Kosin
University Gospel Hospital (Hospital Director Choi Jong-soon) and NKCL Bio
Group (Chairman Shin Dong-hwa) are set to strengthen competitiveness in the
field of advanced regenerative medicine through NK cell-based next-generation
immune cell therapy research and clinical cooperation.
Kosin
University Gospel Hospital (Hospital Director Choi Jong-soon, Vice President
for Research Ok Cheol-ho, Head Representative of Advanced Regenerative Medicine
Clinical Research Jang Hee-kyung, Professor Seo Kwang-il, Professor Shin
Ho-sik, Professor Heo Jeong-hoon) is a medical institution that has
continuously expanded the clinical applicability of advanced regenerative
medicine and immune cell therapy, based on accumulated clinical experience and
research infrastructure in the treatment of severe diseases including cancer.
In particular,
with its strength in clinical data-driven research capabilities, the hospital
has established a structure that connects research outcomes to actual treatment
settings.
NKCL Bio Group
is a company specializing in the development of personalized immune cell
therapeutics utilizing NK cells, and has secured high-efficiency NK cell
cultivation technology and production automation systems as its core
competencies.
The company is
focusing on building automated cultivation processes to overcome the production
standardization and scalability limitations faced by the cell therapy industry,
and is pursuing a clinical and commercialization-centered strategy that does
not remain at the research stage.
This agreement
is drawing attention as a substantive cooperation model that combines the
hospital's clinical infrastructure with the bio company's cell therapy
technology.
The two
organizations plan to jointly pursue high-level projects including clinical
research on NK cell combination therapy targeting intractable diseases
including hepatocellular carcinoma, and the development of tumor
microenvironment-overcoming NK cell therapeutics.
Industry
observers view this cooperation as a potential turning point where domestic
immune cell therapy research transitions from a technology development focus to
a clinical value verification stage.
In particular,
the structure of simultaneously pursuing clinical data acquisition and
production technology advancement is expected to also impact the future
commercialization competitiveness of immune cell therapeutics.
The
cooperation between the two organizations is being recognized as a case of
rapidly applying next-generation immune cell therapy technology to clinical settings
and elevating the technological standards and execution capabilities of the
domestic advanced regenerative medicine industry as a whole.