Beckman Coulter Life Sciences Supports Clinical Researchers in The ONE Study
18 Nov 2014Beckman Coulter Life Sciences is participating in the ONE Study, an international collaboration of scientists across Europe and the USA − and holding its annual general meeting in Regensburg, Germany from 19-21 November 2014. Beckman Coulter is contributing its flow cytometry expertise in cell therapy and diagnostic technologies to support the study’s specific translational research into organ transplantation and immune deficiency diseases such as HIV.
Prof. Edward Geissler, the founder of the ONE Study and head of Experimental Surgery at the University Hospital in Regensburg, Germany, said: “Collaborating with Beckman Coulter scientists has furthered our ability to conduct clinical research studies in the field of organ transplantation. In the case of the ONE Study, this will permit us to more accurately assess the effects of various different cell therapies as potential advanced, therapeutic products.”
To make this possible, Beckman Coulter donated a substantial quantity of flow cytometry instruments and reagents, as well as providing scientific consultation and flow cytometry technical expertise. The donation also includes the DuraClone IM premixed dry reagent cocktails* which are designed to simplify workflow to minimize labor and reduce variability and errors when characterizing alterations of immune status through detection of human blood-cell subpopulations.
The ONE study consortium won a European Union 7th framework-funded grant to initiate its work. Beckman Coulter was invited to join at a later stage, after the grant had been awarded (therefore, it does not benefit directly) to enable ONE Study scientists to access its flow cytometry innovation.
Professor Birgit Sawitzki, of the Charité Hospital, Institut für Medizinische Immunologie Transplantationstoleranz, in Germany, and the leader of the immune monitoring work package of the ONE Study, confirmed: “Reliable, reproducible results across participating sites are a necessity in multi-institution clinical research studies aiming to characterize changes in immune cell composition.”
Mario Koksch, Vice President and General Manager of Beckman Coulter’s Cytometry Business Unit, explained: “As a company we are increasingly working with clinical research scientists to enable them to standardize and streamline workflow for high content flow cytometry. This is particularly valuable for translational research being carried out across multiple sites where results must be reproducible. Our contribution to the ONE Study is already facilitating the consistent identification of cellular sub-populations of the human immune systems, which is vital to immunodeficiency research.”