Two
South Korean biotechnology firms are expected to receive government approval
for their stem cell drugs this month, paving the way for the world's second
batch of stem cell-based medicines to hit the market, sources said Sunday.
The Korea Food and Drug Administration (KFDA)
will likely approve "Cartistem" produced by Medipost Inc. for
treatment of damaged cartilage in mid-January, they said. A stem cell-based
anal fistula drug by Anterogen Co. will also receive official permission within
this month.
"We are currently reviewing documents
additionally submitted by each company. Permission will be issued sooner or
later," a KFDA official said on condition of anonymity.
Medipost's Cartistem, in particular, is a drug
for treating degenerative arthritis and knee cartilage defects.
The drug uses stem cells from other people,
not from patients, so that it can be mass-produced and its quality could be
better maintained, experts said.
If Cartistem and Anterogen's anal fistula
treatment medicine get the green light, they could be commercialised within one
or two months, according to market watchers.
In July, South Korea became the world's first
country to approve a stem cell-based drug named "Hearticellgram-AMI."
The medicine for acute myocardial infarction is produced by FCB-Pharmicell
based in Seongnam, south of Seoul.
Yonhap
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