Delivery devices and methods are used in humans for spinal delivery of cells, drugs, or vectors. The patient population may include patients with spinal traumatic injury, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, multiple sclerosis, spinal ischemia, and any other spinal neurodegenerative disorders that require spinal cell, vector, or drug delivery. Current conventional methods require multiple injection sites to make multiple, localized substrate deliveries.
A UC San Diego researcher has developed a delivery device and method
that will deliver—via a single spinal-cord puncture—an agent (stem
cells, drugs, or any injectable substances) into the spinal cord to
permit multisegmental (between four and six segments) delivery of
substances. This technology utilizes multiple vertical spinal-cord
injections, up to several hundred, in order to deliver to multiple
segments of the spinal cord. The advantage of fewer spinal injections
over several segments is significant.
For patent status, please see PCT application 2008/137760 published 13-Nov-2008.
Country | Type | Number | Dated | Case |
United States Of America | Issued Patent | 9,011,410 | 04/21/2015 | 2007-267 |
Additional Patent Pending