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Embryo-safe stem cells? Not so fast, GPI
WASHINGTON, Jan. 8 (UPI) -- Despite recent reverie over embryo-safe stem
cells, a U.S. group said Monday amniotic fluid-based stem cells are no
stand-in for embryonic cells.
In a statement, the Genetics Policy Institute said it applauded the
discovery of "apparently versatile" stem cells in amniotic fluid as a
positive thing but warned that the much-heralded finding cannot replace the
need for standard embryonic stem cell research.
"This discovery is a welcome development that opens up a new line of
research," said Eve Herold, GPI's director of public policy research and
education. "However, much more work needs to be done before anyone can
determine the cells' future clinical value."
Over the weekend, a research team from Wake Forest University School of
Medicine said it had created what appeared to be highly versatile stem cells
taken from the amniotic fluid of women who were about ten weeks pregnant.
"People have been excited about new cell types in the past and were later
disappointed," Herold added. "Science is a slow process. Experiments need to
be repeated and independently verified before they become established as
facts."
She stressed that this latest twist in stem cell research "should definitely
be pursued," but not at the expense of "the science that has been proven
over and over again to be so promising."

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