| Literature DB >> 24198520 |
Abstract
Neurodegenerative diseases are a growing public health challenge, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) remains a fatal incurable disease. The advent of stem cell therapy has opened new horizons for both researchers and ALS patients, desperately looking for a treatment. ALS must be considered a systemic disease affecting many cell phenotypes besides motor neurons, even outside the central nervous system. Cell replacement therapy needs to address the specific neurobiological issues of ALS to safely and efficiently reach clinical settings. Moreover, the enormous potential of induced pluripotent cells directly derived from patients for modeling and understanding the pathological mechanisms, in correlation with the discoveries of new genes and animal models, provides new opportunities that need to be integrated with previously described transplantation strategies. Finally, a careful evaluation of preclinical data in conjunction with wary patient choice in clinical trials needs to be established in order to generate meaningful results.Entities:
Keywords: amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; clinical trials; regenerative medicine; stem cell therapy
Year: 2010 PMID: 24198520 PMCID: PMC3781739 DOI: 10.2147/SCCAA.S8662
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Cloning ISSN: 1178-6957
Figure 1Novel “holistic” approach to ALS therapy. Clinical overlaps between ALS and other neurodegenerative diseases could unravel common molecular/pathological mechanisms (A). Moreover, new insights on causative genetic mutations (B) and the development of novel animal models (C) widen our knowledge of the possible therapeutic targets in the pathological pathways. In the meantime, recent iPS technology (D) provides patient-derived specimens as disease modeling and cell assays to dissect pathological mechanisms and specific cell contribution (E). The development of SC-based therapies is also directly exploitable for new drug screening (F and G). The discovery of the importance of epigenetic regulation in the pathological processes is paralleled by a relevant role in SC biology. Any alteration in this complex network could alter SC dynamic cross talk to the diseased surroundings, thus precluding possible therapeutic effects (H–J). The complex nature requires a multifaceted strategy, able to efficiently contrast widespread degeneration in all tissue districts (K), which should be carefully evaluated in accurate preclinical studies (L). Efficient therapeutic treatments are required both to replace MNs (M) and provide an healthy environment for them (N), capable also of enhancing endogenous repair (O). These laboratory studies will lead to successful clinical trials (P), based on novel surgical techniques (Q), able to slow the disease progression. Consensus international guidelines for drug/SC trials will guarantee the conscientious translation of basic SC research into appropriate treatment applications for patients aiming to create optimized efficient protocols able to slow down (neuro)degeneration (R).
Abbreviations: MND, motor neuron disease; ALS, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; FTD, frontotemporal dementia; TDP-43, TAR DNA-binding protein; FUS, fused in sarcoma protein; iPS, induced pluripotent stem cells; Oct-4/Sox2/Klf-4/c-Myc, 4 transcription factors essential for iPS generation; SC, stem cell; miRNA, micro-RNA; MN, motor neuron.
Recent clinical trials with SCs in ALS patients (in chronological order)
| SC types | Delivery route (injection into) | Patient number | Main patient characteristics | Outcome (patient number) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Olfactory ensheathing cells | Pathological regions of the spinal cord and/or bilateral corona radiata of the brain | 327 | ➢ Onset spinal | Safe and well tolerated (short term (4 weeks)) | |
| Olfactory ensheathing cells | Frontal lobe | 1 | ➢ Onset spinal | Faster disease rate | |
| Autologous Bone marrow mesenchymal SCs | Laminectomy + mielotomy Central part of thoracic spinal cord | 9 | ➢ Onset spinal | Safe and well tolerated in the long term (4 years follow-up) | |
| Peripheral blood SCs | Mobilization with GCSF treatment | 8 | ➢ Onset limb (7 patients) | Safe and well tolerated | |
| Mobilized allogenic hematopoietic SCs | Total body irradiation | 6 | ➢ Onset spinal or bulbar | Tolerated with some immunological problems (3) | |
| Fetal olfactory ensheathing cells | Bilateral corona radiata involving the pyramidal tracts of the frontal lobes | 15 | ➢ Onset nr | Safe and well tolerated (short term (4 months) | |
| Autologous Bone marrow hematopoietic progenitors | Laminectomy Anterior part of spinal cord (C1-C2) | 13 | ➢ Onset nr | Clinical benefits (9) (1 year follow-up) | |
| Autologous blood purified CD133+ cells | Bilateral implantation in frontal motor cortex with stereotaxy or neuronavigation guidance | 10 | ➢ Onset spinal | Safe and well tolerated (1 year follow-up) | |
| Fetal olfactory ensheathing cells | Bilateral corona radiata involving the pyramidal tracts of the frontal lobes | 457 | ➢ Onset nr | Improvement of the patients’ neurological functions and/or decrease the progressive deterioration | |
| Autologous Bone marrow SCs | Laminectomy Posterior part of spinal cord | 11 | ➢ Onset medullar | Safe and well tolerated in the short term (some months) | |
| Autologous Bone marrow SCs | Spinal tap | nr | nr | Ongoing patient enrolment | Press release: |
| Neural SCs | Lumbar area of spinal cord | 12 | Phase i trial ongoing 4 patient surgeries done (3 patients with unilateral injections, 1 patient bilateral injections into the spinal cord) | Estimated 24 months follow-up |
Abbreviation: nr, not reported.