| Literature DB >> 26237258 |
Wilhelm K Aicher1, Melanie L Hart2, Jan Stallkamp3, Mario Klünder4, Michael Ederer5, Oliver Sawodny6, Martin Vaegler7, Bastian Amend8,9, Karl D Sievert10,11, Arnulf Stenzl12,13.
Abstract
Stress urinary incontinence is a significant social, medical, and economic problem. It is caused, at least in part, by degeneration of the sphincter muscle controlling the tightness of the urinary bladder. This muscular degeneration is characterized by a loss of muscle cells and a surplus of a fibrous connective tissue. In Western countries approximately 15% of all females and 10% of males are affected. The incidence is significantly higher among senior citizens, and more than 25% of the elderly suffer from incontinence. When other therapies, such as physical exercise, pharmacological intervention, or electrophysiological stimulation of the sphincter fail to improve the patient's conditions, a cell-based therapy may improve the function of the sphincter muscle. Here, we briefly summarize current knowledge on stem cells suitable for therapy of urinary incontinence: mesenchymal stromal cells, urine-derived stem cells, and muscle-derived satellite cells. In addition, we report on ways to improve techniques for surgical navigation, injection of cells in the sphincter muscle, sensors for evaluation of post-treatment therapeutic outcome, and perspectives derived from recent pre-clinical studies.Entities:
Keywords: cell injection techniques; mesenchymal stem cells; mesenchymal stromal cells; stem cell application; urinary stress incontinence; urodynamics
Year: 2014 PMID: 26237258 PMCID: PMC4449674 DOI: 10.3390/jcm3010197
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Selected features of human stem or progenitor cells suitable for regeneration of the urinary sphincter in the context cell based therapies for stress urinary incontinence (* SMC: smooth muscle cell).
| Stem cell source | Bone marrow | Adipose tissue | Urine | Striated muscle |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cell Type | MSC | ADSC | USC | satellite cell |
| Key Surface | CD73, CD90 | CD34, CD73 | CD44, CD73 | α7β1 integrin |
| Inclusion Marker(s) | CD105, CD146 | CD90, CD105 | CD90, CD105 | |
| Key Surface | CD11b, CD14 | CD11b, CD14 | CD31, CD34 | ø |
| Exclusion Marker(s) | CD34, CD45 | CD45 | CD45 | |
| Key Intracellular | vimentin, αSMA | STRO-1 | unknown | Pax7 |
| Marker(s) | STRO-1 | |||
| Cell Availability | abundant | abundant | abundant | limited |
| Isolation/Preparation | simple | feasible | very simple | complex |
| Differentiation | osteo, chondro | osteo, chondro | osteo, chondro | myoblast |
| Capacities | adipo, SMC * | adipo, SMC * | adipo, SMC * | myotube |
| endothelial | ||||
| urothelial | ||||
| Smooth Muscle Differentiation | established | established | established | ø |
| Striated Muscle Differentiation | complex | questionable | published | published |
| but not confirmed | ||||
| Mode of Action | paracrine/trophic | paracrine/trophic | paracrine/trophic | generation of |
| SMC generation | SMC generation | SMC generation | striated muscle cells | |
| Target in SUI | lissosphincter | lissosphincter | lissosphincter | rhabdosphincter |
| Key References | [ | [ | [ | [ |
Figure 1Selected progenitor cells, sources, and myogenic differentiation. Suitable progenitor cells, sometimes also referred to as “stem” cells, can be isolated from different sources, such as bone marrow, adipose tissue, striated muscle, or urine, to generate bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (bmMSC), adipose-derived stem cells (ADSC), satellite cells (SC), or urine-derived stem cells (USC). After a primary expansion the quality of bmMSC, ADSC, and USC is explored by adipogenic (“A”), chondrogenic (“C”) and osteogenic (“O”) differentiation of the stem cells, and by detection of the expression of the inclusion/exclusion cell surface antigens [34,37,55]. For SC expression of lineage-specific marker antigens is investigated (not shown). The bmMSC, ADSC, SC, or USC are then either applied as progenitor cells, or incubated in differentiation media to generate smooth muscle cells (SMC), for example, from bmMSC, ADSC or USC, or myoblasts (MB) and multinucleated myofibres from SC.
Figure 2CAD-Rendering of the test stand.
Figure 33D-Representation of the deformed urethra model under pressure.
Figure 4Cell application and functional read-out. (A) Transurethral injection of cells during cystoscopy procedure under visual control. Defined volumes of labeled cell suspension can be applied via a syringe (asterisk) and needle; (B) Urethral pressure profiles (UPP) can continuously be measured by a balloon catheter automatically retracted from the bladder to the rhabdosphincter and urethra.