
RHEACELL and AOP Health: Strategic Partnership to Deliver Breakthrough Therapies for the 'Butterfly Children's Disease' and Chronic Venous Wounds
HEIDELBERG, Germany & VIENNA--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- RHEACELL, a German biotech company specialized in the development of stem cell therapies, and AOP Health, a Europe-based leader in integrated therapies for rare diseases and in intensive care, are forming a strategic alliance. This partnership marks a crucial step toward making breakthrough therapies available to patients with high unmet medical needs – particularly those affected by Epidermolysis bullosa (EB or 'butterfly children's disease') and chronic venous wounds. Both conditions currently have limited treatment options, severely impacting the lives of patients and their families. Two novel therapies from RHEACELL's pipeline are currently in Phase 3 clinical development. Combining RHEACELL's cutting-edge R&D capabilities with AOP Health's proven expertise in bringing rare disease therapies to patients in Europe, this partnership underscores both companies' strong commitment to addressing high unmet medical needs.
RHEACELL, a German biotech company specialized in the development of stem cell therapies, and AOP Health, a Europe-based leader in integrated therapies for rare diseases and in intensive care, are forming a strategic alliance.
Share
With 30 years of experience and a growing presence in more than 50 countries, AOP Health complements this ambition by providing the expertise needed to make RHEACELL's cell therapies available not only in Europe, but also in the Middle East, North Africa, Turkey, and Israel.
Promising cell therapy
Cell-based regenerative therapies are gaining increasing importance, particularly for diseases with currently limited therapeutic options. For over 20 years, RHEACELL has focused on the research and development of so-called stromal cells - stabilizing cells obtained from donor skin. RHEACELL's cell therapy is only the second stromal cell product to receive national marketing authorization from the Paul Ehrlich Institute in Germany for the treatment of therapy-resistant, chronic venous wounds ("leg ulcer") on the basis of positive phase 2 clinical trial data. 1; 2
An innovative mechanism of action
RHEACELL's cell therapy is based on a specific type of cells, so-called ABCB5+ mesenchymal stromal cells, with anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory properties. These cells represent a promising new therapeutic approach for EB and chronic venous wounds. In patients with EB, this therapy is administered systemically and can thus stimulate both internal and external wound healing by restoring the normal physiological function of affected tissues – an innovative mechanism of action. This can lead to a reduction in the number of existing wounds and help prevent the formation of new ones. 3
Building on positive Phase 2 results and positive feedback from regulatory authorities, two Phase 3 clinical trials are currently underway, and a first EMA submission is already expected in 2026.
Background:
Voices on the Partnership
"This partnership marks a significant milestone for RHEACELL and the further development of our stem cell medication programs. Collaborating with an established partner like AOP Health to commercialize our stromal cell medications will allow us to bring our innovative therapies to the European patients faster and more efficiently."
Dr. med. Christoph Ganss, CEO RHEACELL
"Our mission is to provide patients with rare diseases access to urgently needed therapeutic innovation. This partnership with stem cell pioneer RHEACELL enables us to jointly bring new treatment options to patients living with chronic venous wounds or Epidermolysis bullosa, who currently have limited or no treatment options. Our teams are fully committed to making these groundbreaking treatments available to all patients affected."
Dr. Martin Steinhart, CEO AOP Health
"In treating Epidermolysis bullosa, we have had few therapeutic options to date. This lack of treatment options adds an additional burden on those affected. From a medical perspective, the concept of regenerative, anti-inflammatory cell therapy is a promising approach. That's why our study center is participating in the next milestone—Phase 3 trials."
Univ.-Prof. Dr. Johann Bauer, Head of EB Research at the EB-Haus Austria, the world's first specialized clinic for 'butterfly children'.
"RHEACELL's approach of administering stromal cells systemically to stimulate internal and external wound healing distinguishes it from other approaches that focus primarily on local applications on the skin. We are thrilled to follow the ongoing clinical development."
Dr. Rainer Riedl, founder and chairman of DEBRA Austria
About Epidermolysis bullosa (EB)
EB is a congenital and currently incurable condition that can affect not only the skin but also internal organs. With approximately 500,000 people affected worldwide 4, EB is a rare disease that severely impacts patients' quality of life. In this genetic disorder, the skin is as fragile as a butterfly's wing. Even minor mechanical stress or friction can cause blistering and painful chronic wounds.
The patient organization DEBRA describes EB as 'the worst disease you've never heard of.' DEBRA was founded in 1995 as a patient organization by patients, families, and physicians with the goal of facilitating exchange and providing support to people living with EB. One of DEBRA Austria's key initiatives is the EB-Haus Austria, located at the Salzburg University Hospital campus. It serves as a center of excellence for Epidermolysis bullosa and is also the world's first specialized clinic for 'butterfly children.'
About Chronic Venous Wounds (leg ulcer)
Venous ulcers are chronic wounds that result from prolonged venous insufficiency, primarily affecting older adults. These ulcers develop due to poor blood flow in the veins, leading to tissue breakdown, especially in the lower extremities. They are the most common type of leg ulcers, accounting for 60–80% of cases.
About AOP Health
AOP Health is a global enterprise group with roots in Austria, where the headquarters of AOP Orphan Pharmaceuticals GmbH ("AOP Health") is located. Since 1996, the AOP Health Group has been dedicated to developing innovative solutions to address unmet medical needs, particularly in the fields of rare diseases and intensive care medicine. The group has established itself internationally as a pioneer in integrated therapy solutions and operates worldwide through subsidiaries, representations, and a strong network of partners. With the claim "Needs. Science. Trust." the AOP Health Group emphasizes its commitment to research and development, as well as the importance of building relationships with physicians and patient advocacy groups to ensure that the needs of these stakeholders are reflected in all aspects of the company's actions. (aop-health.com)
About RHEACELL
With more than 20 years of experience, we are a leading, integrated biopharmaceutical stem cell company based in Heidelberg, Germany, currently conducting two approval trials (EU, US). We focus on innovative stem cell therapies for patients suffering from severe immune- and inflammation-related diseases who experience high levels of distress and for whom no adequate treatments currently exist. Our goal is to offer these patients a new and innovative treatment option. Our ABCB5+ mesenchymal stromal cells, as a purified active ingredient, can improve the lives of these patients—for example, in cases of Epidermolysis bullosa — and have the potential to transform treatment paradigms for these diseases. Our targeted approach to fighting inflammation through our proprietary stem cell therapy enables the restoration of normal physiological function in affected individuals.

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

Miami Herald
43 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Major healthcare business files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
Biotechnology companies often encounter common challenges of long timelines for developing their products, the high costs associated with creating their innovations, and regulatory problems that must be solved to bring their inventions to market. Companies will amass huge amounts of debt over the years that's needed to develop medical devices, drugs, and other products, which can lead to financial distress and sometimes bankruptcy filings. Don't miss the move: Subscribe to TheStreet's free daily newsletter Over a 12-year period from 2011 through 2022, biotech firms filed fewer than 10 bankruptcies each year, but that changed beginning in 2023. Related: Key healthcare company files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy Biotech firms filed 14 cases in 2023, which was the highest number since 2010, when 14 firms filed for bankruptcy. Companies filed 13 petitions in 2024. Economic issues common to all businesses, such as rising costs of labor and products driven by inflation and rising inflation, played a role in distress over the last two years. AmplifyBio, which develops next-generation vaccines, medicine, and therapeutics, filed for Chapter 11 protection on May 17, 2025, seeking to sell all of its assets and liquidate through the bankruptcy process. The debtor's largest creditors included certain shareholders, including Battelle Services Co., owed $3.25 million; Battelle Memorial Institute, owed $1.89 million; and Kavra 14 LLC, owed $1.8 million. Distressed biotechnology company Synthego Corp. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on May 5, seeking to sell its assets to its prepetition lender Perceptive Credit Holdings III L.P. in a bankruptcy sale with a stalking-horse bid calling for a credit bid of $74.4 million of debt owed to the lender, as well as a $12.5 million DIP financing. Austin, Texas-based biotechnology company Molecular Templates Inc., which develops cancer treatment drugs, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on April 20, 2025, with plans to hand its assets to its secured lender as part of a restructuring support agreement. And now, medical diagnostics company Capture Collective Inc., which is developing and commercializing medical testing equipment for early detection of radiation exposure, and two affiliates, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on May 27 to reorganize their debts, facing high litigation costs. Related: Major health care company files for bankruptcy to sell assets The company listed $1 million to $10 million in assets and liabilities in its petition filed in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Ohio, including a $5.7 million disputed tax claim owed to its largest creditor Hawaii Department of Taxation. More bankruptcy: Iconic auto repair chain franchise files Chapter 11 bankruptcyPopular beer brand closes down and files Chapter 7 bankruptcyPopular vodka and gin brand files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy The Columbus, Ohio-based debtor and affiliates Capture Diagnostics LLC and Capture Diagnostics HIB01 had also faced costly contract disputes as a result of its Covid-19 testing business that ceased operations in May 2023. Capture Collective was unable to resolve the contract disputes with claimants after the Covid-19 testing business ended. The company said high litigation costs had exhausted all of its remaining capital resources and made it impossible for the company to obtain new venture capital, according to information provided by RK Consultants. All litigation filed against Capture Collective and its affiliates is subject to an automatic stay while the bankruptcy case proceeds. Capture Collective is developing the radiation biodosimetry diagnostic test, MiRAD, a high-throughput, microRNA biomarker-based biodosimetry assay, which enables individualized clinical biomarker quantification in direct correlation with radiation exposure. Related: Another major healthcare company files Chapter 11 bankruptcy The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Gun violence has declined, but groups fighting it say more needs to be done
HARLEM, Manhattan (PIX11) — It's an issue so serious that it merits a month of focused attention. Gun Violence Awareness Month is underway, and while the city has positive developments to report in the struggle to reduce and prevent shooting incidents and deaths, crime numbers show that there's more work to do. More Local News A program that supports anti-violence groups through unconventionally raised funds is set up to do the additional work, according to the Manhattan district attorney and leaders of the groups receiving the support. One of those groups is Street Corner Resources, a Harlem-based violence interruptor organization. On Tuesday morning, it was one of 11 groups to receive grants from the district attorney totaling $295,000. Iesha Sekou is Street Corner Resources' founder. Its slogan, 'I Am Peace,' she said, infuses the group's work, which is consistent with the overall mission of gun violence awareness. 'That's our movement with young people,' Dr. Sekou said in an interview. 'You read [the phrase] long enough, you think about who you are in that.' She was at an event at Goddard Riverside Community Center in which she and leaders of the other 10 organizations were recognized by District Attorney Alvin Bragg and other elected officials for their work in countering youth violence. The grants they received were funded through the D.A.'s Criminal Justice Investment initiative, which is made up of monies seized in investigations against major banking institutions. More: Latest News from Around the Tri-State Also on the receiving end of the program was the organization Getting Out and Staying Out, or GOSO. James Dunham is one of its participants. He's completed an internship and is now in a GOSO-related security guard training program funded in part by grants from the district attorney's anti-violence fund. 'They paid for it,' Dunham said in an interview. 'I didn't have to worry about paying for it myself.' Andrew Blacks is the executive director of one of the other recipient groups, called Positive Influence. Its participants have grown fifteenfold in its 20-year history, affecting thousands of young people. Blacks said that every one of its many programs — from basketball tournaments, to self-defense courses, to dozens of other activities — lowers the risks teens face, because they have productive things to take part in. 'I'm not saying we can stop gun violence,' Blacks said, 'but we can kind of find ways to give these kids different things and different options.' He was referring to the latest NYPD statistics. They show that in Manhattan overall, shooting incidents in Manhattan are down. More specifically, in the northern part of the borough, they're down more than 28 percent this year. In the southern section, shooting incidents are down 40 percent for the year. However, in that same part of the borough in the last 28 days, there's been a jump of 100 percent. District Attorney Bragg said that it shows that while there's been improvement overall, there's still more to do. 'This is day in, day out work,' he said. 'We're looking at all the cycles,' he said, referring to the various periods of time in which the NYPD compiles crime statistics. 'Seven-day cycle, 28-day cycle, and we pan out and look at the last three years.' Over that time, Bragg said, gun crimes have declined by about 45 percent in Manhattan. Still, he said, more work is needed. Part of that effort, said Bragg, is to consider increasing funding to community groups that provide alternatives. The $295,000 amount is a record that he said he sees going up next year. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
AI foot scanner could keep people with heart failure out of hospital
An in-home foot scanner that uses artificial intelligence (AI) to recognise the warning signs of heart failure could help keep people with the condition out of hospital, according to researchers. The device, which is roughly the size of a smart speaker, operates in a similar way to facial recognition by taking and analysing almost 2,000 pictures a minute to calculate the level of fluid in the feet and ankles. This water retention, known as oedema, is one of the three major warning signs that heart failure is becoming severe and potentially life threatening. The AI scanner is able to trigger an alert to healthcare professionals so they can take action, such as increasing their patient's medication. The Foot Study, which is being presented at the British Cardiovascular Society annual conference in Manchester, suggests these alerts come 13 days before a person would end up in hospital. It involved 26 heart failure patients from five NHS trusts who were enrolled between 2020 and 2022. They were monitored using the AI device and were also asked to weigh themselves using Bluetooth-enabled scales. Seven instance of worsening heart failure was detected in six patients, while one death from the condition was recorded. Researchers found that, in patients enrolled in the study for at least two weeks before an alert was triggered, the average lead time before hospital admission was 13 days. The lead time averaged eight days when all five triggers picked up by the device were analysed. The study also found that monitoring using the scales failed to predict any heart failure-related hospital admissions. Researchers suggested this is because patients struggled to stick to tracking their weight, whereas the AI device did not require any action. Dr Philip Keeling, senior author of the study and a consultant cardiologist at Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust, said: 'Only about half of people admitted to hospital with heart failure currently get assigned an early review by a heart failure nurse who can check to see if they are suffering a harmful build-up of fluid because their heart is not working properly. 'Amid a shortage of heart failure nurses, a device like this can be like a virtual nurse, tracking people's health.' The device, developed by Cambridge-based start-up Heartfelt Technologies, is mounted to the wall and is typically installed at a patient's bedside. It uses AI technology to detect a person's foot and lower leg and track their position, so a camera can take 1,800 pictures a minute from multiple angles. These images reveal the volume of fluid in the foot and lower leg. It works without wifi, and only scans the legs to a height of 50cm from the floor. Heart failure is a long-term condition that means the heart is unable to pump blood around the body properly, usually because the heart has become too weak or stiff. Is it estimated that more than a million people are living with heart failure in the UK. The three main symptoms that indicate the condition is getting worse are increased breathlessness, weight gain and swelling in the legs or ankles. Dr Keeling added: 'Living with heart failure can be overwhelming, with all the medications, medical tests and appointments, and the requirement to monitor your own health. 'This scanner, once it is installed, just automatically keeps an eye on you and alerts the heart failure nurse, which is a huge relief.' At the end of the study, 18 of the 22 surviving patients kept the AI device. Reacting to the findings, Professor Bryan Williams, chief scientific and medical officer at the British Heart Foundation (BHF), said: 'This small study suggests a simple device could significantly improve outcomes for at-risk patients with heart failure by keeping them out of hospital. 'This study is a good example of how technology might aid earlier interventions and treatment, by allowing people to track a key sign of their heart health at home. 'Innovations with the potential to transform heart care in this way are a major part of the BHF's goal to save and improve lives of people living with cardiovascular disease.' Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data