Boston, RI
Stem Cell Therapy clinics in Boston
Boston supports a regenerative medicine market shaped by both private clinics and regional academic medicine. Local referral networks run through Massachusetts General Hospital, Brigham and Women's, Beth Israel Deaconess, and Boston Children's, and stem cell practice in the area spans the Longwood Medical Area, Back Bay, and Cambridge border. Patient demand splits across three buckets: orthopedic injections for active adults and aging athletes, neurological and autoimmune protocols marketed to longevity-focused patients, and IV-based allogeneic products offered by private wellness clinics. The FDA classifies most stem cell injections for orthopedic, neurological, or longevity use as investigational biologics under 21 CFR Part 1271, meaning they require either a Biologics License or an active Investigational New Drug authorization. Autologous bone marrow and adipose products may qualify as Section 361 when minimally manipulated and used for homologous function. Massachusetts regulates physician practice through the Board of Registration in Medicine. There is no state-specific stem cell statute, so federal 21 CFR Part 1271 rules apply. Harvard-affiliated hospitals and MIT anchor the region's academic trial infrastructure. The 4 Boston clinics listed below have been reviewed against our vetting criteria, including federal NPI lookup, OIG exclusion screening, and Massachusetts Board of Registration in Medicine licensure checks.
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