| Literature DB >> 28575280 |
Francisco Fernández-Avilés1,2, Ricardo Sanz-Ruiz1,2, Andreu M Climent1,2, Lina Badimon2,3, Roberto Bolli4, Dominique Charron5, Valentin Fuster2,6,7, Stefan Janssens8, Jens Kastrup9, Hyo-Soo Kim10, Thomas F Lüscher11, John F Martin12, Philippe Menasché13, Robert D Simari14, Gregg W Stone15, Andre Terzic16, James T Willerson17, Joseph C Wu18.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28575280 PMCID: PMC5837698 DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehx248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Heart J ISSN: 0195-668X Impact factor: 29.983
| SURNAME, NAME | INSTITUTION |
|---|---|
| Anker, Stefan | Charité Medical School (BERLIN, GERMANY) |
| Anversa, Piero | Harvard Medical School (BOSTON, USA) |
| Atsma, Douwe | Leiden University Medical Center (LEIDEN, THE NETHERLANDS) |
| Badimon, Lina | Cardiovascular Research Center -CSIC (BARCELONA, SPAIN) |
| Balkan, Wayne | University of Miami Miller School of Medicine (MIAMI, USA) |
| Bartunek, Jozef | Cardiovascular Center, OLV Hospital (AALST, BELGIUM) |
| Bayés-Genís, Antoni | Hospital German Trias y Pujol (BARCELONA, SPAIN) |
| Behfar, Atta | Mayo Clinic (ROCHESTER, USA) |
| Bergmann, Martin | Asklepios Klinik St. Georg (HAMBURG, GERMANY) |
| Bolli, Roberto | University of Louisville, (LOUISVILLE, USA) |
| Brofman, Paulo | Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Paraná, (CURITIBA, BRASIL) |
| Broughton, Kathleen | San Diego State University (SAN DIEGO, USA) |
| Campos de Carvalho, Antonio C | Federal Univ Rio de Janeiro, (RIO DE JANEIRO, BRASIL) |
| Chachques, Juan Carlos | Hopital George Pompidou (PARIS, FRANCE) |
| Chamuleau, Steven | University Medical Centre (UTRECHT, THE NETHERLANDS) |
| Charron, Dominique | Hopital Saint Louis (PARIS, FRANCE) |
| Climent, Andreu M | Hospital Gregorio Marañon (MADRID, SPAIN) |
| Crea, Filippo | Universita Cattolica de Sacro Cuore (ROME, ITALY) |
| D´Amario, Domenico | Universita Cattolica de Sacro Cuore (ROME, ITALY) |
| Davidson, Sean M | University College London, (LONDON, UK) |
| Dib, Nabil | University of Arizona Medical College (PHOENIX, USA) |
| DiFede, Darcy | University of Miami (MIAMI, USA) |
| Dimmeler, Stefanie | University Frankfurt, (FRANKFURT, GERMANY) |
| do Rosario, Luis Bras | Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência (LISBON, PORTUGAL) |
| Duckers, Eric | University Medical Center Utrecht (UTRECTH, NETHERLANDS) |
| Engel, Felix B | Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, (ERLANGEN, GERMANY) |
| Eschenhagen, Thomas | University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf (HAMBURG, GERMANY) |
| Ferdinandy, Péter | Semmelweis University (BUDAPEST, HUNGARY) |
| Fernández Santos, María Eugenia | Hospital Gregorio Marañon (MADRID, SPAIN) |
| Fernández-Avilés, Francisco | Hospital Gregorio Marañon (MADRID, SPAIN) |
| Filippatos, Gerasimos | Athens University Hospital, (ATHENS, GREECE) |
| Fuster, Valentin | The Mount Sinai Hospital (NEWYORK, USA) |
| Gersh, Bernard | Mayo Clinic (ROCHESTER, USA) |
| Goliasch, Georg | Medical University of Vienna (VIENNA, AUSTRIA) |
| Görbe, Anikó | Semmelweis University (BUDAPEST, HUNGARY) |
| Gyöngyösi, Mariann | Univ. Klinik für Innere Medizin II (VIENA, AUSTRIA) |
| Hajjar, Roger J | The Mount Sinai Hospital (BOSTON, USA) |
| Hare, Joshua M | University of Miami (MIAMI, USA) |
| Hausenloy, Derek J | University College London (LONDON, UK) |
| Henry, Timothy D | Cedars Sinai (LOS ANGELES, USA) |
| Izpisua, Juan Carlos | Salk Institue (LA JOLLA, USA) |
| Janssens, Stefan | KU Leuven (LEUVEN, BELGIUM) |
| Jiménez Quevedo, Pilar | Hospital Clínico San Carlos (MADRID, SPAIN) |
| Kastrup, Jens | Rigshospitalet University (COPENHAGUEN, DENMARK) |
| Kim, Hyo-Soo | Seoul National University Hospital, (SEOUL, KOREA) |
| Landmesser, Ulf | Universitätsmedizin Berlin (BERLIN, GERMANY) |
| Lecour, Sandrine | Tel-Aviv University and Sheba Medical Center (TEL HASHOMER, ISRAEL) |
| Leor, Jonathan | Tel-Aviv University (TEL HASHOMER, ISRAEL) |
| Lerman, Amir | Mayo Clinic (ROCHESTER, USA) |
| Losordo, Douglas | Caladrius Biosciences, Northwestern University, New York University (NEWYORK USA) |
| Lüscher, Thomas F | Zurich Heart House (ZURICH, SWITZERLAND) |
| Madeddu, Paolo | University of Bristol (BRISTOL, UK) |
| Madonna, Rosalinda | Institute of Cardiology, Center of Excellence on Aging, “G. D'Annnunzio” University - (CHIETI, ITALY) |
| Majka, Marcin | Jagiellonian University (KRAKOW, POLAND) |
| Marban, Eduardo | Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute (LOS ANGELES, USA) |
| Martin Rendon, Enca | University of Oxford (OXFORD, UK) |
| Martin, John F | University College (LONDON, UK) |
| Mathur, Anthony | Queen Mary and Barts University Hospitals (LONDON, UIK) |
| Menasche, Philippe | Hopital George Pompidou (PARIS, FRANCE) |
| Metra, Marco | Universita degli Studi di Brescia (BRESCIA, ITALY) |
| Montserrat, Nuria | Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia (BARCELONA, SPAIN) |
| Mummery, Christine L | Leiden University Medical Center (LEIDEN, THE NETHERLANDS) |
| Musialek, Piotr | Jagiellonian University (KRAKOW, POLAND) |
| Nadal, Bernardo | King's College (LONDON, UK) |
| Navarese, Eliano | Heinrich-Heine-University, (DÜSSELDORF, GERMANY) |
| Pelacho, Beatriz | Clinica Universitaria de Navarra (PAMPLONA, SPAIN) |
| Penn, Marc S | Summa Cardiovascular Institute (OHIO, USA) |
| Perin, Emerson C | Texas Heart Institute (HOUSTON, USA) |
| Perrino, Cinzia | Federico II University, (NAPLES, ITALY) |
| Pinto, Fausto | Santa Maria University Hospital (LISBON, PORTUGAL) |
| Pompilio, Giulio | Centro Cardiologico Monzino (MILAN, ITALY) |
| Povsic, Thomas J | Duke Clinical Research Institute (DURHAM, USA) |
| Prosper, Felipe | Clinica Universitaria de Navarra (PAMPLONA, SPAIN) |
| Quyyumi, Arshed Ali | Emory University School of Medicine (ATLANTA, USA) |
| Roncalli, Jerome | Rangueil University Hospital (TOULOUSE, FRANCE) |
| Rosenthal, Nadia | Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute (MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA) |
| San Roman, Alberto | Hospital Clínico Universitario (VALLADOLID, SPAIN) |
| Sanchez, Pedro L | Hosp Univ de Salamanca (SALAMANCA, SPAIN) |
| Sanz-Ruiz, Ricardo | Hospital Gregorio Marañon (MADRID, SPAIN) |
| Schaer, Gary | Rush University Medical Center (CHICAGO, USA) |
| Schatz, Richard A | Duke University (LA JOLLA, USA) |
| Schulz, Rainer | Justus-Liebig Giessen University of Giessen (GIEßEN, GERMANY) |
| Sherman, Warren | Cardiovascular Center, OLV Hospital (AALST, BELGIUM) |
| Simari, Robert D | University of Kansas Medical Center (KANSAS, USA) |
| Sluijter, Joost PG | University Medical Center Utrecht (UTRECTH,THE NETHERLANDS) |
| Steinhoff, Gustav | Universitat Rostock, (ROSTOCK, GERMANY) |
| Stewart, Duncan J | Ottawa Hospital Research Institute (OTTAWA, CANADA) |
| Stone, Gregg | Columbia University (NEWYORK, USA) |
| Sürder, Daniel | University of Zurich (ZURICH, SPAIN) |
| Sussman, Mark A | San Diego State University (SAN DIEGO, USA) |
| Taylor, Doris A | Texas Heart Institute (HOUSTON, USA) |
| Terzic, André | Mayo Clinic (ROCHESTER, USA) |
| Tompkins, Bryon A | University of Miami Miller School of Medicine (MIAMI, USA) |
| Traverse, Jay | Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation (MINNEAPOLIS, USA) |
| Van Laake, Linda W | University Medical Center Utrecht (UTRECHT, THE NETHERLANDS) |
| Vrtovec, Bojan | University Medical Center Ljubljana (LJUBLJANA, SLOVENIA) |
| Willerson, James T | Texas Heart Institute (HOUSTON, USA) |
| Winkler, Johannes | Medical University of Vienna (VIENNA, AUSTRIA) |
| Wojakowski, Wojtek | Medical University of Silesia (KATOWICE, POLAND) |
| Wollert, Kai C | Kardiologie und Angiologie Medizinische Hochschule (HANNOVER, GERMANY) |
| Wu, Joseph C | Stanford University (STANFORD, USA) |
| Yang, Phillip | Stanford University, (STANFORD, CA, USA) |
| Yla-Herttuala, Seppo | University of Eastern Finland (KOUPIO, FINLAND) |
| Ytrehus, Kirsti | The Arctic University of Norway (TROMSØ, NORWAY) |
| Zamorano, José Luis | Hospital Ramón y Cajal, (MADRID, SPAIN) |
| Zeiher, Andreas | Goethe University (FRANKFURT, GERMANY) |
| Zuba-Surma, Ewa | Jagiellonian University (KRAKOW, POLAND) |
Figure 1Schematic representation of cardiovascular regenerative advanced therapy medicinal products according to the pre/clinical phase of development. ADSC, adipose tissue-derived stem cells; BMMNC, bone marrow mononuclear cells; BM-MSC, bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells; CDC, cardiosphere-derived cells; CPC, cardiac progenitor cells; CSC, cardiac stem cells; EPC, endothelial progenitor cells; ESC, embryonic stem cells; iPSC, induced pluripotent stem cells; MSC, mesenchymal stem cells; SM, skeletal myoblasts.
Summary of randomized clinical trials in cardiovascular diseases with regenerative products
| Disease (patients treated) | Regenerative product | Safety | Overall efficacy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acute myocardial infarction ( | BMMNC | Favourable | Inconsistent |
| BM-MSC | Favourable | Inconsistent | |
| Specific BM cells | Favourable | Inconsistent | |
| ADSC | Favourable | Inconsistent | |
| CDC | Favourable | Positive | |
| Growth factors | Favourable | Inconsistent | |
| Ischaemic heart failure ( | SM | Favourable | Inconsistent |
| BMMNC | Favourable | Inconsistent | |
| BM-MSC | Favourable | Positive | |
| Specific BM cells | Favourable | Positive | |
| CSC | Favourable | Positive | |
| Gene therapy | Favourable | Inconsistent | |
| Refractory angina ( | BMMNC | Favourable | Positive |
| Specific BM cells | Favourable | Positive | |
| ADSC | Favourable | Positive | |
| Non-ischaemic heart failure ( | BMMNC | Favourable | Inconsistent |
| Specific BM cells | Favourable | Inconsistent | |
| BM-MSC | Favourable | Inconsistent | |
| Peripheral artery disease ( | BMMNC | Favourable | Positive |
| Specific BM cells | Favourable | Positive | |
| Gene therapy | Favourable | Inconsistent | |
| Stroke ( | Neural stem cells | Favourable | Inconsistent |
| BMMNC | Favourable | Inconsistent | |
| Specific BM cells | Favourable | Inconsistent |
ADSC, adipose tissue-derived stem cells; BMMNC, bone marrow mononuclear cells; BM-MSC, bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells; CDC, cardiosphere-derived cells; CSC, cardiac stem cells; SM, skeletal myoblasts. ‘Specific BM cells’ means either modified or selected subpopulations of the bone marrow mononuclear fraction.
Note that all randomized clinical trials evaluated efficacy with surrogate endpoints.
Main safety concerns after skeletal myoblast transplantation in humans include an increased probability of arrhythmic events, so these cell type should be viewed with extreme caution in further clinical trials.
Main obstacles encountered by clinical CRM
| 1. The complex molecular, cellular and organ-based mechanisms that govern the cardiovascular reparative process as a whole have yet to be understood. Consequently, it has been difficult to design clinical trials. Since many cardiovascular diseases are syndromes, the future identification of specific molecular or cellular causes will help to increase the chances of success in clinical trials. |
| 2. The results of clinical trials are often contradictory because of non-homogeneous study protocols with inter-trial and inter-patient variability and the lack of standardization and scalability of investigational products. |
| 3. Focus on cell phenotype initially led to underestimation of the importance of delivery methods, thereby leading to low initial cell retention rates, poor survival in the host tissue, and subsequent loss of efficacy. |
| 4. Efforts have focused mainly on the loss of the myocardial parenchyma, thus leading to underestimation of the importance of other key aspects of a functional heart, such as the extracellular matrix or the appropriate cell patterning and electromechanical coupling required for a well-co-ordinated improvement in contractility. |
| 5. Key aspects of clinical trial design that have been systematically underestimated and not sufficiently investigated in phase I trials include optimal dosage (dose-escalation studies), timing of delivery (especially in the case of AMI), cell type and delivery method in the specific condition under study. |
| 6. Patient selection is paramount, given the critical influence that comorbidities, aging and medications have on the quality of source cells (if autologous) and on the response of host tissue to regenerative products. Predictors and scores that would enable appropriate identification of specific target populations that benefit most from CRM have not been described/validated. |
| 7. Surrogate imaging and hard clinical endpoints have been inconsistently used in clinical trials and are usually misinterpreted when translating clinical research for a specific product. In addition, surrogate endpoints need further standardization. |
| 8. Limited multidisciplinary/multinational collaborations to unravel and resolve identified limitations, which could increase our knowledge of regenerative therapies and facilitate definitive large-scale preclinical and clinical trials. |
Recommendations for basic research
| 1. Better understanding of the underlying biology that leads to significant loss of regeneration capacity in the adult mammalian cardiovascular system. |
| 2. Breakdown of the regeneration process in clinically relevant models, from the niche of adult stem cells to active dedifferentiation, proliferation, and/or transdifferentiation. |
| 3. Identification of molecular mechanisms that control the post-infarction inflammatory response and the remodelling process in order to redirect healing towards regeneration instead of scar formation. |
| 4. Identification of endogenous regeneration triggers that would enable the production of biological or synthetic CRM products, ideally for a prolonged and efficient outcome. |
| 5. Evaluation of potential differences between males and females in terms of their ability to generate a regenerative response. |
| 1. Identification of the most appropriate |
| 2. Evaluation of disruptive organogenesis strategies (e.g. chimeric approaches to produce human organs in pigs). |
Figure 2Flow-chart of translational research.
Recommendations for translational research with large animal models
| 1. Prospective online and public registration of preclinical trials, including the description of the study and research model, primary and secondary outcomes, number of animals, and duration of follow-up. |
| 2. Obligatory publication of results required for grant fund release (e.g. funding depends on the dissemination of results, independently of whether they are positive or negative). Use of the ARRIVE guidelines for the reporting of preclinical study results. |
| 3. Prioritization of multicentre studies and development of collaborative consortia consisting of independent core laboratories specialized in large animal models (e.g. the CAESAR consortium). |
| 4. Blinded and randomized studies in the confirmatory stage. |
| 5. Establishment, optimization, and sharing of standard animal models and protocols. Funding agencies should provide guidelines for the generation of animal models, which should include the definition of a standard model for AMI and CIC. |
| 6. Standardization of software protocols for the analysis and quantification of the main outcomes by means of open-source solutions and platforms for data sharing (e.g. scar size, left ventricular ejection fraction). |
| 7. Prioritization of animal models that include comorbidities (e.g. old-animal models), cardiovascular medication use and clinically relevant scenarios (e.g. surrogate cell products or xenoregulated animals that do not require immunosuppression). |
| 8. Mandatory evaluation of gender differences. |
Main challenges of cardiovascular tissue engineering
| 1. Enormous number of cells needed to build a heart (e.g. around 10 billion for a whole human heart) |
| 2. Anatomically realistic scaffolds (e.g. natural or synthetic biomaterials with vasculature and anisotropic structures). |
| 3. Differentiation of cells into several cardiac lineages (e.g. endothelial cells, fibroblasts, cardiomyocytes) |
| 4. Mature electrophysiological properties (e.g. action potential duration and conduction velocities, avoidance of autoexcitability) to ensure co-ordinated contraction without arrhythmias. |
| 5. Mature mechanical function (e.g. sarcomere constructs, troponin orientation) to achieve efficient contraction. |
| 6. Bioreactors that allow maturation under sterile conditions for long culture periods. |
| 7. Development of easy-to-use and safe, minimally-invasive, delivery technologies. |
Figure 3Supply chain of cardiac regenerative advanced therapy medicinal products.
Recommendations for production, delivery, navigation, tracking, and assessment
| 1. Identification of optimal delivery technologies for each novel or ‘conventional’ regenerative product (e.g. viral vectors, stem cells, growth factors and molecules). Other variables, such as timing, dose, microenvironment, clinical scenario, and location, need to be considered when designing new delivery technologies. |
| 2. Development of minimally invasive methodologies, ideally percutaneous approaches, for tissue engineering solutions. |
| 3. Optimization of delivery modalities to improve accuracy by means of fusion imaging tools. |
| 4. New imaging and automated software to guide and improve CRM product delivery and retention: real-time, non-invasive imaging and/or integrating computed tomography, magnetic resonance and ultrasound into the catheter navigation process. |
| 5. New imaging and automated software for |
Requirements for each phase of clinical research
| Preclinical, Phase I | Phase II | Phase III | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Product regulatory requirements | Kinetics, biodistribution of the regenerative product. Purity, potency, and karyotype stability of particular cells. Ensure traceability | Short-term side effects and risk associated with particular regenerative biologics. Establish efficacy and safety monitoring assays | Performed after preliminary evidence suggesting effectiveness of particular regenerative product |
| Objective | Safety. Kinetics, dose-dependency, retention, and optimal delivery method | Safety/surrogate endpoints | Safety/therapeutic benefit/improved survival |
| Patients restriction/criteria | Identify target group (safety analysis) | Identify potential responders and non-responders | Include only responders |
| Sample size | Usually 20 per cohort | From a few dozen to a few hundred | Several hundred or more |
| Design | Randomized, open label or placebo/sham | Randomized, double-blind, placebo or sham controlled | Randomized, double-blind, placebo or sham controlled |
| Endpoints (feasibility/product and procedure related) | Procedural safety, biological activity of the regenerative product | Safety/feasibility of the procedure, adequate number of cells/dose response | Long-term, substantial evidence of previously observed feasibility/safety |
| Safety endpoints | Patient tolerance, abnormal cell growth, mutagenesis, tumorigenicity | Patient tolerance, tissue injury, clinical major adverse cardiac events, arrhythmias | Clinically relevant endpoints: death, adverse clinical events |
| Efficacy endpoints | Detect surrogate endpoints that are sufficiently sensitive to track the therapeutic benefit | Further analysis of previously detected surrogate endpoints Exploratory analysis of clinically relevant endpoints | Clinically relevant endpoints Objective (single or composite): improved survival, reduced clinical events/number of hospitalizations Subjective: symptom score, health-related quality of life Surrogate efficacy endpoints that correlate significantly with clinical endpoints |
Identification of regenerative products ready for clinical trials
| 1. ‘First-generation’ and ‘second-generation’ stem cells (except for iPSC and ESC), including those used in allogeneic transplants, are ready for phase III clinical trials. However, issues such as best tolerated doses, benefits of repetitive administration, optimal timing, and most efficient delivery modality still need further research. |
| 2. Emphasis should be placed on comparison between products, doses and delivery strategies. |
| 3. Cell-based and other regenerative products, especially when evaluated in multicentre/international trials, should be standardized. Standardization includes quality assessments of the final product before release (viability, surface markers, potency, stability, and sterility tests). |
| 4. Safety and efficacy issues in gene therapy should be solved before moving forward to new phase I or more phase II trials. Novel ‘cell-free’ products and tissue engineering approaches must progressively enter the clinical stage. |
| 5. Efforts should be made to include biomarkers, new imaging/tracking and delivery techniques in phase I trials with the aim of unraveling the complex mechanisms of action of regenerative products. |
Recommendations for advanced therapy medicinal product-based translational clinical research
| 1. Clinical research planning should include ‘proof-of-principle’ studies, bio-distribution studies, and dose-escalation studies before safety and efficacy can be validated. |
| 2. Confirmatory ‘proof-of-efficacy’ trials should comply with disease-specific guidelines and target specific, well-defined patient subpopulations. |
| 3. Traditional safety and efficacy endpoints (clinical/surrogate) will be used in the future when appropriate. However, new mechanistic endpoints to corroborate unanswered hypotheses (e.g. on mechanisms of action) should be incorporated after proper validation in the preclinical field and standardized according to regulatory recommendations. In the event that surrogate endpoints are anticipated, the most reproducible techniques must be used (MRI, PET), and core laboratories should be established for centralized analysis. |
| 4. The timing and route of delivery must also be re-considered from the early phases, taking into account the underlying disease, previous hard preclinical observations, and plausible assumptions. |
| 5. Patient selection is crucial. Confounders such as age, gender, comorbidities, disease vulnerability and severity, and concomitant medications should always be taken into consideration when designing a new clinical trial (using predictive scores of outcomes, if possible). |
| 6. Sample size calculations should be rigorous, and general requirements and safety/efficacy profiles for phases I, II, and III should be strictly adhered to. Specifically, phase II clinical trials must be conducted in order to generate hypotheses and foundational (although not significant) evidence for the appropriate design of meaningful confirmatory phase III clinical trials. |
| 7. Adequate inclusion of control/placebo patients should be ensured and strict blinding methods should be followed. The risk/benefit ratio should be defined, and the interference of eventual commercial interests should be avoided. |
| 8. The costs of clinical evaluation phases have been frequently underestimated, thus forcing the interruption of ongoing trials. Strong support and collaboration between academia and industry and an appropriated economic plan are mandatory if we are to provide patients with the most efficient treatments. |
Recommendations regarding regulatory hurdles
| 1. Additional workshops should be organized and sponsored to establish excellence networks comprising patient advocacy groups, researchers, clinical trialists, industry representatives, specialists in clinical-grade production of biologics and representatives of regulatory agencies from around the world. |
| 2. Development of international mechanisms for the oversight of regenerative treatments. To support regulatory mechanisms that would offer patients access to CRM therapies that have proven to be safe and efficient. |
| 3. The standardization of biological therapies presents specific characteristics that cannot be evaluated following the procedures developed for the pharmaceutical industry. Specific tracks need to be considered for measuring the safety, purity, potency, and efficacy of products. |
| 4. Special care and protection needs to be offered to patients with critical diseases who may be subject to hype rather than true hope. |
Global aims of TACTICS
| 1. A comprehensive increase in our knowledge of the complex molecular, cellular, and tissue mechanisms that govern regenerative homeostasis and the cardiovascular repair process. |
| 2. Standardization of small and large animal models for cardiovascular research so that they can reach the standards required for clinical research. |
| 3. Collaborative performance of large-scale and optimally designed phase III multicentre clinical trials to demonstrate the clinical efficacy of regenerative therapies and to advance the standard of care in human cardiovascular medicine. |
| 4. Transnational standardization of regulatory requirements to ensure adoption of approved therapies. |
| 5. Communication and demonstration of best practices of all those working in the field of CRM to the scientific community, decision makers and the public. Mitigating a main risk challenging the field—the lack of credibility—requires the organization of robust evidence-based investigational team tracks with the scientific support of a large and committed multidisciplinary/multinational consortium. |