Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - January 17, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A6
A 6 WINNIPEG FREE PRESS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 2015 SATURDAY SPECIAL winnipegfreepress. com
T HE numbness entered Kathleen
Jaynes' body 19 years ago, and
during the intervening years
the multiple sclerosis symptom
has spread from her toes to her chest.
Nothing really changes the numbness, or
helps. Which is why, despite her sister's
misgivings and her own lingering questions,
Jaynes paid $ 20,000 to receive an
experimental stem cell procedure in India
through Regenetek, a company led by a
now- discredited Winnipeg researcher
who fudged his credentials and misled
patients.
It's not like there are many other sources of hope
out there for patients such as Jaynes, 59, who lives in
southeast Arizona.
" You're a no- option patient," Jaynes said. " You
have no other options. I justified it in every way that
I could, despite my family saying this guy is not for
real. Unless you're in my numb body, you can't know
how desperate you feel to not feel that way."
In exchange for that money, Jaynes and roughly 70
other patients received what one of Canada's top MS
researchers calls an " impossible" promise.
In December, Dr. Mark Freedman looked over Regenetek's
study protocols, after a reporter drew his
attention to the company's claims. Freedman, who is
the director of Ottawa Hospital's MS research unit,
has plenty of experience with stem cell treatments
for the disease: In 2000, he and bone marrow transplant
physician Dr. Harold Atkins launched a study
to examine whether transplanting stem cells from a
patient's own bone marrow could halt the disease.
The study was closely watched, the results tremendously
encouraging. The 24 patients in the study
- all of whom had a rapidly advancing form of MS
- showed improvement. Freedman and Atkins also
treated about a dozen more patients outside of the
study, who have shown the same positive results. The
researchers have submitted the study's results for
publication in a scientific journal, and are preparing
to announce new research sites later this month.
But the procedure Regenetek owner Doug Broeska
was touting wasn't anything like the technique that
showed such promise in Freedman and Atkins' study.
For instance, Jaynes and other Regenetek patients
the Free Press spoke to described having stem cells
extracted, expanded and implanted within days of
their arrival in Pune, India.
But the premise that patients could receive
benefits from stem cells taken from bone marrow
extracted just four days earlier - and which had to
make a 300- kilometre round- trip journey between
Pune and a lab in Mumbai at that time - is " impossible,"
Freedman said.
Culturing and expanding enough of those kind of
stem cells is a process that takes " weeks," Freedman
said, adding bluntly: " They're not getting anything."
That said, some patients who have travelled abroad
for stem cell treatments have reported positive
results. In this case, Freedman thinks, " there's a
tremendous placebo effect associated with it. You're
going to be looking for every positive little itch. It's
just human nature. These are the patients for whom
we've come up with no effective therapy, and
they're
desperate... They don't want to hear there's absolutely
no reason to believe that it's working."
Hope is a powerful thing. It's what led Jaynes to
set her initial skepticism aside, and give Regenetek
a second look. She was leery when she first heard of
the company and its owner, Broeska, whom patients
often called " Dr. Doug." But she saw other patients'
glowing reports of the procedure he was selling, and
one Saturday in 2013 she sent Regenetek an application.
The next day, Broeska called her at home.
At first, Jaynes thought he seemed " knowledgeable
and articulate." Over the ensuing weeks, she and her
sister noticed parts of his background that didn't add
up - they couldn't find any research he'd published,
or details about his credentials. Still, Jaynes pressed
forward. " I have a brain," said Jaynes, a former
paralegal. " I can be very skeptical. The skepticism
was being outweighed by how I felt in my body, and
my wanting to get better. That trumped my common
sense."
W HILE Jaynes waited to travel to India, she
chatted with other patients, including one
avid stem cell advocate. In January 2014,
Broeska sent Jaynes an email demanding to know
why she had asked the advocate about Broeska's
background. As a result, he told her that her application
for the study had been destroyed, and that her
" negative opinion and preconceived notions" may
prevent her from obtaining the procedure in the
future.
" It seems to me at this point, that despite my
sincerity and patience in answering all of your questions
and providing you with all of the evidence as
requested regarding our research, you have for some
reason... attempted to discredit or disparage the
work we are doing," Broeska wrote. " I am wondering
about your motivations and why you are distrustful
of the research when I have given you everything
you've asked for..."
Jaynes was stunned, but fear at being frozen out of
the procedure trumped her reaction. She responded
to Broeska clarifying that she never disparaged his
work and wanted to continue with the procedure, and
Broeska quickly said he was " perhaps hasty" and
that they were " all good."
Four months later, Jaynes travelled to India to receive
the " combination therapy" that Broeska touted,
a mixture of stem cell implantation and a veinopening
procedure that made headlines in 2010 as a
possible MS treatment. Subsequent studies haven't
held up well compared with early hopes or anecdotal
reports; Freedman has been a staunch opponent of
the narrowed- vein theory, and called that part of the
Regenetek procedure " nonsense."
When Jaynes had asked Broeska whether the
" combination therapy" would help with her creeping
numbness, he told her it would. And for a week
or two she felt a little bit better, a little stronger on
her feet. It didn't last. By August, the numbness was
worse than ever, and Jaynes turned to Broeska and
his business partner, Winnipeg physician Dr. Susan
Hauch, for advice.
They suggested one of her medications might be
interfering with the stem cells; then Broeska issued
a long list of supplements or foods that might also
prevent the stem cells from working. Finally, they
suggested she obtain a new MRI. After reviewing the
result in November, Broeska told Jaynes the reason
she wasn't getting better is that she had cervical
stenosis, which puts pressure on spinal nerves. He
suggested she have surgery.
When Jaynes reviewed her past MRIs, she learned
that stenosis had been visible in the MRI she had
sent to Regenetek before her procedure, as well as
others dating back to 1996.
" Now you're telling me the stem cells I got don't
solve the problem, and you'd have known about the
problem before I went, if you'd looked at the report,"
Jaynes said. " He tried to make it sound like I was
ungrateful, because he'd made this great discovery
that this is my real problem."
Like other patients, Jaynes is frustrated. " We did
not get what was promised," she said.
Jaynes still has hope for stem cell research into
MS - and there is reason to have hope, as the research
Freedman and others have done has shown.
" I think ( stem cell treatment) is the only viable
treatment option," Jaynes said. " The MS drugs...
they treat symptoms. But it's like with anything, if
you're just putting a Band- Aid on the problem, you're
not getting to what's underneath. I want to solve the
problem, I don't want to put the Band- Aid on it."
Freedman, who watched the Regenetek story unfold
from his office in Ottawa, worries regulations to
protect patients haven't caught up with the times.
" We probably need legislation to go after individuals
who are recruiting individuals for medical
tourism," he said.
" This guy is obviously a fake. He has no credentials.
He's never published anything. But he can just
set up a website, and everybody goes for it... Patients
obviously need some sort of protection. Just like the
( Better Business Bureau)."
melissa. martin@ freepress. mb. ca
maryagnes. welch@ freepress. mb. ca
The
' IMPOSSIBLE' DREAM
City firm's
MS claims
not medically
possible,
says top
researcher
By Melissa Martin and Mary Agnes Welch
' I have a brain...
I can be very skeptical. The skepticism
was being outweighed by how I felt in
my body, and my wanting to get better.
That trumped my common sense'
- Kathleen Jaynes
JULIE OLIVER / POSTMEDIA FILES
Dr. Mark Freedman ( above) says of Regenetek owner Doug Broeska: ' This guy is obviously a fake. He has no credentials. He's never published anything. Patients obviously need some sort of protection.'
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