Advanced Tissue Sciences

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Advanced Tissue Sciences is a corporation based in La Jolla, CA. They are the makers of Dermagraft-TC, which is an artifical skin created from harvested foreskins from infant circumcision.[1] They are also the makers of NouriCel, another product made from harvested foreskins,[2] and one of the main ingredients of SkinMedica's TNS Recovery Complex product.[3]

Earnings

Dermagraft-TC is FDA approved,[4][5] and it sells for about $3,000 per square foot and one foreskin contains enough genetic material to grow 250,000 square feet of skin.[6]

Advanced Tissue Sciences has sold about $1 million worth of cultured dermis to Proctor & Gamble, Helene Curtis, and other such businesses for pre-market testing. Advanced Tissue Science's foreskin-derived merchandise held a $32 million stock offering in the beginning of 1992.[7]

In 1996 alone, Advanced Tissue Sciences could boast of a healthy $663.9 million market capitalization performance.[8]

See also

References

  1.   Dermagraft-TC: Overview, Advanced Biohealing, Inc.. Retrieved 6 March 2011.
    Quote: Dermagraft is manufactured from human fibroblast cells derived from newborn foreskin tissue.
  2.   The Foreskin Mafia, Acroposthion.com. Retrieved 6 March 2011.
    Quote: TNS contains... NouriCel-MD which is... a combination of Natural Growth Factors, matrix proteins, and soluble collagen. Human Growth Factors extracted from cultured cells of foreskin...
  3.   (12 February 2002). SkinMedica Introduces TNS Recovery Complex, SkinMedica. Retrieved 6 March 2011.
    Quote: TNS Recovery Complex is the only product containing a professional concentration of NouriCel®, a new cosmetic ingredient from leading tissue-engineering company Advanced Tissue Sciences.
  4.   (2011). Dermagraft-TC: General Information: Advanced Tissue Sciences, MediLexicon International Ltd. Retrieved 7 May 2011.
    Quote: Dermagraft-TC is the first human, fibroblast-derived temporary skin substitute for the treatment of partial-thickness burns that has been approved for marketing by the FDA.
  5.   (28 March 1997). Transplant News: Advanced Tissue Sciences' temporary wound covering Dermagraft-TC approved for marketing by FDA, HighBeam Research. Retrieved 7 May 2011.
    Quote: the Food and Drug Administration has approved Dermagraft-TC
  6. Circumcision. Daecher M. Icon 1998;2(2):70-3.
  7.   Pitta J: Biosynthetics. Forbes. Pp. 170-1.
    Note: The 32-page Advanced Tissue Sciences, Inc. 1997 Annual Report refers to "fibroblasts" but does not contain the word "foreskin."
  8.   Hall CT. Biotech's Big Discovery. San Francisco Chronicle. 25 October 1996; : E1+E4.