René Yiou1, Leila Hamidou2, Brigitte Birebent3, Dalila Bitari4, Philippe Le Corvoisier4, Isabelle Contremoulins5, Anne-Marie Rodriguez6, Déborah Augustin7, Françoise Roudot-Thoraval8, Alexandre de la Taille7, Hélène Rouard3. 1. APHP, Urology Department, Henri Mondor Teaching Hospital, Créteil, France. Electronic address: rene.yiou@hmn.aphp.fr. 2. APHP, Department of Physiology, Henri Mondor Teaching Hospital, Créteil, France. 3. Etablissement Français du Sang, Unité d'Ingénierie et de thérapie cellulaire, Créteil, France. 4. APHP, CIC-P006 and CIC-BT 504, Henri Mondor Teaching Hospital, Créteil, France. 5. APHP, Anesthesiology Department, Henri Mondor Teaching Hospital, Créteil, France. 6. INSERM, U955, UPEC, Créteil, France. 7. APHP, Urology Department, Henri Mondor Teaching Hospital, Créteil, France. 8. APHP, Department of Public Health of Statistics, Henri Mondor Teaching Hospital, Créteil, France.
Abstract
We recently reported stage I of a phase 1/2 clinical trial of cell therapy to treat postradical prostatectomy erectile dysfunction (INSTIN, INtra-cavernous STem-cell INjection clinical trial, NCT01089387). In this first stage, four doses of intracavernous autologous bone marrow mononuclear cells (BM-MNCs) were tested in 12 patients. Here, we report the results of stage II, in which six additional patients received the optimal dose identified in stage I (109 BM-MNCs), and the long-term results in the 12 patients included in stage I. The objectives were to assess the safety and efficacy of this new treatment. In stage II, no patients had side effects, and the erectile function improvements were similar to those seen in stage I: after 6 months, significant improvements versus baseline were noted in International Index of Erectile Function-15 intercourse satisfaction (7.8±3.1 vs 2.2±3.4, p=0.033) and erectile function (18±8.3 vs 3.7±4.1, p=0.035) domains. In stage I patients, after a mean follow-up of 62.1±11.7 mo, there were no prostate cancer recurrences, and erectile function scores were somewhat lower compared with the 1-yr time point. These findings suggest that intracavernous BM-MNC injections are safe and improve erectile function. The decline in erectile function over time suggests a need for assessing repeated injections. PATIENT SUMMARY: We report a phase 1/2 pilot clinical trial of cell therapy consisting in intracavernous injection of bone marrow mononuclear cells to treat postradical prostatectomy erectile dysfunction. Erectile function was improved after 6 mo in the patients given 1×109 cells. No serious side effects (life threatening or requiring hospitalisation) occurred after a mean follow-up of 62.1 mo in the first 12 patients.
We recently reported stage I of a phase 1/2 clinical trial of cell therapy to treat postradical prostatectomy erectile dysfunction (INSTIN, INtra-cavernous STem-cell INjection clinical trial, NCT01089387). In this first stage, four doses of intracavernous autologous bone marrow mononuclear cells (BM-MNCs) were tested in 12 patients. Here, we report the results of stage II, in which six additional patients received the optimal dose identified in stage I (109 BM-MNCs), and the long-term results in the 12 patients included in stage I. The objectives were to assess the safety and efficacy of this new treatment. In stage II, no patients had side effects, and the erectile function improvements were similar to those seen in stage I: after 6 months, significant improvements versus baseline were noted in International Index of Erectile Function-15 intercourse satisfaction (7.8±3.1 vs 2.2±3.4, p=0.033) and erectile function (18±8.3 vs 3.7±4.1, p=0.035) domains. In stage I patients, after a mean follow-up of 62.1±11.7 mo, there were no prostate cancer recurrences, and erectile function scores were somewhat lower compared with the 1-yr time point. These findings suggest that intracavernous BM-MNC injections are safe and improve erectile function. The decline in erectile function over time suggests a need for assessing repeated injections. PATIENT SUMMARY: We report a phase 1/2 pilot clinical trial of cell therapy consisting in intracavernous injection of bone marrow mononuclear cells to treat postradical prostatectomy erectile dysfunction. Erectile function was improved after 6 mo in the patients given 1×109 cells. No serious side effects (life threatening or requiring hospitalisation) occurred after a mean follow-up of 62.1 mo in the first 12 patients.
Authors: Celeste Manfredi; Fabio Castiglione; Mikkel Fode; Michal Lew-Starowicz; Javier Romero-Otero; Carlo Bettocchi; Giovanni Corona Journal: Int J Impot Res Date: 2022-07-27 Impact factor: 2.408
Authors: Russell G Saltzman; Roei Golan; Thomas A Masterson; Aditya Sathe; Ranjith Ramasamy Journal: Int J Impot Res Date: 2022-09-06 Impact factor: 2.408
Authors: Joseph M Israeli; Soum D Lokeshwar; Iakov V Efimenko; Thomas A Masterson; Ranjith Ramasamy Journal: Int J Impot Res Date: 2021-11-06 Impact factor: 2.408
Authors: James L Liu; Kevin Y Chu; Andrew T Gabrielson; Run Wang; Landon Trost; Gregory Broderick; Kelvin Davies; Gerald Brock; John Mulhall; Ranjith Ramasamy; Trinity J Bivalacqua Journal: Sex Med Date: 2021-05-14 Impact factor: 2.491