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Samumed Continues to Pour Funding into Wnt Pathway Therapies


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#1 reason

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Posted 16 August 2018 - 10:11 AM


Samumed is noteworthy for the breadth of their regenerative medicine development pipeline, based as it is on a single technology platform, the manipulation of Wnt signaling. Their trials to date are attempts to use variations on this approach to increase regenerative capacity in aging and damaged tissues. The company might be viewed as an early example of the fork in the road for the regenerative medicine community, arising after first generation stem cell therapies have matured. Some groups will produce better, more advanced cell therapies, aiming to improve the survival and utility of transplanted cells. Others, like Samumed, will abandon cell transplants in favor of ways to manipulate native cell populations to produce similar outcomes.

At least a few of the future successful companies in the rejuvenation research space should come to look quite similar to Samumed in structure. Most legitimate rejuvenation therapies, those capable of at least partially reversing one of the root causes of aging, will be applicable to scores of age-related diseases. Companies will be limited in size and activity only by the amount of funding they can raise. It will not be unusual to see the likes of Samumed or Unity Biotechnology raising hundreds of millions of dollars for very broad pipelines, with trials of their technology for a dozen or more age-related conditions running in parallel.

Samumed, LLC, announced today that it has closed its A-6 Round of equity issuance with $438 million, bringing its total equity raised to date to more than $650 million.The pre-money valuation for the round was $12 billion. "We appreciate the strong support from our investors, and we are now in a fortunate position to both move our later stage programs to commercialization, as well as expand on our earlier stage science and clinical portfolio."

Samumed is developing small-molecule drugs that target the regenerative potential of the Wnt pathway in order to reverse the progression of various age-related diseases. Its development pipeline includes therapies focused on osteoarthritis, degenerative disc disease, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, and Alzheimer's disease. A number of these therapies are currently in human trials, and some of them are currently in phase 2 testing.

The Wnt pathway is a primary signaling pathway that regulates the self-renewal and differentiation of adult stem cells. It plays a key role in tissue repair and upkeep, and it helps the body repair and regenerate following injury. As we age, the Wnt pathway becomes deregulated, which leads to a decline of tissue regeneration and supports the progression of various age-related diseases. Samumed is focused on modulating the Wnt pathway in order to promote the restoration and health of diseased tissues by spurring effective regeneration.

Link: https://www.leafscience.org/samumed/


View the full article at FightAging
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#2 Zisos

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Posted 17 July 2019 - 08:06 PM

While Samumed has been successful with its human trials in a very diverse set of diseases caused by aging, not many people seem to notice it.

 

Already some of their therapies have reached phase 3 (I.e. osteoarthritis therapy).

 

With such impressive results, it is strange that very few people seem to notice. 

 

 

 


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#3 Mind

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Posted 18 July 2019 - 05:15 PM

True. This is the first I have heard of them.



#4 Mind

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Posted 18 July 2019 - 05:31 PM

Maybe works for hair regeneration as well? http://www.longecity...ia-wnt-pathway/


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#5 Zisos

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Posted 18 July 2019 - 07:47 PM

Very likely...

 

Also, in a presentation by Osman Kibar (Samumed's CEO), he mentioned that their exact drug that treats 'Androgenetic Alopecia', also treats face wrinkles.

 

I am actually very impressed by their performance on a very wide range of aging related diseases

 

 

 

 

 
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#6 Bike_to_120

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Posted 17 July 2022 - 02:39 AM

Was listening to Tony Robbins book "Life Force" and he writes very highly of Kibar and Biosplice (formerly Samumed).  found some youtube videos from 4 years ago but nothing recent and they seem to have abandoned the alopecia product but are banking on the osteoarthritis product

 

Seems strange - sounded too good to be true and maybe it was.



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