The Cell & Gene Therapy Center ("CGTC") was founded in 20 The CGTC aims to identify potential therapeutic avenues arising from the characterization of models of human neurological diseases. The translation of basic research into therapy requires the investigation of disease mechanisms at multiple levels, ranging from the molecular to the behavioral. Investigators at the CGTC therefore adopt a multidisciplinary approach to the study of diseases of the brain and employ a wide range of laboratory techniques in this process. Cooper Hospital and UMDNJ are hosting a NIH-sponsored Phase I/II study on Gene Therapy for Canavan Disease, in collaboration with Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, under a major grant from the National Institute for Neurological Diseases and Stroke (NINDS). This clinical trial represents the first use of adeno-associated viral vectors (AAV) in the human brain, as well as the first viral gene therapy for a neurodegenerative disorder.
01 at Cooper Hospital and UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, as a combined clinical and basic research facility. As part of the Division of Neurosurgery, the focus of our work is on neurological diseases that can be treated using the latest gene transfer technologies and cell transplantation methods. CGTC is a "translational" research facility, which means that we bring discoveries from the laboratory bench directly to the clinical setting.