| Literature DB >> 31516638 |
Atsunori Tsuchiya1, Suguru Takeuchi1, Takayuki Watanabe1, Tomoaki Yoshida1, Shunsuke Nojiri1, Masahiro Ogawa1, Shuji Terai1.
Abstract
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) can be cultured relatively easily and can be obtained not only from the bone marrow, but also from medical waste such as adipose tissue and umbilical cord tissue. Because of its low antigenicity, allogeneic MSC injection is safe. MSCs have been evaluated in more than 900 clinical trials in a variety of fields, with more than 50 clinical trials related to liver diseases. Experiments have suggested that MSCs function as "conducting cells" to affect various "effective cells" such as T cells, B cells, and macrophages. Recent clinical trials have focused on allogeneic MSCs. Thus, studies are needed to determine the most effective cell source, culture conditions, cell numbers, administration frequency, administration route, cost, safety, and liver disease treatments. Recently, the functions of exosomes have gained attention, and cell-free therapy may become possible as an alternative therapy for liver disease. In this review, we introduce general information, mechanism, representative clinical study data, recently started or planned clinical trials, and possibility of cell-free therapy of MSCs.Entities:
Keywords: Acute on chronic; Cell therapy; Liver cirrhosis; Mesenchymal stem cell
Year: 2019 PMID: 31516638 PMCID: PMC6732839 DOI: 10.1186/s41232-019-0107-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inflamm Regen ISSN: 1880-8190
Fig. 1Mechanisms of MSCs for liver disease. MSCs have various effects including the reduction of hepatocyte injury and inflammation. Additionally, MSCs affect macrophages and increase matrix metalloproteinase expression and phagocytosis, promoting the regenerative process
Recently started or planned clinical trials
| Country | Conditions | Auto/Allo | Origin | Cell number | Cell injection times | Route | Phase | Study design | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | China | ACLF | N/A | N/A | 1–10 × 105/kg | 4 | Peripheral vein | I/II | Randomized/open label |
| 2 | China | ACLF | N/A | N/A | 0.1–1 × 106/kg | 3 | Peripheral vein | N/A | Randomized/double blind |
| 3 | Germany | ACLF | Allo | Skin (ABCB5+ cells) | 2 × 106/kg | 3 | Peripheral vein | I/II | Non-randomized/open label |
| 4 | China | Cirrhosis | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | I/II | Non-randomized/open label |
| 5 | China | Cirrhosis | Allo | UC | 1.5 × 106/kg | 2~4 | Peripheral vein | II | Non-randomized/open label |
| 6 | China | Cirrhosis (HBV, HCV) | N/A | N/A | 1 × 106/kg | 4 | Peripheral vein | N/A | Randomized/single blind |
| 7 | Japan | Cirrhosis (NASH, HCV) | Allo | AD | N/A | 1 | Peripheral vein | I/II | Non-randomized/open label |
| 8 | Taiwan | ACLF | Allo | AD | 0.5–2 × 106/kg | N/A | Peripheral vein | I | Non-randomized/open label |
| 9 | Singapore | Cirrhosis | Auto | BM | 0.5–1 × 106/kg | N/A | Peripheral vein | I/II | Non-randomized/open label |
| 10 | China | Alcoholic liver cirrhosis | Auto | BM | 5 × 107 cells/10 ml | 1 | Hepatic artery | I | Non-randomized/open label |
| 11 | China | Cirrhosis (HBV) | Allo | UC | 6 × 107 (30 ml) | N/A | Peripheral vein | I | Non-randomized/open label |
| 12 | China | PBC | N/A | N/A | 0.1–1 × 106/kg | 3 | Peripheral vein | N/A | Randomized/double blind |
Fig. 2Recent trends in clinical trials using MSCs. Proportion of country (a), disease conditions (b), autologous or allogeneic (c), and tissue origin of MSCs (d) in recent clinical trials