If your practice uses human-derived biologics, sourcing isn't just a pricing decision — it's a compliance one. AATB accreditation and a clean chain of custody are what keep your sourcing defensible as the regulatory landscape evolves. Here's what to know in 2026. For licensed professional use only.
What AATB accreditation signals
The American Association of Tissue Banks sets voluntary standards for the recovery, processing, storage, and distribution of human tissue. For a clinic, sourcing from an AATB-aligned supply chain signals documented quality control and traceability — exactly what you want to be able to show.
A compliance checklist for sourcing biologics
- Lot-level Certificate of Analysis on file for every product you use.
- AATB-aligned tissue sourcing with a clear, documented chain of custody.
- cGMP manufacturing.
- Licensed-professional use records and clear internal documentation.
- State-by-state awareness — the legal landscape for stem cell and regenerative products varies and is changing.
Why "boring" sourcing is good sourcing
A supplier who makes documentation easy — COAs on request, transparent sourcing, a named point of contact — is reducing your risk. One who hand-waves it is creating future problems. Keep it boring on purpose.
Source documented, COA-backed biologics
If you want sourcing you can stand behind, open a wholesale account to see products and pricing — about two minutes.
Questions? info@stemnovanetwork.com.
Related sourcing guides
- How to Source Wholesale Exosomes & Biologics for Your Clinic
- Wholesale hUCT-MSC Pricing for Orthopedic & Pain Clinics
- Exosomes vs PRP: What Clinics Should Know
Stem Nova Network supplies cGMP, COA-backed biologics for licensed medical professionals. Information is for licensed professional use only and is not medical advice or a therapeutic claim.
