
New dawn for NeuroScientific with stem cell acquisition
The deal will hand NeuroScientific the keys to Isopogen's patented 'StemSmart' technology, which innovatively prepares a specific type of stem cell, mesenchymal stem cells (MSC), for use as an intravenous infusion. MSC are universal donor cells, meaning that there is no need for matching between a donor and recipient. The are effectively an 'off-the shelf' cell therapy.
Over the past 20 years, haematology medical scientist Dr Marian Sturm, NeuroScientific's incoming chief scientific officer, pioneered the development of MSCs in her former role as facility director of Royal Perth Hospital's Cell and Tissue Therapies centre.
The cells have so far been used in many patients, including as a last-line treatment for critically ill patients suffering severe immune complications from bone marrow transplantation and in kidney and lung transplant rejection, through early phase clinical trials and studies and on compassionate grounds, with promising results.
The MSC technology has also been employed to treat patients with severe Crohn's disease, an inflammatory autoimmune condition that affects the gut. The disease can develop into very difficult-to-manage and treat forms, including refractory Crohn's, in which patients experience persistent uncontrolled flare-ups, and fistulising Crohn's, in which patients develop an open wound from a gut flare-up out to the skin.
In a phase two trial targeting refractory Crohn's disease, a condition that no longer responds to standard treatments, of 18 patients treated with StemSmart MSC, 78 per cent of patients experienced clinical improvement and 44 per cent achieved full remission. That level of efficacy is considered impressive in the MSC field, particularly for refractory Crohn's.
With the global market for refractory Crohn's treatment alone estimated to be worth about US$7.5 billion, it's no wonder StemSmart's new owner quickly hailed the system as a potential game-changer. StemSmart technology offers a step up from traditional MSC manufacturing in that the cells are grown in a special media, becoming activated in the process. The platform technology was developed at Royal Perth Hospital (RPH) and manufactured using RPH's processes.
Notably, the manufacturing methodology can yield more than 200 cryopreserved clinical doses from just 10 millilitres of precious donated bone marrow, giving it both clinical flexibility and manufacturing scale.
Based on the early results in Crohn's disease and in other conditions, Sturm now sees hope in employing MSCs to treat other autoimmune and inflammatory diseases, possibly including lupus, multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis. As the cells can grow into skin, bone, fat and other tissue cells, they also offer potential applications for tissue repair, such as bone repair for skull or long bone injuries, for example.
The clinical development of MSC stretches back to 2002, when a Swedish paediatric haematologist used MSCs for the first time to treat a child gravely ill with complications from the treatment of leukaemia. The cells were isolated and grown in the doctor's laboratory from bone marrow donated by the child's mother. The child's clinical response to the cells was striking.
No doubt, the successful experimental treatment would have caught the attention of immunology and haematology researchers and clinicians worldwide, including Sturm, an expert in blood, cell and tissue transplant manufacturing for clinical applications, who was the then-director of RPH's cutting-edge Cell and Tissue Therapy facility.
At the time, Sturm was particularly focused on delivering MSCs as safely as possible into healthcare areas of unmet need. She began experimenting with ways to process the cells into a safe infusion that could be used to treat diseases and transplant complications where there were few or no existing clinical options.
In 2007, Dr Sturm was approached by her clinical colleagues, who wanted to use the MSC product on compassionate grounds to treat a critically ill man with complications of bone marrow transplant to treat blood cancer.
At the time, about 60 per cent of bone marrow transplant patients, who received donor marrow, developed a serious complication, known as graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), where the new blood system created by the bone marrow transplant rejects the recipient's body. It usually presents with symptoms that affect the gut, skin and liver, and is treated with steroids. With recent advancements in transplant practices, the incidence of acute GVHD has fallen to now occurring in about 25-30 per cent of cases. However, these medicines fail in about 30 per cent of acute GVHD cases – and most of this group die.
After receiving MSC treatment, the man quickly recovered, spurring Sturm to keep working to develop a scalable, commercial-grade MSC product and patenting the manufacturing process.
After an agreement was reached between Isopogen and the State Government's East Metropolitan Health Service (EMHS) giving Isopogen control of the MSC technology, NeuroScientific struck a deal with Isopogen to progress StemSmart.
The all-scrip acquisition sees Isopogen shareholders receive 85.7 million NeuroScientific shares and 57.1 million performance shares tied to future clinical and commercial milestones. The market welcomed the move, with NeuroScientific's share price surging 97 per cent on the day of the announcement. A $3.5 million capital raise led by Perth corporate advisor Westar Capital, after existing funds, creates a war chest of about $7.5 million. This will support further development, including for a special access program or bigger phase 2/3 trials for patients with refractory and fistulising Crohn's, and will enable regulatory engagement with Australia's Therapeutic Goods Administration with a long-term goal of partial or full registration for StemSmart MSC, first up as a Crohn's treatment.
The company is also eyeing the United States, where inflammatory bowel disease is forecast to grow into a lucrative US$13.8 billion market by 2026. About 30 per cent of Crohn's patients fail to respond to current gold-standard treatments, such as biologics, making them prime candidates for a new approach, such as StemSmart. The takeover signals a bold pivot for NeuroScientific, which previously focused on peptide-based drugs for neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's. Those drugs showed promise, but the timelines to market were long. By contrast, StemSmart's progress and results over decades of development position the product closer to near-term commercialisation, helped along by NeuroScientific's healthy bank balance. Nor will NeuroScientific be walking away from its roots completely. Two current directors will remain on the company's revamped board, and management will explore crossover applications for StemSmart, particularly to tackle the neuroinflammation that is a hallmark of inflammatory diseases such as Alzheimer's. That convergence could open a dual-front therapeutic pipeline, leveraging both peptide and cellular approaches. While competition in the stem cell space is fierce, the upside is enormous. Importantly, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently approved the first mesenchymal stromal cell therapy by ASX-listed, regenerative medicine company Mesoblast. While MSC products have been approved in other jurisdictions, the FDA approval of an allogeneic, bone marrow-derived MSC product for paediatric, steroid-refractory, acute graft-versus-host disease is momentous.
According to NeuroScientific, StemSmart is differentiated by its purity, potency and consistency. In preclinical and early human data, the platform has shown enhanced potency over conventional MSCs. The recent regulatory FDA approval of MSC also tilt the momentum in StemSmart's favour, suggesting regulators are warming to well-characterised stem cell platforms with rigorous clinical data.
Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact:
matt.birney@wanews.com.au
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Daily Telegraph
9 hours ago
- Daily Telegraph
Measles alert issued for Perth
Don't miss out on the headlines from Breaking News. Followed categories will be added to My News. A measles alert has been issued after three cases were detected in travellers who were on the same Bali flight. WA Health urged people travelling overseas to get a measles vaccination before they depart following the most recent cases. A health department spokesman said the most recent case was a traveller on Jetstar flight JQ108 which departed Perth about 6.30pm on July 22. Two other cases were reported from travellers on the same flight but were in separate parties and were not seated together. One of the infected travellers has visited multiple locations throughout Perth's south since they arrived back into Australia on Jetstar flight JQ117 at 1.30am on July 28. It follows a similar alert issued by South Australia Health, after an Adelaide man was diagnosed after holildaying in Bali. Three measles cases in Perth have been linked to travellers on the same Bali flight. Picture: NewsWire / Luis Enrique Ascui Authorities in WA are contacting people exposed at the locations, but the public is urged to check the list of exposure sites on the Department of Health website. Communicable Disease Control acting director Clare Huppatz said measles is highly contagious and it was not surprising that it had spread to other passengers who travelled on a plane with an infectious person. 'Anyone who is not immune is at risk of developing the disease if they are exposed,' she said. 'Measles can be severe for some people and can require hospitalisation, but it is preventable through vaccination. 'It's important for people to monitor for symptoms if they visited the venues on the exposure locations at the times listed.' Health authorities are urging travellers to get a measles vaccine before they travel from their GP or pharmacist. Dr Huppatz said early symptoms included fever, tiredness, cough, runny nose, and sore eyes, followed by a red non-itchy rash three or four days later. 'The rash usually starts on the face and spreads to the rest of the body,' she said. Dr Huppatz encouraged anyone planning overseas travel to see their GP or a travel doctor to discuss appropriate vaccinations prior to their trip, adding that a free MMR vaccine is available to adults who are not fully vaccinated. Originally published as A measles alert has been issued after cases were linked to travellers on the same Bali flight

News.com.au
10 hours ago
- News.com.au
A measles alert has been issued after cases were linked to travellers on the same Bali flight
A measles alert has been issued after three cases were detected in travellers who were on the same Bali flight. WA Health urged people travelling overseas to get a measles vaccination before they depart following the most recent cases. A health department spokesman said the most recent case was a traveller on Jetstar flight JQ108 which departed Perth about 6.30pm on July 22. Two other cases were reported from travellers on the same flight but were in separate parties and were not seated together. One of the infected travellers has visited multiple locations throughout Perth's south since they arrived back into Australia on Jetstar flight JQ117 at 1.30am on July 28. Authorities are contacting people exposed at the locations, but the public is urged to check the list of exposure sites on the Department of Health website. Communicable Disease Control acting director Clare Huppatz said measles is highly contagious and it was not surprising that it had spread to other passengers who travelled on a plane with an infectious person. 'Anyone who is not immune is at risk of developing the disease if they are exposed,' she said. 'Measles can be severe for some people and can require hospitalisation, but it is preventable through vaccination. 'It's important for people to monitor for symptoms if they visited the venues on the exposure locations at the times listed.' Dr Huppatz said early symptoms included fever, tiredness, cough, runny nose, and sore eyes, followed by a red non-itchy rash three or four days later. 'The rash usually starts on the face and spreads to the rest of the body,' she said. Dr Huppatz encouraged anyone planning overseas travel to see their GP or a travel doctor to discuss appropriate vaccinations prior to their trip, adding that a free MMR vaccine is available to adults who are not fully vaccinated.

News.com.au
14 hours ago
- News.com.au
Health Check: Pro Medicus banks the profits as customers go the ‘full stack'
Pro Medicus shares surge up to 7% on record revenue and earnings Tetratherix pockets $3.3 million, while Rhythm girds for a raising CEO oration inspires Starpharma share run The $32 billion market cap ProMedicus (ASX:PME) has drawn the chapter on what co-founder and CEO Dr Sam Hupert dubs 'the most successful year in the company's history by any measure'. The US-focused radiology imaging house today posted revenue of $213 million for the full year to June 30 2025, up 32%. Net earnings surged 39%, to $115 million. While the numbers were pretty much as expected, the shares surged up to 7% on the prospect of further revenue gains from newly-written contracts. The company is also expanding into areas such as cardiology and pathology – the latter of which could be two-thirds the size of the radiology market. "But it's early days." Hupert describes a 'record year of new contract wins, contract renewals and sales of additional modules'. Revenue rose in the three key jurisdictions of the US, Germany and Australia, but North America led the way with a 36% increase. The company derives about 90% of its revenue from the US. During the year, Pro Medicus won $520 million of new contracts. Yep, that's a record. These included a monster $330 million deal with Trinity Health, one of the biggest not-for-profit networks in the US. The company also signed two key renewals, totalling $130 million. Hupert says more customers are going the 'full stack', which means they are availing of the company's image viewing, archiving and workflow tools. Only the beginning? He adds that many of the recently signed contacts will come on stream 'in the next year and beyond', which means 98% of this revenue is yet to be recognised. He cites forward contracted revenue for the next five years at $948 million, up from $624 million a year ago. Despite the growth, Pro Medicus still accounts for only 10% of the US total addressable market. The company still trades on an extravagant price-earnings multiple, which implies that this 10% will become a much bigger number in the near future. 'We don't have a fixed target in mind, our aim is to get as big a percentage market share as possible,' Hupert says. 'Importantly, we do not see any technical or capacity-related reason why we will not continue to increase our market share materially from here.' Hupert says the company's recent $10 million loan facility to lung imager 4D Medical (ASX:4DX) related to the companies AI capabilities. There's the prospect of adding one or morr 4D products to the Pro Medicus stable. "But I wouldn't read more into it than that." Broker RBC says while the result was broadly in line with consensus, the company pleased with its free cash flow generation and upbeat outlook on contracts. RBC has a 'hold' rating on the stock with a 'price target' of $350. Starpharma shares take a run Starpharma (ASX:SPL) CEO Cheryl Maley's prezzo to Bioshares annual summit in Hobart last week appears to have been enough to spark a 50% share run. The contents weren't new, but Maley did outline how management had tweaked the company's strategy over the last year. Maley started in January 2024. Otherwise, Starpharma's June quarterly report showed customer receipts of $2 million, 51% higher than the March quarter. Net cash outflows were $2 million. Starpharma's reason for being is its dendrimer enhanced product (DEP) platform, which has produced the commercialised bacterial vaginosis treatment Vivagel and the germ-busting nasal spray Viraleze. Before you ask, dendrimers are nanoscale polymers aimed at improving drug efficacy and reducing side effects (such as bone marrow toxicity and hair loss). The company has oncology programs that combine the dendrimer with three existing drugs. They are irinotecan (colorectal cancer), cabazitaxel (prostate cancer and others). Management is attempting to outlicense these assets. Maley says despite considerable interest 'the licensing process has taken longer than anticipated.' She attributes this to factors including "the evolving oncology landscape shifting towards targeted treatment options and the current geo-political environment, which has impacted the biotechnology industry at large". Starpharma ended the quarter with cash of $15.5 million – enough funding for close to two years – with an expected $3.5 million R&D tax rebate yet to come. Starpharma shares today had a well-earned rest, falling around 10%. Rhythm limbers up for raising Rhythm Biosciences (ASX:RHY) shares are on trading halt pending a capital raising announcement, on or before next Monday. It's not a bad time for the company to tap the market, given its shares have gained 75% over the last month. Rhythm is developing Colostat, a blood-based cancer assay which could replace the commonly used 'poo' tests. The company also owns Genetype, a genetic risk assessment testing platform combining clinical, family history and genetic data. Rhythm bought this asset from the administrators of Genetic Technologies. Tetratherix gets a grant Of course, the best form of funding is the free variety and the recently listed Tetratherix (ASX:TTX) has come up trumps in this regard. The wound-care house has been awarded $3.3 million of non-dilutive funding, under the federal Industry Growth Program grant. Tetratherix is commercialising products based on its polymer biomaterials, which offer claimed benefits such as increased flexibility and bioresorbability. The grant will partly fund a $7.4 million project to take its Tetramatrix platform global, including expanding its production facility near Sydney Airport. The funding spans the current financial year and 2026-27. Tetratherix shares have gained a sprightly 40% since listing on June 30, the only local life sciences IPOs year to date. But if you think that's a drought, there been no US biotech IPO for six months. The last one was diseases specialist Aardvark Therapeutics, which listed on the Nasdaq in mid-February.