How to Choose a Trustworthy Regenerative Medicine Clinic: Four Questions to Ask
Regenerative medicine has grown rapidly — and so has the number of clinics offering stem cell and PRP treatments. Not all of them are equal. Some are delivering genuinely effective, evidence-based care. Others are marketing buzzwords backed by products that don’t perform as advertised.
Here’s a practical framework for evaluating any clinic before committing to treatment.
1. Where do the cells come from, and are they actually alive?
Autologous cells — harvested from your own blood, fat, or bone marrow — are living at the time of injection. This matters, because living cells can differentiate, proliferate, and actively participate in the healing process.
Allogeneic products derived from amniotic fluid, placental tissue, or umbilical cord are frequently marketed as “live stem cells” or “young stem cells.” This claim doesn’t hold up. By the time these products are tested for infectious disease, preserved, stored, and shipped, the cellular viability is gone. These products retain growth factors and cytokines that have genuine biological value — but they do not contain living stem cells, regardless of what the marketing says.
Any clinic claiming to offer “living” stem cells from banked or commercial sources should prompt immediate skepticism.
2. What guidance technology does the physician use?
Regenerative injections need to reach the specific damaged tissue to work. Unguided injections — even by experienced physicians — miss the target in a meaningful percentage of cases. In complex joints, accuracy without imaging guidance can be as low as 30%.
Ask directly: does the physician use real-time ultrasound or fluoroscopy to guide every injection? If the answer is no, or if the physician suggests guidance isn’t necessary, that’s a significant red flag.
At Albano Clinic, every injection is performed under musculoskeletal ultrasound. Precision isn’t optional — it’s what determines whether expensive biological material reaches the tissue that needs it.
3. Is the treatment plan customized to your specific imaging and labs?
Effective regenerative medicine is not a menu. The right combination of PRP, bone marrow concentrate, fat-derived cells, and adjunct treatments depends on the specific injury, its severity on imaging, your overall health status, your hormonal and nutritional baseline, and your activity goals.
A clinic that offers a standard package without reviewing your imaging, discussing your history in depth, and explaining the rationale for the specific protocol is not practicing precision medicine.
4. Is the physician honest about limitations?
A trustworthy regenerative medicine physician will tell you when orthobiologics are not the right answer — when surgery is genuinely necessary, when your injury is too advanced to respond predictably to regenerative treatment, or when your expectations don’t align with what the evidence supports.
If every consultation ends in a treatment recommendation regardless of the clinical picture, that’s a business model, not a medical practice.