The Institutions Behind the Science
Trust is built on names that can be checked
Anyone can claim a relationship with a respected institution. What matters is whether the connection is documented and verifiable. The institutional names associated with our cell source are not decoration. They appear in a published, peer-reviewed study you can read for yourself, and that is the only kind of affiliation worth putting on a page like this.
Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Medicas y Nutricion Salvador Zubiran
The Salvador Zubiran institute is one of Mexico’s national institutes of health, a top-tier medical and research institution. It participated in the peer-reviewed clinical study that used cells from our source, CBCells. An institution of this standing does not attach its name to research involving a cell product it has not evaluated.
Tecnologico de Monterrey
Tec de Monterrey is among the most respected universities in Latin America, with a research reputation that extends well beyond Mexico. It was also involved in the published study. Academic institutions of this caliber are careful about the work they associate with, which is precisely why their involvement carries weight.
COFEPRIS
COFEPRIS, Mexico’s federal health authority, is the body whose authorization licenses our cell source to operate as a stem cell bank. It is not an affiliation in the partnership sense, it is the regulator. We list it here because its oversight is the foundation everything else rests on.
How these connect
The through-line is simple. Our cell source holds a COFEPRIS license. That same source supplied cells to a study conducted with Salvador Zubiran and Tec de Monterrey, published in a peer-reviewed journal. Each name reinforces the others, and all of them trace back to documents you can verify. That is the difference between an affiliation strip that is marketing and one that is evidence.
What to do next
See the study on our Published Research page. Review the license on our Our Cells page. Then talk to our team.
The information on this page is for educational purposes and describes the source, licensing, and processing of the cells used in our therapies. It is not a guarantee of any specific medical outcome. Regenerative therapies are not a substitute for conventional medical care. Speak with a qualified physician about whether any treatment is appropriate for your individual situation.