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Saturday, June 21, 2025

Vertex: Stem Cell-Derived Islets Still Producing Insulin at 1 Year

 Ten people with type 1 diabetes, who had recurrent severe hypoglycemia and hypoglycemic unawareness, have remained insulin-independent for over a year following allogeneic stem cell-derived islet-cell therapy with immunosuppression, according to new phase 1/2 data from the multicenter FORWARD study sponsored by Vertex Pharmaceuticals.

The insulin-producing therapy VX-880, now named zimislecel, is delivered by infusion into the hepatic portal vein. A steroid-free immunosuppressive regimen is used, involving induction with antithymocyte globulin followed by maintenance with tacrolimus plus sirolimus

"It's really exciting to have a consistent, scalable source of insulin-producing tissue," study investigator Michael R. Rickels, MD, of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, told Medscape Medical News

Even with the need for immunosuppression, there are many patients who could benefit from cell therapy, including those experiencing severe hypoglycemia or having challenges with glycemic control, or those already immunosuppressed for an organ transplant, he said. 

"Having a product with reproducible efficacy and an established safety record will be important in testing new immunomodulatory approaches, and ultimately other approaches for immune evasion, whether that's through engineering or gene-editing types of approaches in the future," added Rickels. 

The findings were presented on June 20 here at the American Diabetes Association (ADA) 85th Scientific Sessions and simultaneously published in the New England Journal of Medicine

Asked for comment, Jeffrey R. Millman, PhD, a professor of medicine and biomedical engineering at Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, who helped develop the technique for deriving islets from stem cells, told Medscape Medical News: "It's what we hoped, but seeing it actually happen is just amazing. There's no stem cell-based therapy has come close to what they've been able to accomplish." 

But, Millman added, "It's still only going to be for a small portion [of people] with type 1 diabetes, which is why we need to have things like encapsulation or genetic engineering to avoid the immunosuppression part, to make it a therapy that's much more applicable to most or all people living with type 1 diabetes."

1-Year Data 

The new data extend the findings reported at last year's ADA meeting and continue to demonstrate the feasibility of the therapy for people with type 1 diabetes in whom the risks of immunosuppression outweigh the benefits. 

The 14 participants (5 men, 9 women) included in the analysis who completed 1 year of follow-up had a mean age of 43.6 years and a mean type 1 diabetes duration of 22.8 years. All had undetectable C-peptide at baseline, a mean A1c of 7.8%, and a mean total daily insulin dose of 39.3 units. All used continuous glucose monitors, 9 used insulin pumps, and 6 used automated insulin delivery systems. Despite the technology, study participants had had an average of 2.7 severe hypoglycemic episodes in the year prior to screening. 

All participants had engraftment and infusion, as detected by the appearance of C-peptide. Two patients received a half dose of zimislecel, and 12 received a full dose (0.8 × 109 cells) in a single infusion. 

At 1 year, none of the 14 patients had experienced severe hypoglycemia. All 12 who received the full dose were free of severe hypoglycemic events and had an A1c level below 7%. They also spent more than 70% of the time in the target glucose range (70-180 mg/dL), and 10 patients were insulin independent at 365 days.

There were 14 adverse events, including diarrheaheadache, and nausea. Most were mild to moderate and attributed to the immune suppression. Neutropenia occurred in six participants. Two patients died, one from cryptococcal meningitis attributed to the immune suppression and one from severe dementia with agitation owing to the progression of preexisting neurocognitive impairment. The deaths resulted in a temporary pause of the research in early 2024. 

Overcoming Need for Immune Suppression

Millman said he is not optimistic about the potential of islet encapsulation techniques — several of which were discussed at the ADA meeting — of overcoming the need for immune suppression. 

"Encapsulation is promising in the sense that it is relatively simple in concept and execution, but historically it's been very challenging," he said. 

"The problem is that you need a certain amount of islets creating a certain amount of insulin to control blood sugars in an adult human. These cells have certain metabolic needs for glucose for the oxygen that they breathe, and if you are encapsulating them, these cells are not able to rely on blood vessels to provide the nutrients and oxygen that they need," Millman explained.

He added, "There can potentially be more advanced ways of doing that that can overcome those barriers, but so far there hasn't been conclusive proof that that can be done in a way that translates to patients." Indeed, in March 2025 Vertex discontinued a phase 1/2 trial of an encapsulated islet product VX-264 because of lack of efficacy. 

Instead, Millman and others in the field are more optimistic about hypoimmune gene editing of the islets to avoid the necessity for immunosuppressant drugs. "There's been a lot of interesting scientific work coming out from both companies and academic labs with different ways of engineering cells to avoid immune destruction," he noted. 

Although this research is still in its early stages, Millman pointed to upcoming programs, such as one announced by Sana Biotechnology, for which a 6-month update will be presented here at the ADA meeting on Monday. 

"I'm hoping that we can learn from that, similar to what we just learned here today from Vertex Pharmaceuticals, about the challenges and the promises of genetic engineering to avoid the need for immunosuppression."

Zimislecel will now be studied in a phase 3 trial, with a planned enrollment of 50 patients, to be completed by the end of summer 2025. 

Rickels has reported being a consultant for Vertex Pharmaceuticals and Sernova, receiving research support from DompĂ© and Tandem Diabetes Care, and being a consultant for Novo Nordisk. Millman has reported holding stock in and receiving research support from Sana Biotechnology. 

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/stem-cell-derived-islets-still-producing-insulin-1-year-2025a1000glb

Dr. Oz welcomes move by states to reduce migrant health coverage

 Dr. Mehmet Oz, who oversees Medicaid and Medicare for the Trump administration, welcomes the move by a trio of blue states — California, Illinois and Minnesota — to freeze or reduce health care benefits for undocumented migrants.

He told NewsNation’s “CUOMO” on Friday that some states broadened their public medical programs to include migrants because they could leverage federal dollars to pay for it, but Medicaid is supposed to be reserved for the most vulnerable Americans.

“If we extend it to illegal immigrants without keeping tabs of what those costs are — and especially if we have a system that encourages states to do legalized money laundering, to push more money towards able-bodied individuals — the dollar doesn’t stretch that far. You end up bankrupting the whole system,” Oz said Friday.

In California, Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) proposes suspending new health care enrollment for undocumented adults, although existing patients would continue to receive some coverage.

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker (D) would go further, ending his state’s immigrant adult health program, which covers more than 30,000 people, on July 1. Minnesota is making undocumented adults ineligible for health care assistance by the end of the year. 

“Taking care of a large population of undocumented folks has become a problem, and states have to manage that,” Oz said.

The top health official’s comments come after the administration moved to end Obamacare’s coverage of immigrants who entered the U.S. illegally as children, according to a final rule announced Friday. 

The provision will undo a Biden-era rule that was estimated to allow 147,000 immigrants to enroll in coverage. A federal judge blocked the rule from being enforced in 19 states, and it is still being litigated in court.

https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/5361875-dr-oz-medicaid-medicare-migrant-health-coverage/

‘Rising fragility’: Therapy culture is fueling America’s unrest

 The unrest in Los Angeles isn’t just about politics. It is a symptom of something deeper: a national collapse of resilience.

Behind the protests lies a broader crisis, a fragile mindset that mistakes discomfort for danger, grievance for identity, and emotional reactivity for truth.

New polling reveals a striking psychological divide: 45 percent of liberals report poor mental health, compared to just 19 percent of conservatives. This is not about ideology. It reflects two competing visions of how Americans are being taught to face adversity.

As a psychotherapist practicing in New York City and Washington, D.C., I have seen firsthand how therapy has changed over the years. Once a tool for building resilience and fostering growth, it has increasingly become a system that rewards victimhood and reinforces vulnerability. Today’s therapy culture pathologizes ordinary discomfort as trauma and treats accountability as incompatible with emotional safety.

One woman told me her previous therapist urged her to quit a new job after only one week because it “triggered” her. The real issue was difficulty taking directions. But instead of confronting it, the therapist simply validated her discomfort.

Another patient was told that setting “healthy boundaries” meant cutting off her entire family. No conversation, no healing — just isolation framed as progress.

This is not therapy. It is enabling.

This mindset goes well beyond the therapy room. It spills into classrooms, workplaces, media and now the streets. When people are conditioned to see themselves as perpetual victims and feel aggrieved, that inner turmoil eventually erupts into public unrest.

Take the recent “No Kings” protests, loosely organized around anti-monarchy themes. These demonstrations erupted across major cities without clear demands or coherent goals. They were not political movements, but emotional releases shaped by a culture that values validation over responsibility and reaction over resilience.

In my practice, I see a growing pattern, especially among younger patients. Many now view the world through a rigid binary of safe versus unsafe, oppressor versus oppressed. While that lens may offer clarity, it ultimately stunts growth, fuels anxiety and deepens social division. Emotional strength is mistaken for aggression. Assertiveness is labeled harm. Coping is no longer a virtue.

More concerning, this worldview is being institutionalized. From diversity, equity and inclusion training centered on personal grievance to college campuses where opposing views are treated as psychological threats, we are cultivating a generation that expects the world to adapt to their emotions rather than learning how to adapt to the world.

The consequences are growing. A society that teaches its citizens to fear discomfort will falter when facing the essential demands of adulthood, leadership and civic duty. If this psychological trend persists, we will experience more unrest, greater dysfunction and a deeper breakdown of national unity — not from politics, but from a widespread failure to handle everyday challenges.

Therapy’s original promise was to prepare people for life’s challenges. It taught that discomfort is part of growth and that personal responsibility is the path to healing. We must return to these principles.

Therapists need to stop encouraging dependence and instead help patients develop real coping skills. Schools should teach grit and perseverance alongside empathy. Workplaces should reward accountability and resilience, not coddling. Media outlets should highlight stories of individuals overcoming adversity rather than celebrating grievance.

If we do not course-correct soon, this fragile mindset will become the cultural norm. More young people will be paralyzed by adversity, institutions will prioritize emotion over reason, and communities will unravel under the strain of perceived harm. This rising fragility threatens the very foundation of our society.

What is at stake is more than just mental health. It is the future of a society capable of facing hardship and solving problems together. America’s strength has always come from its ability to persevere and overcome challenges. Without that strength, unrest will continue to grow, dividing us further.

The unrest in Los Angeles is not simply another protest. It mirrors what’s happening inside many Americans — a breakdown in coping, a decline in resilience and a confusion between emotions and reality.

Our national mental health crisis is no longer confined to private sessions. It is playing out in public. Until we stop treating fragility as a virtue, America’s unraveling will continue — in therapy offices, on college campuses and in the streets alike.

 Jonathan Alpert is a psychotherapist practicing in New York City and Washington, D.C., and author of the forthcoming book, “The Therapy Trap.”

https://thehill.com/opinion/5360971-mental-health-crisis-americas-frailty/

Sabbath gasbags, June 22

 NewsNation “The Hill Sunday:” Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.); Rep. Sean Casten (D-Ill.)

ABC’s “This Week:”  Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.)

CNN’s “State of the Union:” Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem; Sen. Adam Schiff, (D-Calif.); Israeli President Isaac Herzog; former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton; Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson

NBC’s “Meet the Press:” Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.)

CBS’ “Face the Nation:”  Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.); Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Yechiel Leiter; Reps. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.); Thomas Massie (R-Ky.); retired Gen. Frank McKenzie, former commander of U.S. Central Command

Fox News“Fox News Sunday:” Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem; Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.); Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah)

Fox News “Sunday Morning Futures:” Tom Homan, Border Czar; Matthew Whitaker, U.S. Ambassador To NATO; Gov. Ron Desantis (R-Fla.), Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wisc.); Rep. Ronny Jackson (R-Texas); Col. Derek Harvey (US Army, Ret.)

https://thehill.com/video-clips/sunday-shows/5362129-sunday-shows-preview-gop-megabill-faces-big-beautiful-road-bumps-all-eyes-turn-to-trump-on-iran/

Lilly Novel Oral GLP-1 Agent Cuts A1c, Weight in Early Diabetes

 An investigational, oral small-molecule GLP-1 receptor agonist improved glycated hemoglobin levels in adults with early-stage type 2 diabetes, a phase III randomized trial found.

Among 559 participants in ACHIEVE-1, all doses of orforglipron monotherapy were superior to placebo for HbA1c reduction over 40 weeks (P<0.001 for all comparisons), reported Julio Rosenstock, MD, of Velocity Clinical Research at Medical City in Dallas:

  • 3-mg dose: -1.24 percentage points change from baseline (95% CI -1.44 to -1.04)
  • 12-mg dose: -1.47 percentage points (95% CI -1.67 to -1.27)
  • 36-mg dose: -1.48 percentage points (95% CI -1.66 to -1.29)
  • Placebo: -0.41 percentage points (95% CI -0.60 to -0.22)

Baseline HbA1c started at 8% and dropped to 6.5-6.7% with all doses of orforglipron by week 40. The drop was quick too, with noticeable reductions within 4 weeks. "Patients like to see rapid effects," said Rosenstock at the American Diabetes Associationopens in a new tab or window (ADA) annual meeting. The findings were simultaneously published in the New England Journal of Medicineopens in a new tab or window.

"Oral small-molecule non-peptide GLP-1 receptor agonists such as orforglipron ... have the potential to be widely accepted as much [earlier] therapy for type 2 diabetes," he added. "I think these drugs have the potential to be first-line therapy in people with type 2 diabetes."

Participants, whose baseline BMI had to be at least 23, also lost some weight with orforglipron. They had a 4.5% reduction in body weight with the 3-mg dose, 5.8% reduction with the 12-mg dose, and 7.6% reduction with the 36-mg dose compared with a 1.7% drop with placebo. These reductions corresponded to weight reductions of -4.2 kg (9.3 lbs), -5.2 kg (11.5 lbs), -7.2 kg (15.9 lbs), and -1.5 kg (3.3 lbs), respectively.

To put these metabolic improvements into perspective, 14-mg daily oral semaglutide (Rybelsus) yielded a 1.5% HbA1c reduction and a 4.9 kg (10.8 lbs) weight loss after 26 weeks in the PIONEER-1 trialopens in a new tab or window. In SUSTAIN-1opens in a new tab or window, 1-mg once-weekly injectable semaglutide (Ozempic) yielded a 1.55% HbA1c reduction and 4.6 kg (10.1 lbs) body weight reduction in patients with type 2 diabetes.

In comparison, orforglipron's glycated hemoglobin reduction was similar to semaglutide's but body weight reduction was a bit more. Rosenstock pointed out that this is simply based on a comparison of clinical trial data, and the drugs have yet to go head-to-head in a clinical trial.

One upside to orforglipron is that it doesn't carry the same timed restriction on intake of food, water, or other medications like oral semaglutide does, added Rosenstock, arguably making it a more convenient option.

Orforglipron acts as a selective, high-affinity, partial agonist of the GLP-1 receptor that favors biased activation toward G protein over β-arrestin recruitment at the GLP-1 receptor.

Running in parallel with ACHIEVE is the ATTAIN clinical program testing orforglipron in obesity. A 2023 phase II trialopens in a new tab or window presented at ADA found people with obesity on orforglipron -- tested in 12, 24, 36, or 45 mg once-daily doses -- lost between 8.6-12.6% of body weight within 26 weeks.

As for the multicenter ACHIEVE-1, 559 adults were recruited from China, India, Japan, Mexico, and the U.S. and randomized 1:1:1:1 to one of the four trial arms. All had to have treatment-naĂŻve type 2 diabetes only managed with diet and exercise and an HbA1c of at least 7% but no higher than 9.5%.

Those on orforglipron adhered to the following dose-escalation regimen: 1 mg starting dose, and the dose increased every 4 weeks (to 3 mg, 6 mg, 12 mg, 24 mg, and 36 mg, as applicable) until the assigned maintenance dose was reached.

By week 40, orforglipron-treated adults also had significant reductions in fasting serum glucose of 31 mg/dL with the 3-mg and 12-mg doses, and 35 mg/dL with the 36-mg dose compared with 11 mg/dL with placebo.

As expected with a GLP-1 agent, the most common adverse events (AEs) were mild-to-moderate gastrointestinal AEs, most of which occurred during dose escalation.

No episodes of severe hypoglycemia were reported. Permanent discontinuation due to AEs occurred in 4-8% of orforglipron participants and 1% of participants receiving placebo.

Developer Eli Lilly saidopens in a new tab or window it expects to submit orforglipron for weight management for regulatory approval by the end of this year, with the submission for the treatment of type 2 diabetes expected in 2026.

Disclosures

ACHIEVE-1 was funded by Eli Lilly. Some co-authors are company employees.

Rosenstock disclosed relationships with Eli Lilly, Amgen, Applied Therapeutics, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Biomea Fusion, Boehringer Ingelheim, Corcept Therapeutics, Hanmi Pharmaceutical Co, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, Oramed, Pfizer, Regeneron, Regor Pharmaceutical, Roche, Sanofi, Structure Therapeutics, Terns, and Zealand.

Co-authors disclosed multiple relationships with industry including Eli Lilly.

Primary Source

New England Journal of Medicine

Source Reference: opens in a new tab or windowRosenstock J, et al "Orforglipron, an oral small-molecule GLP-1 receptor agonist, in early type 2 diabetes" N Engl J Med 2025; DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa2505669.

https://www.medpagetoday.com/meetingcoverage/ada/116186

Trump Says US Intel Assessment Of Iran's Nuclear Program "Was Wrong", Tulsi Responds

 by Jacob Burg via The Epoch Times,

President Donald Trump said on June 20 that his director of national intelligence’s assessment in March that Iran had yet to decide on building a nuclear weapon was wrong.

Trump made the remarks to reporters on Friday while standing next to Air Force One at the Morristown Municipal Airport in New Jersey.

The president was asked about the U.S. intelligence community’s assessment that it had no evidence that Iran was building a nuclear warhead before Israel’s strikes on its military and nuclear sites last week.

“Well, then my intelligence community is wrong,” Trump said. “Who in the intelligence community said that?”

When he was told that it was his director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, who gave those remarks to lawmakers in March, Trump replied, “She was wrong.”

After Trump’s comments, Gabbard took to social media to share a clip of her March testimony to lawmakers on Capitol Hill, and accused the media of twisting her words.

“The dishonest media is intentionally taking my testimony out of context and spreading fake news as a way to manufacture division,” Gabbard wrote. “America has intelligence that Iran is at the point that it can produce a nuclear weapon within weeks to months, if they decide to finalize the assembly. President Trump has been clear that can’t happen, and I agree.”

Gabbard said in her testimony at the time that the intelligence community had determined that Iran was not currently building a nuclear weapon. However, as part of that assessment, she said there were alarming signals that warranted continuous monitoring for any change.

The signs Gabbard mentioned included indications that Iranian decision-makers who wanted the country to have nuclear arms were becoming increasingly emboldened in their pursuit, and that Iran’s enriched uranium stockpiles were at “unprecedented” levels for a state without nuclear weapons.

In remarks to reporters, Trump reiterated that he believes, based on the quantity of enriched uranium that Iran currently possesses, that the regime could develop a nuclear bomb “within a matter of months.”

“We can’t let that happen,” Trump said, adding that he believes his current military intelligence is more accurate than what then-President George W. Bush used as a pretext to invade Iraq in 2003, which Trump opposed.

He was asked what makes the current situation different than the one 22 years ago, and Trump said: “Well, there were no weapons of mass destruction [in Iraq]. I never thought there were.”

“There was a nuclear age [in 2003], but nothing like it is today. And it looked like I’m right about the material that they’ve gathered already,” he said.

The United Nations’ nuclear watch group said early last month that Iran had more than 900 pounds of 60 percent enriched uranium at the time. To make a nuclear bomb, 90 percent enriched uranium is required.

The group said that if Iran chooses, it could enrich enough stockpiled uranium to make a bomb in a matter of days, but building and testing a warhead could take much longer.

In response to comments from Iran’s foreign minister earlier on Friday, who said if the United States is serious about negotiations, it must first call Israel to order a stop to the airstrikes, Trump said it’s difficult to make that request now.

“If somebody is winning, it’s a little bit harder to do than if somebody’s losing,” he said. “But we’re ready, willing, and able, and we’ve been speaking to Iran, and we'll see what happens.”

Trump said he is giving Iran two weeks to “see whether or not people come to their senses” before he makes a final decision on whether to involve the U.S. military in the conflict after Israel’s surprise airstrikes on Iranian military and nuclear sites last week.

“I’m giving them a period of time, and I would say two weeks would be the maximum,” he said.

The president said he believes that Europe is not going to be able to help in negotiations with Iran to end the conflict.

“I will say this, it’s very hard to stop when you look at it. Israel’s doing well in terms of war, and I think you would say that Iran is doing less well. It’s a little bit hard to get somebody to stop,” Trump said.

As to whether Iran should be allowed to continue enriching uranium up to 3.76 percent for electricity production, which was one of the conditions of the Iran nuclear deal that Trump exited in 2018, the president suggested that Iran doesn’t need that energy source due to its large oil reserves.

“I just don’t know why they need that for civilian work,” Trump said. “When you’re sitting on one of the largest oil piles anywhere in the world, it’s a little bit hard to see why you'd need that.”

When asked whether an aerial campaign in Iran would be enough, or if he would send in ground forces, Trump said: “I’m not going to talk about ground forces.

“The last thing you want to do is ground forces.”

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/trump-says-us-intel-assessment-irans-nuclear-program-was-wrong-tulsi-responds

Highway Mayhem: Trucker From Sanctuary State Illinois Arrested After Baltimore Shooting Spree

 America's highways have become not just a mess but a national security threat, as the Biden–Harris regime oversaw a four-year surge in migrants obtaining non-domiciled Commercial Driver's Licenses (CDLs). The situation has grown so dire that President Trump recently signed an executive order requiring all CDL holders to demonstrate English proficiency—a policy slated to take effect next week.

The latest chaos unfolded on a stretch of highway in northern Baltimore County, where a truck driver identified as Christian Ramos, 28, of Aurora, Illinois, went on an alleged shooting spree Wednesday night, according to Maryland State Police.

The incident occurred just before midnight when a Toyota Prius carrying three people, including a toddler, was shot at near the Shawan Exit, about ten miles north of Towson, Maryland.

No injuries were reported, but a bullet was found lodged in the front seat of the Prius. Ramos, driving a Tag Trans Inc. tractor-trailer, was identified through dashcam footage as the shooter and arrested at a TA Travel Center in Elkton, Maryland, where MSP found a .45-caliber handgun and ammunition.

"Investigators later learned that Pennsylvania State Police are also investigating three shootings that occurred Wednesday night along I-83 in Pennsylvania between 10:00 p.m. and midnight," MSP stated. 

The trucking advocacy group American Truckers United commented on X, noting:

This incident involving Christian Ramos reflects a troubling trend of unvetted truck drivers contributing to a surge in wrecks and public safety threats across the United States.

The expansion of the non-domicile CDL program has allowed an unprecedented influx of drivers, compounded by lax vetting processes and fast-tracked commercial driver's licenses, leading to dangerous incidents like this shooting spree and the earlier bomb threat in South Carolina involving another Illinois-based driver.

According to data from Overdrive, the sanctuary state of Illinois flooded America's highways with non-domiciled CDL holders: 

ZeroHedge investigators contacted MSP regarding Christian Ramos' citizenship status but were referred to Illinois authorities for further information.

Recall an earlier note from American Truckers....

What a mess. 

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/highway-mayhem-trucker-sanctuary-state-illinois-arrested-after-baltimore-shooting-spree