|
EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT
OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20503
May 24, 2005
STATEMENT
OF
ADMINISTRATION
POLICY
H.R. 2520 – Stem
Cell Therapeutic and Research Act of 2005
Rep. Smith (R) NJ and 78 cosponsors)
The Administration
strongly supports House passage of H.R. 2520, which would
facilitate the use of umbilical-cord-blood stem cells in
biomedical research and in the treatment of disease.
Cord-blood stem cells, collected from the placenta and
umbilical cord after birth without doing harm to mother or
child, have been used in the treatment of thousands of
patients suffering from more than 60 different diseases,
including leukemia, Fanconi anemia, sickle cell disease, and
thalassemia. Researchers also believe cord-blood stem cells
may have the capacity to be
differentiated into other cell types, making them
useful in the exploration of ethical stem cell therapies for
regenerative medicine.
H.R. 2520 would
increase the publicly available inventory of cord-blood stem
cells by enabling the Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) to contract with cord-blood banks to assist
them in the collection and maintenance of 150,000 cord-blood
stem cell units. This would make matched cells available to
treat more than 90 percent of patients in need. The bill
would also link all participating cord-blood banks to a
search network operated under contract with HHS, allowing
physicians to search for matches for their patients quickly
and effectively in one place. The bill also would
reauthorize a similar program already in place for aiding
the use of adult bone marrow in medical care. There is now
$19 million available to implement the Cord Blood Cell Bank
program; the Administration will work with the Congress to
evaluate future spending requirements for these activities.
The bill is also consistent with the recommendation from the
National Academy of Science to create a National Cord Blood
Stem Cell Bank program.
The Administration
also applauds the bill’s effort to facilitate research into
the potential of cord-blood stem cells to advance
regenerative medicine in an ethical way. Some research
indicates that cord blood cells may have the ability to
be
differentiated into other
cell types, in ways similar to embryonic stem cells, and so
present similar potential uses but without raising the
ethical problems involved in the intentional destruction of
human embryos. The Administration encourages efforts to
seek ethical ways to pursue stem cell research, and believes
that -- with the appropriate combination of responsible
policies and innovative scientific techniques – this field
of research can advance without violating important ethical
boundaries. H.R. 2520 is an important step in that
direction.
To return to
the NRLC Human Embryos index page, click
here |