| Literature DB >> 29523186 |
Yongting Zhang1, Yuwen Li2, Lili Zhang1, Jun Li1, Chuanlong Zhu3.
Abstract
Nowadays, orthotopic liver transplantation is considered the most efficient approach to the end stage of chronic hepatic cirrhosis. Because of the limitations of orthotopic liver transplantation, stem cells are an attractive therapeutic option. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) especially show promise as an alternative treatment for hepatic cirrhosis in animal models and during clinical trials. Nevertheless, the homing of transplanted MSCs to the liver occurs in limited numbers. Therefore, we review the strategies for enhancing the homing of MSCs, mainly via the delivery routes, optimizing cell culture conditions, stimulating the target sites, and genetic modification.Entities:
Keywords: Cirrhosis; Homing; Mesenchymal stem cells
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29523186 PMCID: PMC5845383 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-018-0814-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1The different types of stem cells isolated from different tissues differentiate into hepatocytes. ALD alcoholic liver disease, ESCs embryonic stem cells, HSCs hematopoietic stem cells, iPSCs induced pluripotent stem cells, MSCs mesenchymal stem cells, NAFLD nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, PH partial hepatectomy
MSCs in clinical trials treating liver fibrosis
| Cell source | Delivery route | No. of cells | Patient population | No. of patients | Follow-up period | Efficacy | Limitations | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UC-MSCs | Intravenous | 5 × 105/kg, three times | Chronic hepatitis B | 30 treatment, 15 control | 12 months | Improvement of liver function and MELD score; reduced ascites | No track of the infused UC-MSCs and the histological evidence in the studied patients | [ |
| UC-MSCs | Intravenous | 5 × 105/kg, three times | Primary biliary cirrhosis | 7 treatment | 48 weeks | Decrease in serum ALP and γ-GGT; alleviation of fatigue and pruritus | No track of the infused UC-MSCs and histological evidence alterations in the studied patients; less detailed follow-up time points | [ |
| BM-MSCs | Intravenous infusion | 1 × 107/kg | Liver cirrhosis due to hepatitis C virus | 15 treatment,10 control | 6 months | Improvement in the frequency of encephalopathy, jaundice, ascites, bleeding tendency, and lower limb edema | Less detailed follow-up time points | [ |
| Autologous BM-MSCs | Hepatic artery | 0.75 ± 0.50× 106/patient | Hepatitis B virus cirrhosis | 27 treatment,29 control | 24 weeks | Significant improvement in liver function | During follow-up, patients were lost about 1/3 | [ |
| Autologous BM-MSCs | Peripheral vein | 1 × 106/kg | End-stage liver disease due to hepatitis C virus | 20 treatment,20 control | 6 months | Significant improvement in liver function | No histological evidence; less detailed follow-up time points | [ |
ALP alkaline phosphatase, BM-MSC bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cell, γ-GGT glutamyl transpeptidase, MELD model for end-stage liver disease, MSC mesenchymal stem cell, UC-MSC umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stem cell