Biotechnology companies specializing in stem cell research stand to reap huge financial windfalls from successful therapies developed via this science. To ensure that their research can continue and perhaps accelerate, some of the companies have teamed up with patients rights groups against certain religious and pro-life groups in the fight over federal regulation of this controversial field. As a result, what was once a debate between science and religion has become, in part, a clash between profits and ethics. New guidelines from the National Institutes of Health, released yesterday, mark the first hard-fought victory for patients rights groups and biotechnology companies interested in this issue. President Clinton took the occasion to voice his support for the guidelines, noting the "potentially staggering benefits" of this technology.
Geron Corporation and Advanced Cell Technology (ACT) are the two companies most interested in NIH funding for research involving stem cells derived from human embryos. Stem cells are indifferentiated, and can develop into brain, heart, or any number of more specific cells. They form within the first eight days of an embryo's life, and develop into almost all of the human body's various tissues and organs.
Since Geron's successful isolation of these types of cells in 1998, scientists and patients rights groups have jubilantly theorized about the extraordinary possibilities in developing treatments for a whole range of diseases and ailments. For example, depending on the future success of stem cell research, scientists might be able to grow stem cells into the neuron cells of the brain, which could provide treatments to those suffering from Parkinsons and Alzheimers disease, or heart cells for those suffering from cardiac ailments.