| Literature DB >> 26674007 |
Elizabeth O Stenger1, Lakshmanan Krishnamurti2, Jacques Galipeau3,4.
Abstract
Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) are multipotent progenitor cells known to modulate the immune system and to promote hematopoiesis. These dual effects make MSCs attractive for use as cellular therapy in hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT). MSCs can be used peri-HCT or pre-engraftment to modulate immune reconstitution, promoting hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) engraftment and/or preventing graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). Pre-clinical studies have demonstrated that MSCs can potentiate HSC engraftment and prevent GVHD in a variety of animal models. Clinical trials have been small and largely non-randomized but have established safety and early evidence of efficacy, supporting the need for larger randomized trials.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26674007 PMCID: PMC4681052 DOI: 10.1186/s12865-015-0135-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Immunol ISSN: 1471-2172 Impact factor: 3.615
Fig. 1Early (peri- or post-transplant) versus late administration of MSCs in HCT. MSCs can be administered to HCT patients in either early or late time periods. The early time period constitutes either peri- or early post-transplant, which includes the use of MSCs to promote engraftment or to prevent GVHD. MSCs can potentiate engraftment via direct infusion peri-transplant or via ex-vivo co-culture with HSCs. The late time period constitutes the late post-engraftment period where MSCs can be infused to treat GVHD or other inflammatory conditions (such as hemorrhagic cystitis) or to treat graft failure
Fig. 2Potential mechanisms of MSC potentiation of engraftment. Pre-clinical studies (in vivo small animal and in vitro with human MSCs) suggest that MSCs function via interaction with other immune cells (Fig. 2 a) and with donor CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs; Fig. 2 b). MSCs may inhibit activated residual recipient immune cells, in particular T lymphocytes and natural killer cells which are known to be drivers of HCT rejection, and/or may promote other regulatory immune cell populations, such as regulatory T cells. As shown in Fig. 2a, some potential mechanisms of this former effect are demonstrated, including cell-cell interaction (such as through B7H1 or B7DC/PD1 on MSCs) or secretion of small molecules (such as PGE-2 through COX2, kynurenine through IDO, and IL-10). MSC likely interact with HSCs through cell-cell interactions, which more likely occur before HSCs reach the bone marrow niche and may lead to HSCs being directed to the niche and/or to increased HSC survival (Fig. 2b)
Use of MSCs to promote engraftment in murine models
| HSC source | Model | Conditioning | MSC source | MSC dose | Outcome | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human UCB CD34+cells | NOD/SCID mice | 3.5 Gy | Human fetal lung | 1 × 106 | 3-4 fold increased donor CD45+ (lymphoid & myeloid, not B cell) | 21 |
| Human UCB CD34+cells | NOD/SCID mice | 3.5 Gy | Fetal lung, liver, or BM or adult BM | 1 × 106 | Fetal lung & BM & adult BM MSCs increased engraftment of donor CD45+ in BM, PB, or spleen | 22 |
| Human UCB CD34+cells (single vs double) | NOD/SCID mice | 3.25 Gy | Human placenta | 4 × 104 | Increased engraftment (total & CD34+), no effect on CD19+ Decreased single cord dominance | 13 |
| Human UCB CD34+cells (single vs double) | NOD/SCID mice | 3.5 Gy | Human BM | NR | Increased engraftment, decreased single cord dominance | 23 |
| Human PB CD133+cells | NOD/SCID mice | 3 Gy | Human BM; CD271+ & PA-MSC | 1 × 105(1:1; HSC:MSC) 7 × 105 (1:8) | Increased engraftment (CD45+, CD33+, CD19+), no effect on CD41a+, CD3+, CD56+ Increased engraftment (CD271+ > PA-MSC), comparable increase CD33+ & CD41a+, CD271+ increase lymphoid & decrease NK cells | 24 |
| Human UCB CD34+cells | NOD/SCID mice | 3.5 Gy | Human BM (STRO-1+ or STRO-1−) | 1 × 106 | STRO-1− MSC increased engraftment of donor CD45+ in BM, PB, or spleen more than STRO-1+, STRO-1+ MSC improved homing to recipient tissue | 25 |
| C57BL/6 or BALB/b TCD BM cells | BALB/c or C57BL6/-Ly-5.1 mice | 5-6 Gy | Syngeneic, allogeneic, or 3rd party BM | 0.25 × 106; days 0, 4, 7, 10, 14 | Syngenic MSCs increase engraftment, donor MSCs increase rejection, 3rd party MSCs no effect | 14 |
| Human PB CD34+cells | NOD/SCID mice | 3 Gy | Autologous (PB) or allogeneic (BM), human | 1 × 106 | Increased donor CD45+ with either MSC source, allogeneic MSCs increased myeloid engraftment and megakaryocytopoiesis | 15 |
MSCs indicates mesenchymal stromal cells, HSC hematopoietic stem cell, UCB umbilical cord blood, NOD/SCID nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficiency, Gy gray, BM bone marrow, NR not reported, TCD T cell depleted, PB peripheral blood, PA-MSC plastic-adherent MSC, NK natural killer
Use of MSCs to promote engraftment in large animal models
| HSC source | Model | Conditioning; Immune suppression | MSC source | MSC dose | Outcome | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human CD34+BM cells | Fetal sheep xenograft | None; n/a | Human autologous & allogeneic BM | 5 × 104 - 7.5 × 105 | Increased engraftment in PB and BM, no difference between autologous & allogeneic | 16 |
| Haploidentical BM cells | Canine | 9.2 Gy; n/a | Allogeneic BM (3rd party), immortalized clonal populations or primary MSC culture | 3 dosing schedules: 30 × 106/kg 3×/wk ×1 wk, then 2×/wk; 15 × 106/kg 5×/wk; 1 × 106/kg 3×/wk | No effect; 50 % graft rejection & 50 % fatal acute GVHD | 26 |
| DLA-identical BM cells | Canine | 1 Gy; MMF and CSA | Donor-derived BM | 1.2 - 1.8 × 106/kg day 0, 1.1 - 1.3 × 106/kg day 35 | No effect, uniform graft rejection at median of 8 weeks after initial donor engraftment | 27 |
| Autologous CD34+ BM cells (intra-BM) | Nonhuman primate | 5.5 Gy ×2 doses or Bu; n/a | Autologous BM | NR | 1.6-6 fold increase in donor CFUs in BM | 28 |
MSCs indicates mesechymal stromal cells, HSC hematopoietic stem cells, BM bone marrow, PB peripheral blood, Gy gray, Bu busulfan, NR not reported, CFUs colony-forming units, wk week, GVHD graft-versus-host disease, DLA dog leukocyte antigen, MMF mycophenolate mofetil, CSA cyclosporine
Clinical trials of MSCs to promote engraftment
| Patient population | HSC source | Conditioning; Immune suppression | MSC source | MSC dose | MSC culture conditions | Outcome | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adult breast cancer, | Autologous PB | Cy/Thio/Carbo; n/a | Autologous BM | Day 0 − +1: ≥ 1 × 106/kg | FBS; Fresh or cryopreserved ( | Engraftment of neutrophils 8 d & platelets 8.5 d; No difference compared to historical control group | 29 |
| Pediatric HR acute leukemia, | UCB | Cy/TBI or Bu/Mel (age <1 yr) & eATG/MP; CSA & MP | Haplo BM (parent) | Day 0: 2.1 × 106/kg; Day 21: 1 × 106/kg, | PlasmaLyte A, 5 % HSA; Cryopreserved; P1-P4 | 100 % donor chimerism (d 21), engraftment of neutrophils 19 d & platelets 53 d; 14 % gr II-IV aGVHD, no cGVHD; No difference compared to historical control group | 30 |
| Pediatric leukemia or HLH, | UCB | TBI or chemotherapy-based; CSA +/− steroids | Haplo BM (parent) | Day 0: 1.9 × 106/kg | FBS; Fresh or cryopreserved; P2-P3 | 85 % donor engraftment, engraftment of neutrophils 30 d & platelets 32 d; 31 % gr II-IV aGVHD (0 % gr III-IV), 0 % cGVHD; ↓ gr III-IV aGVHD ( | 31 |
| Pediatric hemoglobinopathy, SCD ( | UCB (1 single, 3 double) or UD BM (2) | Flu/Mel/alemtuzumab; CSA & MMF | Haplo (1) or third-party (5) BM | Day 0: 2 × 106/kg; Day 2: 2 × 106/kg | FBS; Cryopreserved; Passages NR | 2 with primary graft failure & 2 with secondary graft failure, 4 deaths; Study prematurely terminated | 32 |
| Adult HR hematologic neoplasms, | UCB + third-party TCD PB HSC | Myeloablative; CSA & MP | Third-party BM (same as HSC; | Day 0: 1.2 × 106/kg | FBS; Cryopreserved; P1-P3 | 100 % donor engraftment (51 d), engraftment of neutrophils 12 d & platelets 44 d; 44 % gr II-IV aGVHD (0 % gr III-IV), 13 % cGVHD; No difference compared to concurrent control group | 33 |
| Pediatric & adult patients, leukemia ( | MSD BM (1) or PB (2); UD BM (1), PB (2), or UCB (1) | Myeloablative (3) or RI (4) +/− ATG (6); CSA +/− MTX (4) | Haplo (4) or MSD (3) BM | Day 0: 1 × 106/kg | FBS; Fresh vs cryopreserved NR; P2-P3 | 100 % donor engraftment, engraftment of neutrophils 12 d & platelets 12 d; 29 % gr II-IV aGVHD (0 % gr III-IV), 14 % cGVHD; No comparison group | 34 |
| Adult hematologic malignancy, | MSD BM or PB | Myeloablative; CSA & MTX | MSD BM | Day 0: 1, 2.5, or 5 × 106/kg (actual dose) | FBS; Cryopreserved; Passages NR | Engraftment of neutrophils 14 d & platelets 20 d; 28 % gr II-IV aGVHD, 61 % cGVHD; No comparison group | 35 |
| Adult hematologic neoplasm, poor hematological recovery post-HCT, | Haplo TCD or MSD PB | TBI or chemotherapy-based +/− ATG (haplo); CSA +/− MTX (MSD) | Haplo or MSD BM (same as HSC) | 1 × 106/kg, day +159.5 (median) | Ultroser G serum substitute; Fresh vs cryopreserved NR; P2-P3 | No response in 4 patients; 2 patients in CR1 with prompt neutrophil recovery (d 5 & 15) and platelet recovery (d 12 & 21); No comparison group | 36 |
| Pediatric patients, Hematologic malignancy ( | Haplo TCD PB CD34+ | TBI or chemotherapy-based (64 %); NR | Haplo BM (same as HSC) | Day 0: 1.6 ×106/kg (mean) | FBS; Fresh or cryopreserved; P1-P3 | 100 % donor engraftment, engraftment of neutrophils 12 d & platelets 10 d (mean); 38 % gr II-IV aGVHD (0 % gr III-IV), 7 % cGVHD; Faster reticulocyte ( | 37 |
| Adult & young adult patients, hematologic malignancy, | MSD PB or BM | Cy/TBI or Bu/Cy; CSA & MTX; open-label randomization to control or MSC group, | MSD BM | Day 0: 3.3 × 105/kg | FBS; Fresh vs cryopreserved NR; Passages NR | 5 patients in MSC group did not receive MSCs due to failed expansion; No difference in time to neutrophil & platelet engraftment; decreased incidence aGVHD (11.1 vs 53.3 %) & cGVHD (14.3 vs 28.6 %); comparable rates of infection; increased relapse (60 vs 20 %) and decreased DFS (30 vs 66.7 %) and OS (40 vs 66.7 %), no p-values reported | 38 |
MSCs indicates mesenchymal stromal cells, HSC hematopoietic stem cell, PB peripheral blood, Cy cytoxan, Thio thiotepa, Carbo carboplatin, n/a not applicable, BM bone marrow, FBS fetal bovine serum, NR not reported, d days, MSD matched sibling donor, CSA cyclosporine, MTX methotrexate, aGVHD acute graft-versus-host disease, cGVHD chronic graft-versus-host disease, NMD non-malignant disease, haplo haploidentical, TCD T cell depleted, TBI total body irradiation, DFS disease-free survival, OS overall survival, HR high-risk, UCB umbilical cord blood, eATG equine anti-thymocyte globulin, MP methylprednisone, HSA human serum albumin, CR1 complete remission 1, HLH hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis, SCD sickle cell disease, UD unrelated donor, Flu fludarabine, Mel melphalan