In 2001, a research team published 2 high-profile reports 1,2 suggesting that bone marrow could regenerate the heart and new myocytes are formed in the human heart at a substantial and surprising rate. The articles upended existing dogma and contradicted years of rigorous analysis. Researchers struggled to reproduce the findings with limited success, and Nature took the unusual step of publishing 3 separate negative studies in 2003 and 2004 suggesting that bone marrow could not regenerate myocardium. [3][4][5] Other researchers found that new myocardial cells in the adult heart are formed only rarely, if at all. 6 Nevertheless, a cadre of researchers continued to publish work supporting the possible existence of bone marrow-derived cardiac stem cells and received millions of dollars from federal agencies and foundations for their ongoing research. Unchecked optimism by many in the cardiology community led to rapidly initiated clinical trials despite the controversy, and over the next decade, thousands of patients received cardiac infusions of putative stem cells both within and outside of clinical trials sponsored by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), costing taxpayers additional millions of dollars. When it became clear that bone marrow does not contain cardiac stem cells, researchers reported the existence of a different, resident cardiac stem cell within the heart itself that could regenerate the myocardium. 4 When subsequent studies failed to show myogenic differentiation of these putative resident stem cells in vivo, yet another theory was generated to defend the purported benefit of injecting these nonstem cells into the heart; perhaps they were secreting a beneficial paracrine factor that caused the heart to regenerate, although the nature of such a factor was elusive and the benefits transitory at best.All along, outstanding scientists were publicly challenging the claims of miraculous cardiac stem cells, and they published thorough and carefully executed studies documenting the virtual absence of cardiac regeneration from stem cells (<0.01% per year 7 ). Claims of lung stem cells with cellular markers similar to those of the putative cardiac stem cells met with widespread skepticism, despite the original publication of their existence. 8 Last month, it was learned that an ongoing investigation at Harvard and Brigham and Women's Hospital concluded that 31 articles should be retracted. 9 It is still not known which 31 contain serious enough errors to induce Harvard to make this public announcement. Last year, Harvard and Brigham and Women's Hospital agreed to pay the NIH $10 million to settle concerns associated with their funding of the involved laboratories. While some degree of cardiac regeneration, likely resulting from proliferation of existing myocytes, Opinion EDITORIAL