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Parkinson's Hope: New Stem Cell Therapy Shows Promise
26 Mar
Summary
- Sasineprocel therapy shows safety and sustained benefit in Parkinson's patients.
- Patients experienced increased 'ON' time and improved motor function.
- Imaging confirms cell survival and engraftment, supporting clinical changes.

Aspen Neuroscience announced promising 12-month data from the ASPIRO trial for sasineprocel, an autologous induced pluripotent stem cell therapy for Parkinson's disease. The autologous DANPC therapy was found to be safe and well-tolerated. Patients experienced sustained clinical benefits, including increased good 'ON' time and improvements in motor function and quality of life scores. Imaging studies confirmed the survival and engraftment of the transplanted cells, providing biological support for the observed clinical improvements. These results suggest sasineprocel may serve as a monotherapy competing with current Parkinson's treatments. However, sasineprocel faces competition from established dopaminergic therapies and other developing cell therapies. Its high cost as an iPSC-derived therapy could present regulatory and reimbursement challenges. Aspen plans to initiate a large Phase III trial later in 2026. This trial will be critical in determining if the promising results from the ASPIRO trial can be replicated in a larger, controlled patient population.