‘Hot off the press’
Epilepsy affects about 3.5 million people in the United States. About two-thirds of people with epilepsy get good control of their seizures using antiseizure medication.
For seizures that are uncontrolled with medication, identifying the seizure focus and removing it surgically can often result in seizure freedom in a high proportion of patients. But not all patients are candidates for epilepsy surgery, and for those who can have it the surgery itself carries some risks, including diminished cognition and memory.
“While these are still early days, we’re encouraged by the positive safety findings so far, and the early seizure responses” with neural cell therapy, Dr. Spencer told reporters.
Given the positive results in the first two patients, additional patients will be treated “with careful safety review all along the way. This is going to be rolling out over the next several years,” Dr. Spencer said. Patient recruitment is underway at epilepsy centers across the United States.
Briefing moderator Natalia Rost, MD, MPH, chair of the AAN science committee, said, “This is a true example of emerging science. It’s literally hot off the press,” and the preliminary results are “very promising.”
Dr. Rost, chief of the stroke division at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, noted that this type of cell therapy implant is “very novel and representative of where the field is moving, when no traditional solutions exist for common neurological problems.”
The study was sponsored by Neurona Therapeutics and funded in part by the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine. Dr. Beach and Dr. Spencer report no relevant financial relationships. Several investigators are employees of Neurona Therapeutics. Dr. Rost reports no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.