hematopoietic stem cell transplants, or HSCT) is to replenish the body with new bone marrow. The new bone marrow will start producing healthy, cancer-free blood cells after a successful transplant. In some cases, the new blood cells will even attack and destroy cancer cells that survived the initial chemotherapy round, a phenomenon called the graft-versus-tumor effect. 

The best bone marrow transplant outcomes happen when a patient’s human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genes match that of their donor. For many patients, the best match is a sibling. However, only about 30% of patients have an HLA-matched sibling, which has led to the development of global bone marrow donor registries to facilitate the act of matching patients to unrelated donors with an ideal HLA. Despite the size of these registries, not all patients are able to find a suitable donor, and large variability in group representation has a particularly negative effect on minority populations. 

At Ossium, we are driven by the opportunity to impact patients in need and we believe that a healthier world is a better one. We are working hard to build a vast and diverse bank of on-demand bone marrow that will make bone marrow transplants available for more patients.

The San Francisco team wearing red in support of Blood Cancer Awareness Month

The Return to the Office in San Francisco

Since the beginning of the pandemic, our facility in Indianapolis has had business-critical employees onsite to keep our production and manufacturing operations running smoothly. As a science-based company, we have followed the latest data-backed policies and advisories of the CDC and local governments. We are proud of our team in Indianapolis for staying safe and healthy as they achieved many milestones over the past year.

Our San Francisco team switched to working remotely in March 2020 and continued working from home through the first half of 2021 as the company more than doubled in size. During that period, the team continued to push the company forward and was able to successfully close our Series B fundraising. As a company, we strongly believe in the value of an in-person work model and a community that is built on real-life human connections. We also believe that nothing is more important than the health and safety of our employees, our partners, and our communities. This meant that any potential return to the office had to be rooted in a science-based approach — we wanted to ensure all of our stakeholders felt comfortable, safe, and supported.

San Francisco Team

Thus, once the San Francisco team was 100% vaccinated and the data suggested more broadly that vaccination efforts were vastly decreasing the spread of COVID-19, we began to scout for a new space. After looking at more than a dozen offices around the city, we finally found a new place to call ‘home’. The beautiful brick building, formerly known as “The Barrel House”, is located in the heart of downtown San Francisco and at one time served as a wine warehouse, prohibition speakeasy, and most recently a concert hall where musicians and talented artists would come together over good food, drinks, and music. The 6,400 ft2, three-story building offers plenty of space for the team to grow, be creative, and collaborate as we (re)adapt to an in-person model.

In celebration of the new office and return to in-person work, we hosted an office-warming party in mid-July with all San Francisco Ossies and their significant others. It was an extra-special event since for many it was the first opportunity to meet and get to know one another outside of Zoom. It was an amazing evening with lots of laughter, tasty hors d’oeuvres, and good company.

Later in July, we were lucky to host another dinner party as our Co-Founder and CEO, Kevin Caldwell, graciously invited the whole team to his humble home. This too was a wonderful opportunity for the San Francisco Ossies and their partners to bond over good food and drinks, and we even had Erik Woods, the Co-Founder & Chief Science Officer join us from Indianapolis.

Here at Ossium, we understand the importance of celebration and human connection. We look forward to many more opportunities to relish our achievements both big and small, and can’t wait to see how we continue to evolve as a company in the years to come.

Our resident competitors, Jay and Jane, battling it out on the air hockey table in the new office

LifeGift and Ossium Health Offer Hope with Bone Marrow Clinical Application

(Houston – July 26, 2021) – LifeGift, the organ procurement organization (OPO) facilitating organ and tissue donation in Southeast, West, and North Texas, and Ossium Health, a therapeutics company harnessing the power of stem cell science to improve treatment for patients with blood and immune diseases, are proud to announce a collaborative partnership. In 2017, LifeGift was the first OPO to work with Ossium and this ongoing partnership resulted in the successful banking of cells from their first clinically transplantable donor at the beginning of 2020. Cell banking systems are set up to assure a uniform population of cells is preserved, their integrity maintained, and a sufficient supply of material is accessible for the life of the product.

Bone marrow recovered by LifeGift and Ossium Health’s other OPO partners is processed for future use in transplant tolerance for individuals receiving organ and tissue transplants, bone marrow transplant for blood cancer patients, and regenerative medicine cell therapies for patients with a variety of inflammatory, autoimmune, and degenerative conditions.

Roughly 20,000 new U.S. patients seek a bone marrow transplant each year, but only 30 percent have a relative who provides a match. Of the remaining 14,000 patients, fewer than 5,000 receive transplants from unrelated donors. The living donor bone marrow registry, autologous bone marrow transplants, and umbilical cord blood banks have provided lifesaving solutions for thousands of patients with hematologic diseases. However, these methods still experience significant limitations driven by the scarcity of matched bone marrow.

LifeGift’s partnership with Ossium Health enables transformative clinical work such as Ossium’s recently approved clinical trial for intestinal transplants. Intestinal transplantation is rare because of historically high rejection rates. However, by infusing bone marrow cells from the same donor as the transplanted intestines, the immune system could see the donor organ as “self” so that long-term graft acceptance can be achieved without life-long immunosuppression.

“We are thrilled to have been the first collaborating partner with Ossium Health among all organ procurement organizations more than four years ago,” says Kevin Myer, president and CEO of LifeGift. “This partnership aligns perfectly with LifeGift’s focus on research and innovation to support our efforts to increase transplantation. We are relentless in our goal to save more lives through donation, and Ossium Health’s initiatives will drive clinical advancements allowing us to help more patients and advance important clinical research.”

“Ossium’s first of its kind bone marrow bank combined with bone marrow recovered by LifeGift establishes a powerful new platform for bringing cell therapies to patients across the globe,” says Ossium co-founder, president and CEO, Kevin Caldwell. “The future looks bright as the partnership moves forward to improve the health, vitality, and longevity of human beings through bioengineering.”

 

About LifeGift

LifeGift is a nonprofit, 501(c) 3 organization offering hope to individuals needing transplants in 109 Texas counties in Southeast, North and West Texas. LifeGift is a founding member of Donate Life Texas, the organization that manages the organ, eye and tissue donor registry. Please visit www.LifeGift.org.

About Ossium Health

Ossium Health is a therapeutics company that leverages its unique deceased donor bone marrow banking platform to develop stem cell therapies for patients with life-threatening blood and immune diseases. Founded in 2016, the company is run by its Co-Founder, President & CEO Kevin Caldwell, and its Co-Founder, EVP & Chief Science Officer Erik Woods. The company’s mission is “to deploy cellular therapeutics and bioengineering to produce lasting gains in the health, vitality, and longevity of human beings.” Ossium is a Public Benefit Corporation. Learn more about Ossium at www.ossiumhealth.com.

Scalare un team di livello mondiale nel 2021

In Ossium sappiamo che assumere le persone giuste è la parte più importante della costruzione di un grande team, quindi siamo molto felici di annunciare che negli ultimi 6 mesi abbiamo dato il benvenuto a più di 35 nuovi dipendenti di prim'ordine. Abbiamo più che raddoppiato le dimensioni e ora abbiamo quasi 70 dipendenti nelle nostre sedi di San Francisco e Indianapolis.

In particolare, abbiamo rapidamente potenziato i reparti di produzione, qualità, produzione di cellule, supply chain e regolamentazione. Inoltre, stiamo costruendo team completamente nuovi che si occupano di Affari Clinici, Sviluppo Commerciale e Legale. Questo periodo di crescita ci consentirà di aumentare in modo massiccio gli sforzi di produzione e di prepararci a dare il via a numerosi studi clinici di valutazione dei prodotti Ossium nei prossimi 6-12 mesi. Questo è un momento entusiasmante per Ossium, in cui saremo presto in grado di misurare il successo dell'azienda in base al numero di vite salvate.

Se chiedete a un membro del team Ossium com'è la vita qui, vi dirà che diamo ai nostri dipendenti la possibilità di mantenere i più alti standard di eccellenza e siamo una forza per il bene. Se siete interessati a far parte del nostro team orientato alla missione e volete migliorare la salute, la vitalità e la longevità degli esseri umani, date un'occhiata ai nostri annunci di lavoro - stiamo continuando ad assumere sia a San Francisco che a Indianapolis!

Excellthera e Ossium Health annunciano una collaborazione per far progredire le loro tecnologie e piattaforme per migliorare la salute umana

ExCellThera Inc., un'azienda di medicina cellulare e molecolare in fase clinica che fornisce molecole e soluzioni di bioingegneria per espandere le cellule staminali e immunitarie per uso terapeutico, e Ossium Health, un'azienda terapeutica che sfrutta la potenza della scienza delle cellule staminali per migliorare il trattamento dei pazienti affetti da malattie del sangue e immunitarie, hanno annunciato il 21 aprile un accordo di collaborazione per valutare e far progredire le opportunità di combinare le loro capacità per promuovere l'obiettivo di migliorare la salute umana.

La collaborazione prevede di valutare e promuovere l'opportunità di impiegare cellule staminali adulte provenienti da donatori deceduti della banca del midollo osseo di Ossium Health, prima al mondo, in combinazione con la tecnologia di espansione e ringiovanimento cellulare ECT-001 di ExCellThera, composta dalla piccola molecola UM171 e da un sistema di coltura ottimizzato, per trattare i tumori del sangue, migliorare la tolleranza degli organi solidi e riparare i danni causati dalle radiazioni.

Leggete l'articolo completo di Globe Newswire qui.

Ossium Health e il Columbia University Irving Medical Center avviano uno studio di fase 1 che utilizza le cellule staminali del midollo osseo per ridurre al minimo i requisiti di immunosoppressione nel trapianto intestinale

Il trapianto intestinale è un'operazione salvavita per i pazienti con lesioni o malattie dell'intestino, ma il successo chirurgico è ostacolato da alti tassi di rigetto derivanti da un attacco immunitario del ricevente contro il donatore, definito reattività ospite-trapianto. Gli alti livelli di immunosoppressione storicamente richiesti per prevenire il rigetto determinano un elevato rischio di infezioni e cancro.

Lo studio di fase I di Ossium e della Columbia University, guidato dal ricercatore principale Dr. Tomoaki Kato, si propone di esaminare la sicurezza e la fattibilità della somministrazione a pazienti sottoposti a trapianto intestinale di cellule staminali CD34+ (le cellule che producono tutti i tipi di cellule del sangue) ottenute dal midollo osseo del donatore dell'organo. L'obiettivo è sviluppare una strategia di trattamento post-trapianto che controlli il rigetto e al contempo riduca l'elevato rischio di infezioni e tumori associato ai tradizionali requisiti di immunosoppressione del trapianto. L'infusione di cellule del midollo osseo provenienti dallo stesso donatore dell'organo o degli organi trapiantati potrebbe promuovere la tolleranza immunitaria, in cui il sistema immunitario considera il donatore come "se stesso", in modo da ottenere l'accettazione dell'innesto a lungo termine senza immunosoppressione per tutta la vita.

Ulteriori informazioni sullo studio, intitolato "Using T-Cell Alloreactivity and Chimerism to Guide Immunosuppression Minimization in Intestinal Transplantation" (Utilizzo dell'alloreattività delle cellule T e del chimerismo per guidare la minimizzazione dell'immunosoppressione nel trapianto intestinale), sono disponibili all'indirizzo clinicaltrials.gov

About Ossium Health
Ossium Health is a therapeutics company that leverages its unique deceased donor bone marrow banking platform to develop stem cell therapies for patients with life-threatening blood and immune diseases. Founded in 2016, the company is run by its Co-Founder, President & CEO Kevin Caldwell, and its Co-Founder, EVP & Chief Science Officer Erik Woods. The company’s mission is “to deploy cellular therapeutics and bioengineering to produce lasting gains in the health, vitality, and longevity of human beings.” Ossium is a Public Benefit Corporation. Learn more about Ossium at www.ossiumhealth.com.

Contact
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