| Literature DB >> 29391871 |
Amitabh C Pandey1,2, Jordan J Lancaster3, David T Harris4, Steven Goldman5,6, Elizabeth Juneman5,6.
Abstract
Resulting from a various etiologies, the most notable remains ischemia; heart failure (HF) manifests as the common end pathway of many cardiovascular processes and remains among the top causes for hospitalization and a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Current pharmacologic treatment for HF utilizes pharmacologic agents to control symptoms and slow further deterioration; however, on a cellular level, in a patient with progressive disease, fibrosis and cardiac remodeling can continue leading to end-stage heart failure. Cellular therapeutics have risen as the new hope for an improvement in the treatment of HF. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have gained popularity given their propensity of promoting endogenous cellular repair of a myriad of disease processes via paracrine signaling through expression of various cytokines, chemokines, and adhesion molecules resulting in activation of signal transduction pathways. While the exact mechanism remains to be completely elucidated, this remains the primary mechanism identified to date. Recently, MSCs have been incorporated as the central focus in clinical trials investigating the role how MSCs can play in the treatment of HF. In this review, we focus on the characteristics of MSCs that give them a distinct edge as cellular therapeutics and present results of clinical trials investigating MSCs in the setting of ischemic HF.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29391871 PMCID: PMC5748110 DOI: 10.1155/2017/9640108
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
Figure 1Multipotent capacity of mesenchymal stem cells. MSCs are derived from numerous tissue sources including bone marrow and adipose tissue. They are able to differentiate into various end-cell types including osteoblasts, adipocytes, chondrocytes, and myoblasts. Additionally, they are immunoprivileged, therefore allowing autologous as well as allogeneic therapeutic potential. They can also be cryopreserved, while maintaining their multipotent properties, thus allowing them to be ideal candidates for “off the shelf” cell-based therapies.
Clinical trials investigating mesenchymal stem cells in heart failure.
| Study name | Trial | Phase | Results | Trial identifier | Citation |
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| Comparison of allogeneic vs autologous bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells delivered by transendocardial injection in patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy: the POSEIDON randomized trial | To test whether allogeneic MSCs are as safe and effective as autologous | Phase 1/2 randomized | Patients with ICM that received transendocardial injection of allogeneic and autologous MSCs demonstrated favorable outcomes on patient functional capacity, quality of life, and ventricular remodeling without adverse effects |
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| Cardiopoietic stem cell therapy in heart failure: the C-CURE (cardiopoietic stem cell therapy in heart failure) multicenter randomized trial with lineage-specified biologics | To evaluate the feasibility and safety of autologous bone marrow-derived and cardiogenically oriented mesenchymal stem cell therapy and to probe for signs of efficacy in patients with chronic heart failure | Prospective, multicenter, randomized trial | Cardiopoietic stem cell therapy was found feasible and safe with signs of benefit in chronic heart failure, meriting definitive clinical evaluation |
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| Transendocardial mesenchymal stem cells and mononuclear bone marrow cells for ischemic cardiomyopathy: the TAC-HFT randomized trial | To demonstrate the safety of transendocardial stem cell injection with autologous mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) and bone marrow mononuclear cells in patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy | Phase 1 and 2 randomized, blinded, placebo-controlledstudy | Transendocardial stem cell injection with MSCs or bone marrow mononuclear cells appeared to be safe for patients with chronic ischemic cardiomyopathy and LV dysfunction |
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| Rationale and design of the first randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of intramyocardial injection of autologous bone-marrow derived mesenchymal stromal cells in chronic ischemic heart failure (MSC-HF Trial) | To investigate the role of MSCs in patients with chronic ischemia utilizing intramyocardial injections in an ischemic viable region of the myocardium using the electromechanical NOGA-XP system | Phase 2, single-center, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlledtrial | Intramyocardial injection of bone marrow-derived MSCs decreased LVEV, improved LV EF, increased stroke volume, and increased myocardial mass significantly compared to placebo |
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| A randomized study of transendocardial injection of autologous bone marrow mononuclear cells and cell function analysis in ischemic heart failure (FOCUS-HF) | To evaluate the safety and efficacy of the transendocardial delivery of autologous bone marrow mononuclear cells in patients with chronic HF | Phase 1, single-blind trial | Autologous bone marrow mononuclear cell therapy is safe and improves symptoms, quality of life, and possibly perfusion in patients with chronic HF |
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| RIMECARD | To assess the safety and efficacy of umbilical cord-derived MSCs in compensated dilated CM | Phase 1/2 | Completed |
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| TEVA CEP-41750 | To evaluate efficacy and safety of allogeneic mesenchymal precursor cells (CEP-41750) for the treatment of chronic HF | Phase 3 | Ongoing |
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| Combination of mesenchymal and C-kit+ cardiac stem cells as regenerative therapy for heart failure | To evaluate the feasibility, safety, and effect of MSCs CSCs, and combination in heart failure of ischemic etiology, administered by transendocardial injection in ischemic cardiomyopathy | Phase 2 randomized, placebo-controlledclinical trial | Ongoing |
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| Intravenous administration of allogeneic bone marrow-derived multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) in patients with recent onset anthracycline-associated cardiomyopathy | To learn if adding mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) to standard-of-care drugs can help control heart failure that may have been caused by anthracyclines | Phase 1 | Ongoing |
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| Intravenous allogeneic mesenchymal stem cells for nonischemic cardiomyopathy: safety and efficacy results of a phase II-A randomized trial | To assess the safety and preliminary efficacy of intravenously administered ischemia-tolerant MSCs (itMSCs) in patients with nonischemic cardiomyopathy | Phase 2 single-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover, randomized | In patients with nonischemic cardiomyopathy, ischemia-tolerant MSC therapy was safe, caused immunomodulatory effects, and was associated with improvements in health status and functional capacity |
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| A randomized clinical trial of adipose-derived stem & regenerative cells in the treatment of patients with non revascularizable ischemic myocardium – the PRECISE trial | To establish safety and feasibility of utilizing adipose derived stem & regenerative cells (ADRCs) in patients who have areas of myocardium that are not revascularizable and have demonstrated reversible ischemia | Phase 1, randomized, double-blind trial | Isolation and transendocardial injection of autologous ADRCs in no-option patients were safe and feasible |
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| Allogeneic adipose tissue-derived stromal/stem cell therapy in patients with ischemic heart disease and heart failure - a safety study | To perform a small clinical safety trial in heart failure patients with allogeneic adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells | Phase 1 | Ongoing |
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| Stem cell therapy in ischemic non-treatable cardiac disease - SCIENCE A European Multi-Centre Trial | To investigate the efficacy of direct intramyocardial injection allogeneic adipose-derived stem cells in patients with reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (EF) (≤45%) and heart failure | Phase 2, double-blind, placebo-controlledtrial | Ongoing |
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| Efficacy and safety of bone marrow-derived mesenchymal cardiopoietic cells (C3BS-CQR-1) for the treatment of chronic advanced ischemic heart failure | To evaluate the safety and efficacy of C3BS-CQR-1 by comparing the overall response to standard of care and C3BS-CQR-1 relative to standard of care and a sham procedure | Phase 3, randomized, double-blind trial | Ongoing |
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Figure 2Cellular scaffold (arrows) placed over a scar in a rat heart in vivo 3 weeks after infarction. Three weeks after patch implantation, 6 weeks after infraction, evidence of angiogenesis from the patch to native myocardium was observed.