During this project JRI worked with University Medical Center Utrecht (UMCU), The Netherlands, and the Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult (CGT), UK, to explore the possibility of a commercial launch of the new treatment of OA in the hip. This targets the disease at an early stage when it appears as a distinct lesion. JRI has its own hip system, Hummingbird that can get into the complex anatomy of the hip and precisely cut out patches of diseased tissue. We studied a cell-based treatment developed by UMCU that they had successfully used to treat OA in the knee to see if it could be used with Hummingbird.
This feasibility study showed that, while the UMCU treatment is technically possible with Hummingbird, it is not commercially sustainable in its current form for JRI. However, JRI found a simpler version of this therapy that can be performed faster and will cost less to develop, which they will look to launch this. Working with the CGT, the next phase will involve a first-in-human study: a critical step in meeting the regulations and launching this new cell-based treatment hip.
Although the initial therapy studied by this Feasibility Study proved to be uncommercial, it should still be seen as a great success because it has defined a cell-based therapy that is more commercially suitable.