Rexlemestrocel-L (MPC-06-ID)

Rexlemestrocel-L (MPC-06-ID) – Investigational Cell Therapy for Chronic Lower Back Pain

Generic Name: Rexlemestrocel-L (MPC-06-ID) | Developer: Mesoblast Limited | Indication: Chronic Discogenic Lower Back Pain


Overview

Rexlemestrocel-L (MPC-06-ID) is an investigational allogeneic (donor-derived) mesenchymal precursor cell (MPC) therapy developed by Mesoblast Limited for the treatment of chronic lower back pain due to degenerative disc disease (discogenic pain). Unlike Mesoblast’s cardiac product (MPC-150-IM), this formulation is delivered via single intradiscal injection directly into the damaged intervertebral disc, aiming to regenerate disc tissue, reduce inflammation, and provide long-term pain relief.

Key Facts

  • Developer: Mesoblast Limited (ASX: MSB, NASDAQ: MESO)
  • Product code: MPC-06-ID (Mesenchymal Precursor Cells – 6 million cells – IntraDiscal)
  • Cell type: Allogeneic mesenchymal precursor cells (MPCs) derived from bone marrow
  • Indication: Chronic lower back pain due to degenerative disc disease (discogenic pain)
  • Delivery: Single intradiscal injection (directly into damaged intervertebral disc)
  • Dose: 6 million cells per disc (single treatment)
  • Stage: Phase III completed; partnered with Grünenthal for Europe
  • Status: Regulatory pathway under evaluation (US, Europe)

Chronic Lower Back Pain Background

Epidemiology & Burden

Prevalence

  • Global: ~540 million people affected by lower back pain at any given time
  • United States: ~80 million adults with chronic lower back pain (>3 months duration)
  • Lifetime incidence: ~80% of adults will experience lower back pain at some point
  • Chronic pain: ~20% of acute lower back pain cases become chronic (>12 weeks)

Economic Impact

  • US healthcare costs: $100+ billion annually (direct medical costs + lost productivity)
  • Leading cause of disability: #1 cause of years lived with disability (YLD) globally
  • Work loss: Leading cause of missed work days and disability claims
  • Quality of life: Severe impact on physical function, mental health, sleep, employment

Degenerative Disc Disease (DDD)

What is Degenerative Disc Disease?

  • Definition: Age-related breakdown of intervertebral discs (cushions between vertebrae)
  • Anatomy:
    • Nucleus pulposus: Gel-like inner core (water-rich, shock-absorbing)
    • Annulus fibrosus: Tough outer ring of collagen fibers
    • Endplates: Cartilage layers connecting disc to vertebrae
  • Degeneration process:
    • Loss of water content in nucleus (disc desiccation)
    • Tears in annulus fibrosus (annular fissures)
    • Disc height loss (collapse)
    • Inflammatory mediators released (cytokines, prostaglandins)
    • Nerve ingrowth into disc (normally avascular and aneural)

Discogenic Pain

  • Definition: Lower back pain originating from damaged intervertebral disc (not nerve compression)
  • Mechanism:
    • Annular tears expose nucleus to immune system → inflammation
    • Inflammatory mediators (TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, PGE2) sensitize nerve endings
    • Nerve fibers grow into damaged disc (nociceptive innervation)
    • Mechanical instability from disc collapse → abnormal loading, pain
  • Diagnosis:
    • MRI: Disc degeneration (Pfirrmann grade III-IV), annular tears, Modic changes
    • Provocative discography: Injection into disc reproduces patient’s pain (controversial test)
    • Exclusion: No nerve root compression (radiculopathy), spinal stenosis, or other structural causes

Current Treatment Landscape

Conservative (Non-Surgical) Treatments

  • Physical therapy: Exercise, stretching, core strengthening
  • Medications:
    • NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen) – anti-inflammatory, pain relief
    • Acetaminophen – pain relief (limited efficacy)
    • Muscle relaxants – short-term use
    • Opioids – high addiction risk, limited long-term efficacy
    • Antidepressants (duloxetine, amitriptyline) – chronic pain management
  • Interventional procedures:
    • Epidural steroid injections – temporary relief (weeks to months)
    • Facet joint injections – if facet arthritis contributing
    • Radiofrequency ablation – nerve ablation for facet or sacroiliac joint pain
  • Limitations: Temporary relief; do not address underlying disc degeneration

Surgical Treatments

  • Spinal fusion:
    • Procedure: Fuse two or more vertebrae together (eliminate motion at painful segment)
    • Techniques: Anterior lumbar interbody fusion (ALIF), posterior lumbar interbody fusion (PLIF), transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion (TLIF)
    • Incidence: ~500,000 spinal fusions annually (US)
    • Cost: $50,000–150,000 per surgery
    • Outcomes: Variable; 60–70% report improvement, but 30–40% have persistent pain or complications
    • Complications: Adjacent segment disease (degeneration of neighboring discs), hardware failure, infection, nerve damage
    • Recovery: 3–6 months; permanent loss of spinal mobility
  • Artificial disc replacement:
    • Procedure: Replace damaged disc with prosthetic device (preserves motion)
    • Limitations: Limited long-term data; device failure risk; not widely adopted

Unmet Need

  • Conservative treatments provide temporary relief but don’t address disc degeneration
  • Surgery (fusion) is invasive, expensive, variable outcomes, and causes adjacent segment disease
  • Need for disease-modifying therapy: Treatment that regenerates disc tissue, reduces inflammation, and provides durable pain relief without surgery

Rexlemestrocel-L (MPC-06-ID): Technology & Mechanism

Cell Type: Mesenchymal Precursor Cells (MPCs)

What are MPCs?

  • Definition: Early-stage mesenchymal stem cells with enhanced regenerative potential
  • Source: Bone marrow from healthy adult donors
  • Allogeneic: “Off-the-shelf” cells (not patient-specific); single donor → thousands of doses
  • Immune-privileged: Low immunogenicity; no HLA matching required
  • Formulation: 6 million cells suspended in injection solution (optimized for disc environment)

Delivery Method: Intradiscal Injection

Procedure

  • Approach: Minimally invasive, image-guided injection (fluoroscopy or CT)
  • Access: Needle inserted through skin into damaged intervertebral disc (usually L4-L5 or L5-S1)
  • Injection: 6 million cells injected directly into nucleus pulposus (center of disc)
  • Duration: ~30 minutes (outpatient procedure)
  • Anesthesia: Local anesthesia + conscious sedation
  • Recovery: Same-day discharge; minimal downtime (vs months for fusion surgery)

Advantages of Intradiscal Injection

  • Targeted delivery: Cells delivered directly to site of pathology (damaged disc)
  • Minimally invasive: Needle injection (vs open surgery)
  • Outpatient procedure: No hospitalization required
  • Preserves anatomy: No fusion, no hardware, no loss of spinal mobility

Mechanisms of Action

1. Disc Regeneration

  • Extracellular matrix (ECM) production: MPCs secrete proteoglycans, collagen, and other ECM components
  • Restore disc hydration: Increase water-binding capacity of nucleus pulposus (restore “cushion”)
  • Repair annular tears: Promote healing of damaged annulus fibrosus
  • Increase disc height: Restore disc height (reduce mechanical stress on vertebrae)

2. Anti-Inflammatory

  • Cytokine modulation: Reduce pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, PGE2)
  • Macrophage polarization: Shift macrophages from pro-inflammatory (M1) to pro-healing (M2) phenotype
  • Reduce nerve sensitization: Lower inflammatory mediators that sensitize pain receptors

3. Anti-Catabolic

  • Inhibit matrix degradation: Reduce activity of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) that break down disc tissue
  • Reduce apoptosis: Prevent death of remaining disc cells (chondrocytes, nucleus pulposus cells)

4. Immunomodulation

  • Suppress autoimmune response: Disc degeneration exposes nucleus to immune system (normally immune-privileged)
  • Reduce immune cell infiltration: Decrease T-cell and macrophage infiltration into disc

5. Neuroprotection

  • Reduce nerve ingrowth: Prevent or reverse pathological nerve fiber growth into disc
  • Reduce pain signaling: Lower nociceptive (pain) signals from disc

Important Note: Paracrine Effects

  • MPCs do not become new disc cells (chondrocytes)
  • Therapeutic effects mediated by secreted factors (growth factors, cytokines, extracellular vesicles)
  • MPCs present in disc for weeks to months, then cleared; effects persist long-term
  • Mechanism: “Hit and run” – cells trigger regenerative cascade, then disappear

Clinical Development

Phase II Trial

Study Design

  • Design: Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-ranging trial
  • Population: 100 patients with chronic discogenic lower back pain (>6 months duration)
  • Inclusion criteria:
    • Single-level lumbar disc degeneration (Pfirrmann grade III-IV on MRI)
    • Positive provocative discography (injection reproduces pain)
    • Failed conservative therapy (≥6 months physical therapy, medications)
    • Visual Analog Scale (VAS) pain score ≥40/100
  • Arms:
    • 6 million cells (low dose)
    • 18 million cells (high dose)
    • Placebo (saline injection)
  • Primary endpoint: Change in VAS pain score at 12 months
  • Secondary endpoints: Oswestry Disability Index (ODI), quality of life, disc height on MRI

Phase II Results

  • Pain reduction (VAS):
    • 6 million cells: -25 points (statistically significant vs placebo)
    • 18 million cells: -20 points (not significantly better than 6M)
    • Placebo: -10 points
  • Functional improvement (ODI): Significant improvement with 6M dose
  • Disc height: Trend toward increased disc height with 6M dose (MRI)
  • Safety: Well-tolerated; no serious adverse events related to cells
  • Conclusion: 6 million cells selected for Phase III (optimal efficacy-to-dose ratio)

Phase III Trial

Study Design

  • Design: Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter trial
  • Population: 360 patients with chronic discogenic lower back pain
  • Inclusion criteria:
    • Single-level lumbar disc degeneration (L3-S1)
    • Chronic pain (>6 months)
    • Failed conservative therapy (≥6 months)
    • VAS pain score ≥40/100
    • Positive provocative discography
  • Arms:
    • Rexlemestrocel-L: 6 million cells (single intradiscal injection)
    • Placebo: Saline injection (sham procedure)
  • Randomization: 2:1 (rexlemestrocel-L : placebo)
  • Primary endpoint: Composite responder analysis at 12 months:
    • ≥20-point reduction in VAS pain score AND
    • ≥15-point reduction in Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) AND
    • No device-related serious adverse events AND
    • No additional surgical intervention (fusion, etc.)
  • Secondary endpoints: VAS pain, ODI, quality of life (SF-36), disc height (MRI), safety
  • Follow-up: 24 months

Phase III Results (Announced 2020)

Primary Endpoint (Overall Population)

  • Result: Did not meet statistical significance
  • Responder rate:
    • Rexlemestrocel-L: 37% met composite endpoint
    • Placebo: 29% met composite endpoint
    • Difference: 8 percentage points (p=0.13, not statistically significant at p<0.05 threshold)
  • Interpretation: Trial missed primary endpoint in overall population

Prespecified Subgroup Analysis: Single-Level Disc Disease

  • Population: Patients with single-level disc degeneration (no multi-level disease)
  • Responder rate:
    • Rexlemestrocel-L: 47% met composite endpoint
    • Placebo: 26% met composite endpoint
    • Difference: 21 percentage points (p=0.006, statistically significant)
  • Pain reduction (VAS): -30 points (rexlemestrocel-L) vs -15 points (placebo) – clinically meaningful
  • Functional improvement (ODI): -20 points (rexlemestrocel-L) vs -10 points (placebo)
  • Durability: Benefits sustained at 24 months

Safety

  • Adverse events: Similar between rexlemestrocel-L and placebo groups
  • Procedure-related complications: Rare (discitis <1%, transient pain increase ~5%)
  • No serious cell-related adverse events
  • No increased risk of disc herniation, nerve damage, or other structural complications
  • Overall: Well-tolerated; favorable safety profile

Why Did Overall Population Miss Primary Endpoint?

  • Multi-level disease: ~40% of patients had multi-level disc degeneration (not just single level)
  • Dilution effect: Multi-level patients less likely to respond (pain from multiple sources; single injection insufficient)
  • Placebo response: Higher than expected placebo response (~29% vs ~15% anticipated)
  • Composite endpoint: Stringent (required meeting all 4 criteria); some patients improved on pain but not function, or vice versa

Regulatory Status & Partnership

Grünenthal Partnership (2021)

Deal Overview

  • Partner: Grünenthal GmbH (German pharmaceutical company specializing in pain management)
  • Announcement: June 2021
  • Territory: Exclusive license for Europe, Latin America, Middle East, select Asian markets
  • Mesoblast retains: United States, Canada, Australia, Japan, China rights

Financial Terms

  • Upfront payment: US$25 million
  • Regulatory milestones: Up to US$235 million
  • Commercial milestones: Up to US$1.43 billion (sales-based)
  • Total potential: US$1.7 billion (milestones)
  • Royalties: Double-digit percentage on net sales (10–20% estimated)

Responsibilities

  • Grünenthal:
    • Regulatory submissions and approvals (Europe, Latin America, etc.)
    • Manufacturing (technology transfer from Mesoblast)
    • Commercialization (marketing, sales, distribution)
    • May conduct additional clinical trials if required by regulators
  • Mesoblast:
    • Technology transfer and manufacturing support
    • Clinical data package and regulatory documentation
    • Ongoing R&D support

Regulatory Path Forward

Europe (Grünenthal)

  • Strategy: Pursue approval in single-level disc disease subgroup (positive Phase III results)
  • Regulatory pathway:
    • EMA (European Medicines Agency) submission
    • May require additional data or confirmatory trial (subgroup analysis less compelling than overall population success)
    • Advanced Therapy Medicinal Product (ATMP) designation (cell therapy regulatory framework)
  • Timeline: Uncertain; Grünenthal evaluating regulatory strategy (2024+)
  • Precedent: EMA has approved therapies based on subgroup analyses in some cases (e.g., oncology)

United States (Mesoblast)

  • Status: No BLA submitted; Mesoblast evaluating options
  • Challenges:
    • Primary endpoint not met in overall population
    • FDA typically skeptical of subgroup analyses (post-hoc vs prespecified)
    • May require additional Phase III trial in single-level disc disease population
  • Options:
    • Option 1: Submit BLA based on single-level subgroup data; request approval with restricted indication
    • Option 2: Conduct new Phase III trial enrolling only single-level patients (confirm subgroup findings)
    • Option 3: Deprioritize US program; focus on Europe (Grünenthal) and other indications (heart failure)
  • Current status (2024): Mesoblast prioritizing heart failure (DREAM-HF) and aGVHD (remestemcel-L); back pain on hold

Other Markets

  • Australia: Mesoblast retains rights; TGA (Therapeutic Goods Administration) approval pathway TBD
  • Japan: Mesoblast retains rights; PMDA (Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency) pathway TBD
  • China: Mesoblast retains rights; NMPA (National Medical Products Administration) pathway TBD

Market Opportunity

Target Population

United States

  • Chronic lower back pain: ~80 million adults
  • Discogenic pain: ~40 million (50% of chronic LBP)
  • Single-level disc disease: ~20–25 million (subset with isolated single-level degeneration)
  • Failed conservative therapy: ~10–15 million (candidates for intervention)
  • Realistic addressable market: ~2–5 million patients (subset willing to undergo injection, no contraindications)

Europe

  • Chronic lower back pain: ~100 million adults
  • Addressable market (single-level, failed conservative therapy): ~3–6 million

Global

  • Chronic lower back pain: ~540 million
  • Addressable market (developed countries with healthcare infrastructure): ~10–20 million

Pricing & Revenue Potential

Pricing Considerations

  • Comparators:
    • Spinal fusion surgery: $50,000–150,000 (surgery + hospitalization + recovery)
    • Epidural steroid injections: $1,000–3,000 per injection (temporary relief; multiple injections needed)
    • Radiofrequency ablation: $5,000–15,000 (temporary relief; 6–12 months)
    • Chronic pain medications: $2,000–10,000 annually (ongoing cost)
  • Value proposition: One-time treatment that provides durable pain relief without surgery
  • Estimated pricing: $10,000–30,000 per injection (one-time)
  • Rationale: Cost-effective vs surgery ($50,000–150,000); durable vs injections ($1,000–3,000 × multiple)

Peak Sales Potential

United States (if approved)

  • Conservative scenario:
    • Addressable market: 2 million patients
    • Market penetration: 5% (100,000 patients treated annually at steady state)
    • Price: $15,000 per treatment
    • Annual revenue: $1.5 billion
  • Optimistic scenario:
    • Addressable market: 5 million patients
    • Market penetration: 10% (500,000 patients treated annually)
    • Price: $20,000 per treatment
    • Annual revenue: $10 billion
  • Analyst consensus: $500M–2B peak sales (US) if approved

Europe (Grünenthal Territory)

  • Addressable market: 3–6 million patients
  • Pricing: Lower than US ($5,000–15,000 per treatment; European price controls)
  • Peak sales potential: $500M–1.5B annually (Europe + Latin America + Middle East)

Global Peak Sales Potential

  • Total (US + Grünenthal territories + other markets): $1–3 billion peak sales (if approved globally)
  • Timeline to peak: 5–7 years post-approval (gradual adoption, physician training)

Reimbursement Considerations

United States

  • Medicare/Medicaid: Coverage uncertain
    • Chronic pain treatments often scrutinized (cost containment)
    • Would need to demonstrate cost-effectiveness vs surgery and conservative care
    • May require prior authorization (failed conservative therapy, specific MRI criteria)
  • Private insurance: Coverage likely with restrictions
    • Criteria: Failed ≥6 months conservative therapy, single-level disease, positive discography
    • May require pre-authorization and specialist referral
  • Workers’ compensation: Likely covered (occupational back injuries common)

Europe

  • Health technology assessment (HTA): Required in most countries
  • Cost-effectiveness: Must demonstrate QALY benefit and reduced long-term costs vs surgery
  • Pricing: Negotiated country-by-country; lower than US

Challenges

  • Elective procedure: Not life-threatening; payers may view as “quality of life” rather than medically necessary
  • Alternative treatments: Surgery (fusion) already covered; payers may prefer established option
  • Long-term data: Need to demonstrate durability (5–10 years) to justify one-time cost

Competitive Landscape

Current Standard of Care

Conservative Treatments

  • Physical therapy, NSAIDs, opioids: Low cost but limited efficacy for chronic discogenic pain
  • Epidural injections: Temporary relief (weeks to months); requires repeated injections
  • Radiofrequency ablation: Temporary relief (6–12 months); not specific to disc pain

Surgical Treatments

  • Spinal fusion: Gold standard for severe discogenic pain; 60–70% success rate but invasive, expensive, complications
  • Artificial disc replacement: Limited adoption; device failure risk

Investigational Disc Regeneration Therapies

Cell Therapies

  • Rexlemestrocel-L (Mesoblast): Most advanced allogeneic cell therapy (Phase III completed)
  • Autologous disc cell therapy: Patient’s own disc cells expanded and re-injected (NuVasive/Intrexon) – Phase II trials; limited data
  • Adipose-derived stem cells: Multiple small companies; early-stage trials

Biologics

  • Growth factors (BMP, GDF-5): Injected into disc to stimulate regeneration; early-stage trials; mixed results
  • Platelet-rich plasma (PRP): Autologous blood product; weak evidence; not FDA-approved for disc disease

Biomaterials

  • Hydrogels, scaffolds: Injectable materials to restore disc height and hydration; preclinical/early clinical

Rexlemestrocel-L Competitive Advantages

  • Most advanced: Only allogeneic cell therapy with completed Phase III trial for disc disease
  • Allogeneic (off-the-shelf): Scalable, consistent quality vs autologous therapies
  • Positive subgroup data: 47% responder rate in single-level disease (vs 26% placebo)
  • Grünenthal partnership: Validates commercial potential; $1.7B milestone potential
  • Minimally invasive: Single injection vs surgery

Challenges

  • Primary endpoint miss: Overall population did not meet statistical significance (regulatory hurdle)
  • Subgroup reliance: Efficacy demonstrated only in subgroup (less compelling to regulators)
  • Competition from surgery: Spinal fusion established, covered by insurance

Investment Considerations

For Mesoblast Shareholders

Bull Case 🐂

  • Large market opportunity: $1–3B peak sales potential (chronic back pain affects millions)
  • Grünenthal partnership: $1.7B milestone potential + double-digit royalties; validates commercial viability
  • Positive subgroup data: 47% responder rate in single-level disease (clinically meaningful)
  • Unmet need: No disease-modifying therapy for discogenic pain; surgery invasive and variable outcomes
  • Minimally invasive: Single injection vs months of recovery from fusion surgery
  • Durable benefit: Effects sustained at 24 months (long-term pain relief)
  • De-risked by partnership: Grünenthal funding European development/commercialization

Bear Case 🐻

  • Primary endpoint miss: Phase III did not meet statistical significance in overall population
  • Subgroup analysis: Regulators skeptical of post-hoc subgroups; may require new trial
  • Regulatory uncertainty: Approval path unclear (US, Europe); may need additional data
  • Reimbursement challenges: Elective procedure; payers may resist coverage
  • Competition from surgery: Spinal fusion established; physicians may prefer familiar option
  • Adoption barriers: Requires physician training, patient selection, imaging expertise
  • Mesoblast prioritization: Company focusing on heart failure (DREAM-HF) and aGVHD; back pain lower priority
  • Financial stress: Mesoblast burning cash; back pain program may be shelved if other programs fail

Key Catalysts

Near-Term (2024–2025)

  • Grünenthal regulatory updates: EMA submission, regulatory strategy announcements
  • Mesoblast US decision: Whether to pursue FDA approval or conduct new trial
  • DREAM-HF data: Heart failure trial results will determine Mesoblast’s financial viability and ability to fund back pain program

Medium-Term (2026–2028)

  • European approval: If Grünenthal successful with EMA (2026–2027)
  • Commercial launch (Europe): Revenue ramp, physician adoption
  • US approval: If Mesoblast pursues (2027+, if new trial conducted)

Valuation Impact

Scenario Analysis (Contribution to Mesoblast Market Cap)

  • European approval (base case): +$500M–1B to market cap (Grünenthal milestones + royalties)
  • US + Europe approval (bull case): +$2–4B to market cap (direct US sales + European royalties)
  • No approval (bear case): $0 (program shelved; sunk cost)

Risk-Adjusted NPV

  • Probability of European approval: 30–50% (subgroup analysis, regulatory uncertainty)
  • Probability of US approval: 10–30% (lower; may require new trial)
  • Peak sales (if approved): $500M–2B (Europe + US)
  • Risk-adjusted value: $200–500M (probability-weighted)

Key Takeaways

  • Large unmet need: 80 million Americans with chronic lower back pain; limited effective treatments
  • Novel regenerative approach: First allogeneic cell therapy for discogenic pain (if approved)
  • Positive subgroup data: 47% responder rate in single-level disc disease (Phase III)
  • Grünenthal partnership: $1.7B milestone potential; validates commercial viability
  • Minimally invasive: Single injection vs invasive fusion surgery
  • Primary endpoint miss: Phase III did not meet statistical significance in overall population
  • Regulatory uncertainty: Subgroup analysis less compelling; may require additional trial
  • Reimbursement challenges: Elective procedure; payers may resist coverage
  • Lower priority for Mesoblast: Company focusing on heart failure and aGVHD programs
  • Grünenthal execution: European approval path will determine commercial viability

Related Terms

  • Degenerative disc disease (DDD) – Age-related breakdown of intervertebral discs
  • Discogenic pain – Lower back pain originating from damaged disc (not nerve compression)
  • Intradiscal injection – Injection directly into intervertebral disc
  • Mesenchymal precursor cells (MPCs) – Early-stage mesenchymal stem cells
  • Provocative discography – Diagnostic test injecting contrast into disc to reproduce pain
  • Spinal fusion – Surgical procedure fusing vertebrae together (eliminates motion)
  • Visual Analog Scale (VAS) – Pain assessment tool (0–100 scale)
  • Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) – Functional assessment for lower back pain
  • Grünenthal – German pharmaceutical company partnered with Mesoblast for Europe
  • Allogeneic cell therapy – Donor-derived cells (off-the-shelf)

Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical or investment advice. Rexlemestrocel-L (MPC-06-ID) is investigational; not approved for any indication. Mesoblast stock is high-risk, speculative investment with significant risks including regulatory rejection, reimbursement challenges, and financial distress. DYOR and consult professionals before making medical or investment decisions.


Mesoblast Investor Relations: investorcentre.mesoblast.com

Grünenthal: www.grunenthal.com

Clinical Trials: ClinicalTrials.gov (Search: Mesoblast, chronic lower back pain)

Related Topics: Rexlemestrocel-L, MPC-06-ID, Chronic Lower Back Pain, Degenerative Disc Disease, Discogenic Pain, Mesenchymal Stem Cells, Cell Therapy, Regenerative Medicine, Mesoblast, Grünenthal, Spinal Fusion, Intradiscal Injection, Pain Management

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