By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
India Times NowIndia Times NowIndia Times Now
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
  • Bharat Shreshtha Ratna Sanman
  • India News
  • Categories
    • Technology
    • Entertainment
    • The Escapist
    • Insider
    • Finance ₹
    • India News
    • Science
    • Health
Reading: New rules to bring stem cell, gene therapies under Central licensing net close regulatory gap
Share
India Times NowIndia Times Now
Font ResizerAa
  • Bharat Shreshtha Ratna Sanman
  • India News
  • Categories
Search
  • Bharat Shreshtha Ratna Sanman
  • India News
  • Categories
    • Technology
    • Entertainment
    • The Escapist
    • Insider
    • Finance ₹
    • India News
    • Science
    • Health
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US

Home » New rules to bring stem cell, gene therapies under Central licensing net close regulatory gap

India News

New rules to bring stem cell, gene therapies under Central licensing net close regulatory gap

Times Desk
Last updated: July 4, 2026 12:43 pm
Times Desk
Published: July 4, 2026
Share
SHARE


The amendment does not amount to automatic approval of these therapies, nor will it immediately make them cheaper or more accessible, a Health Ministry official clarified.

The amendment does not amount to automatic approval of these therapies, nor will it immediately make them cheaper or more accessible, a Health Ministry official clarified.
| Photo Credit: Getty Images/istockphoto

The Union Ministry of Health recently amended the Drugs Rules, 1945 to bring cell and stem cell products, gene therapies, and xenografts under the Centrally Licence Approving Authority (CLAA) framework, closing a long-standing regulatory gap in India’s oversight of advanced therapies.

The amendment does not amount to automatic approval of these therapies, nor will it immediately make them cheaper or more accessible, a Health Ministry official clarified on Saturday (July 4, 2026). Manufacturers will still have to prove safety, quality and efficacy, secure clinical trial and marketing approvals, and comply with the Drugs and Cosmetics Act. The change lays the regulatory groundwork for safer, more reliable access to advanced treatments over time, with both Central and State licensing authorities now jointly overseeing these products, the official said.

The move comes against the backdrop of clinics across India offering costly, often unproven stem cell treatments for several conditions, including autism and spinal cord injury.

The amendment brings such products under a uniform framework for the first time, addressing a regulatory grey zone that had let some clinics market dubious “stem cell” cures while charging patients large sums, Mandeep Singh Malhotra, director, surgical oncologist at C.K. Birla Hospital, Delhi, said.

Until now, the CLAA system covered only specific high-risk biologics — vaccines, large-volume parenterals, and recombinant DNA-derived drugs — which needed manufacturing licences from State Licensing Authorities with CLAA approval. Stem cell and cell-based products had been classified as “new drugs” since 2018, requiring regulatory clearance for clinical use, but the Rules had no dedicated provision (Forms 27D, 27DA, 28D, 28DA) for issuing manufacturing licences to these categories. The amendment fixes this by revising Rules 75, 75A, 76, and 76A along with the relevant licensing forms.

The updated framework will cover regenerative treatments and CAR-T cell therapies for blood cancers, including lymphoma, gene replacement, and editing products for genetic disorders and cancers, and animal-tissue-derived products, including heart valves used in cardiology and orthopaedics.

Experts note that India’s drug regulatory architecture has traditionally been built around its generics industry, which evaluates equivalence to already approved drugs — a model ill-suited to novel cell and gene therapies. The gap became apparent in 2023, when ImmunoACT won approval for NexCAR19, India’s first indigenous CAR-T therapy, only after regulators and the company worked out evaluation standards during the process itself. Since then, firms including Immuneel Therapeutics and Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories, have advanced their own CAR-T programmes, while Council of Scientific and Industrial Research – Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology (CSIR-IGIB), and the Serum Institute of India are developing BIRSA-101, a CRISPR (Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats)-based gene-editing therapy for sickle cell disease — all previously assessed case-by-case without a formal pathway.

Analysts caution that while the new framework should curb unregulated and unproven therapies, the added compliance layer could lengthen approval timelines and raise costs, especially for smaller biotech firms. Broader constraints — limited manufacturing infrastructure, a shortage of specialised workforce, and constrained clinical research capacity — remain unaddressed.

Published – July 04, 2026 06:13 pm IST



Source link

Anthropic to get trademark – The Hindu
In Maharashtra civic polls, a Marathinama vs Congress manifesto for North Indians
PAC questions FSSAI for unchecked sale of adulterated food items
FIR registered over ASI Sandeep Lather’s death; CM Nayab Saini, Opposition leader Hooda express condolences
CBI arrests ‘mastermind’ linked to NEET-UG 2026 biology paper leak
TAGGED:1945Centrally Licence Approving AuthorityDrugs and Cosmetics ActDrugs Rulesindia gene therapy policyindia stem cell therapy policy
Share This Article
Facebook Email Print
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow US

Find US on Social Medias
FacebookLike
XFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TelegramFollow

Weekly Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!
[mc4wp_form]
Popular News
EntertainmentMovieMusic

Vijay Deverakonda shares FIRST pics with Rashmika Mandanna after wedding, now husband and wife

Times Desk
Times Desk
February 26, 2026
Uddhav Thackeray seeks disqualification of rebel MPs, says defections part of bigger conspiracy
‘Insects can kill a serpent’: Pawan Kalyan warns of divisive forces at ‘national integrity’ meet in Delhi
Maharashtra doctor ends life, accuses two policemen of rape in note
Interplanetary missions crucial for nation: astronaut
- Advertisement -
Ad imageAd image
Global Coronavirus Cases

Confirmed

0

Death

0

More Information:Covid-19 Statistics
© INDIA TIMES NOW 2026 . All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?