World’s First Human Stem Cell Clinical Trial Approved by Japanese Government
By Ida Torres,
Japan Daily Press
| 07. 19. 2013
The Japanese government finally gave its approval for the world’s first clinical trials using stem cells that will be harvested from the patient’s body. Health Minister Norihisa Tamura gave permission for two research institutes to start their tests to treat age-related macular degeneration (AMD) by using “induced Pluripotent Stem (iPS) cells”.
The Riken Center for Developmental Biology and the Institute of Biomedical Research and Innovation (IBRI) Hospital in Kobe will be doing the joint testing to treat AMD, a condition that usually causes blindness among the elderly. This condition is incurable at the moment, and affects around 700,000 middle-aged to older people in Japan alone. Their proposal was
approved by a government committee last month, but they had to wait for the Health Ministry to sign off before starting the tests.
Riken will harvest the stem cells from the patients while IBRI will conduct the transplant by the middle of next year. The trial treatment will try
replacing the damaged part of the eye of six patients who have AMD with the retinal cells that will be created from the...
Related Articles
By Judd Boaz and Elise Kinsella, ABC News | 03.17.2026
By Gabriele Pichlhofer and Tino Plümecke, Guest Contributors
| 03.25.2026
A German translation of this interview will be published in May 2026 in the German GID MAGAZIN, which focuses on the market for reproductive technologies. For more information, visit: Gen-ethisches Netzwerk
Egg donation is currently prohibited in Germany and Switzerland, but both countries have been debating its legalization for years. In Switzerland, a legal framework is currently being developed, with a first draft expected by the end of the year. Yet the debate rarely draws on scientific evidence. Instead...
By Charles Pulliam-Moore, The Verge | 03.21.2026
Like many people, director Valerie Veatch was intrigued when OpenAI first released its Sora text-to-video generative AI model to the public in 2024. Though she didn’t fully understand the technology, she was curious about what it could do, and she...
By Ritsuko Kawai, Wired | 03.14.2026
On March 6, Japan’s Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare officially granted conditional and time-limited marketing authorization to two regenerative medical products derived from reprogrammed iPS cells, marking exactly 20 years since the creation of mouse iPS cells.These will...