| Literature DB >> 29859175 |
Erik Curtis1, Joel R Martin1, Brandon Gabel1, Nikki Sidhu1, Teresa K Rzesiewicz2, Ross Mandeville3, Sebastiaan Van Gorp4, Marjolein Leerink4, Takahiro Tadokoro4, Silvia Marsala4, Catriona Jamieson2, Martin Marsala4, Joseph D Ciacci5.
Abstract
We tested the feasibility and safety of human-spinal-cord-derived neural stem cell (NSI-566) transplantation for the treatment of chronic spinal cord injury (SCI). In this clinical trial, four subjects with T2-T12 SCI received treatment consisting of removal of spinal instrumentation, laminectomy, and durotomy, followed by six midline bilateral stereotactic injections of NSI-566 cells. All subjects tolerated the procedure well and there have been no serious adverse events to date (18-27 months post-grafting). In two subjects, one to two levels of neurological improvement were detected using ISNCSCI motor and sensory scores. Our results support the safety of NSI-566 transplantation into the SCI site and early signs of potential efficacy in three of the subjects warrant further exploration of NSI-566 cells in dose escalation studies. Despite these encouraging secondary data, we emphasize that this safety trial lacks statistical power or a control group needed to evaluate functional changes resulting from cell grafting.Entities:
Keywords: SCI; spinal cord injury; spinal surgery; stem cell therapy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29859175 DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2018.05.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Stem Cell ISSN: 1875-9777 Impact factor: 24.633