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Stem Cell News
| Wealthy
Thais use stem cell bank for high-tech life
insurance |
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BANGKOK: Thai parents
often mark the birth of a child by heading to
a bank to set up a savings account.
Now some wealthy Thais are using a different
kind of bank they hope will help protect their
children’s future well-being - a medical
bank that saves stem cells from a baby’s
umbilical cord in hopes of providing a cure to
any major illnesses that could develop later
in life.
Through a Thai-Malaysian venture called Thai
Stem Life, parents are paying 130,000 baht for
what they see as a high-tech insurance policy
for their children.
Stem cells are the body’s “master”
cells, which can develop into replacement
cells that researchers believe could help
treat illness and be used in the repairs of
damaged organs.
Research with some stem cells is controversial
because obtaining them can involve destroying
a human embryo. However, stem cells can also
be obtained from the umbilical cord shortly
after it is cut in a five-minute procedure
that poses no danger to the child or the
mother, the company says.
If the cells were later used to repair damaged
organs or tissue—even when the child grows
into an adult—doctors believe there would be
no danger of rejection and even a chance to
use the cells to treat other members of the
family.
Kostas Papadopoulos, the bank’s chief
operations officer, says that by saving the
stem cells, parents are investing in the hope
of giving their children more medical options
down the road in life.
“If the babies have leukemia or cancer in
the future, you would have stem cells waiting
for their treatment,” he told AFP. The
option is particularly important for babies of
mixed ethnicity, Papadopoulos said, because
people of mixed race who need organ
transplants find it almost impossible to find
a match.
While stem cell treatments remain
controversial in many countries, Thailand has
few regulations governing their study. Doctors
here are already using stem cells for bone
marrow transplants to treat people with
leukemia, as well as treating other forms of
cancer, heart disease and a variety of genetic
disorders.
The bank was founded in 2005 by 30 doctors
from Bangkok hospitals, who launched it as a
joint venture with a Malaysian company called
Stem Life, which had opened a similar
programme in Malaysia five years earlier.
To harvest the stem cells, doctors use a
needle to withdraw blood from a newborn’s
umbilical cord. The blood is taken to a lab
where it is processed to isolate the stem
cells, which are then frozen in liquid
nitrogen.
Because of the high price tag, Papadopoulos
says the clients so far are “relatively
wealthy,” mainly politicians and
celebrities—including a former Miss
Thailand, Panadda Wongphudee, who has stored
the stem cells of her six-month-old daughter.
Panadda, 31, said that after she suffered from
uterine cancer she wanted to give her daughter
an extra medical option in case she develops
the disease.
“With advanced medical technology available
to better protect the health of my child as
well as her siblings in the future, I thought
why not?” she said. “I don’t want to see
my children suffering from diseases in the
future, so I decided to buy this as
insurance,” said Panadda.
Police Major General Jonggate Aojanepong, a
founder and chief executive of TSL, said
storing stem cells was no different to
investing in an insurance policy. “You pay
20,000 to 30,000 baht a year in insurance
premiums on a Japanese car,” said Jongjate,
who also is chief executive of the Jettanin
fertility clinic in Bangkok.
“If we spend that kind of money to protect
our car, why not pay for something that could
save the lives of our family members?” he
said. TSL claims to be the largest stem cell
bank in Southeast Asia, and the fourth largest
in Asia, behind similar operatios in South
Korea, Japan and Taiwan.
About 12,000 families have stored stem cells
with TSL, with about one third of them from
European or American families living in
Thailand, said Papadopoulos.
Similar services are available in the West,
usually at a higher price. Virgin Group
entrepreneur Richard Branson in February
launched a private stem cell bank in Britain,
and Sweden has launched a national system for
parents to voluntarily store stem cells.
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