Progress of upcoming treatments
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RepliCel
Is anyone else waiting for Replicel data from Phase I to be released. If so, does anyone know when? I feel like this could be the biggest game changer in the hair loss industry. And yes, if positive results are shown in HM in 2012, I will start saving for a hair transplant too.Comment
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Hey DTD, I was told by their director of communications via email that the phase 1 results would be released in late March and they hope to start the phase 2 injections in the fall of 2012. She then said that 2015 was a realistic goal for RepliCel to be available to the public.Comment
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Hey DTD, I was told by their director of communications via email that the phase 1 results would be released in late March and they hope to start the phase 2 injections in the fall of 2012. She then said that 2015 was a realistic goal for RepliCel to be available to the public.
I'm sorry if this sounds overtly negative, but I don't feel it's sensible to get one's hopes up very easily — especially not in the hair-restoration industry.Comment
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I know how important hope is to us all, so I hate to sound pessimistic, but one thing that bothers me about everyting that Replicel has told us so far, is that they don't seem to have figured out their distribution plan yet. In other words, if all the trials prove successful, how we will all get a Replicel treatment? Will these be done at hair transplant clinics? Dermatology offices? Also, how will treatments be administered, and who will administer them? Will the providers of the Replicel treatment need some kind of training in the procedure?
I guess my point is that there are so many unkowns that even if Replicel's procedure clears trials on schedule,this does not mean that we will all get our hair back on January 1, 2015. A truly effective baldness treatment without terrible side effects would be immensely popular, and if the providers are not on top of things, I can see all kinds of problems with shortages and distribution cropping up.Comment
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Count me in, if we see good news this year, I'll wait a few months and will start to search for good FUE doctors to fix my hairline. By the time the rest of my hair would need attention HM would already be there
I also don't see the reason why to choose Gho over a good FUE doctor. Gho might offer regrowth (and that is still unconfirmed), but it's way more expensive. And people overreact about FUE scarring, I never read anyone complain about it before Gho started to sound again
Concerning Aderans, even if they only bring half of the density, I'm in. I can buzz it for the rest of my lifeComment
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I actually think that because the Aderans, Histogen, Replicel, etc, trials look promising, all hair loss sufferers should be especially wary of hair transplants at this stage in the game. The next generation of hair loss treatments look promising in early trials, but there is no reason to think that they would work on the scar tissue that is created by conventional hair transplants. I would bet that all the clinical trials for the new treatments were conducted on virgin scalps. The new treatments may or may not work on transplanted scalps, we just don't know yet. One reason I haven't had a transplant myself is because I am afraid that the next generation of treatments won't work or won't be as effective on patients with transplanted hair.
10. [...] Hair transplantation surgery during the last 6 months. [...]
12.Presence of hair transplants or scalp surgery.
So, does this or does this not mean persons who received hair-transplantation surgery more than six months prior to Histogen's study will be excluded?Comment
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I know how important hope is to us all, so I hate to sound pessimistic, but one thing that bothers me about everyting that Replicel has told us so far, is that they don't seem to have figured out their distribution plan yet. In other words, if all the trials prove successful, how we will all get a Replicel treatment? Will these be done at hair transplant clinics? Dermatology offices? Also, how will treatments be administered, and who will administer them? Will the providers of the Replicel treatment need some kind of training in the procedure?
I guess my point is that there are so many unkowns that even if Replicel's procedure clears trials on schedule,this does not mean that we will all get our hair back on January 1, 2015. A truly effective baldness treatment without terrible side effects would be immensely popular, and if the providers are not on top of things, I can see all kinds of problems with shortages and distribution cropping up.
But let us not speculate, one thing at a time. First: phase I trials results. Ee can then discuss other stuff later....Comment
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Hey Thinning. I hate to be a negative chap. But CEO David Hall said that if phase I trials are good they would like to attract Big Pharma. I am honestly dreading the thought.
But let us not speculate, one thing at a time. First: phase I trials results. Ee can then discuss other stuff later....Comment
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surely you could have your scalp removed and have the scalp and hair of a dead person sewn onto you head, that would solve hair loss?
or could the donor scalp not work on the recipient and end up dying and rotting away on your head.
Maybe not then.Comment
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Hey Thinning. I hate to be a negative chap. But CEO David Hall said that if phase I trials are good they would like to attract Big Pharma. I am honestly dreading the thought.
But let us not speculate, one thing at a time. First: phase I trials results. Ee can then discuss other stuff later....Comment
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I too would absolutely dread it if they were to attract Big Pharma. As most of us know, big pharmaceutical companies just want constantly "treat" diseases instead of curing them, and they sure as hell don't give a damn about the good of the people. But I'm not sure that that's what Replicel is trying to do. After all, they say on their website that they're attempting to develop a permanent solution to hair loss, which I think means that they're shooting for a cure and not a treatment, since a treatment would not be permanent and would require multiple, periodic doses to retain and regrow hair. I hope Replicel is similar to Anthony Atala's lab in North Carolina, where they explicitly state that they're looking to "cure" diseases, not simply "treat" them. I think what Replicel is hoping to do is to get great Phase I results and then use these results to attract investors, which will help fund things like further clinical trials. I don't think they are looking to outsource their technology to some big pharmaceutical company, since that would take away millions from their forseeable profit margin. If their hair loss treatment is a permanent cure for hair loss (meaning that it regrows hair and prevents hair loss), then it would literally be a billion dollar treatment, even if it would cost a ton of money. Hell, hair transplants, Rogaine, and Propecia are multi-million dollar industries and I think less than 10% of hair loss sufferers even opt for these treatments, so one can only imagine how extremely profitable a permanent cure for hair loss would be.
I've been lurking here for about a year now when I started receding and I'm now a norwood 3. The fact that Replicel WANTS to include big pharma in their treatment should be the first sign that we don't want anything to do with replicel. You've already said pharma wants to treat not cure, which is absolutely true. Why pay 20,000 dollars and cure somebody when you can milk them for 100,000 over a lifetime. That's the motivation right? These companies are racing for the treatment because there's a huge goldmine at the end, not because they actually want to help people.
Another thing is, do you really think replicel and other companies care about what Spencer has to say about them? People spend millions on rogaine/propecia/otherbullshit without even looking anything up. These companies know that people will buy no matter what and they're looking to milk it as much as they can, the only factor of who wins the race is who's treatment works the best. In the end, that's all it is, a TREATMENT. These companies know they can tell Spencer one thing and go the other direction, and they don't have to join the IAHRS because they'll make money regardless.
As a young business owner this is my opinion, that's all it is.
I respect Spencer and all he does for this community, but get used to being bald fellas.Comment
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