| Literature DB >> 31949342 |
Arun Sharma1, Mumun Sinha1, Niraj Nirmal Pandey1, S H Chandrashekhara2.
Abstract
Critical limb ischemia (CLI) represents the most severe manifestation of peripheral arterial disease (PAD). It imposes a huge economic burden and is associated with high short-term mortality and adverse cardiovascular outcomes. Prompt recognition and early revascularization, surgical or endovascular, with the aim of improving the inline bloodflow to the ischemic limb, are currently the standard of care. However, this strategy may not always be feasible or effective; hence, evaluation of newer pharmacological or angiogenic therapies for alleviating the symptoms of this alarming condition is of utmost importance. Cell-based therapies have shown promise in smaller studies; however, large-scale studies, demonstrating definite survival benefits, are entailed to ascertain their role in the management of CLI. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Critical limb ischemia; peripheral arterial disease; stem cell therapy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31949342 PMCID: PMC6958876 DOI: 10.4103/ijri.IJRI_385_19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Radiol Imaging ISSN: 0970-2016
Figure 1Therapeutic angiogenesis with stem cell therapy
Studies evaluating the role of stem cell therapy in CLI
| Study (Year) | Cell type and route of injection | Broad inclusion criteria | Type of study | Sample size | Duration of follow up (Months) | Significant changes in the treatment group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Huang | IM G-CSF and | CLI of diabetic patients | RCT | 28 | 3 | Improvement in ABI, angiographic score, and ulcer healing compared with the control group. No amputation vs 5/14 in the control group. |
| Arai | IM BM-MNCs vs | Intractable PAD | A negative control group ( | 39 | 1 | Improvement in subjective symptoms, ABI, and TcPO2 in both BM-MNCs and G-CSF group compared to negative control. |
| Barć | IM BM-MNCs | Nonrevascularisable CLI not responsive to conventional treatment | Control group ( | 29 | 6 | Improvement in subjective symptoms, healing of ulcers. Lesser amputations in the treatment group. |
| Lu | IM BM-MSCs | Lower limb ischemia in Type 2 diabetes | RCT | 50 | 3 | Ulcer healing rate and ABI more in the treatment group |
| Dash | IM BM-MSCs | Nonhealing ulcers (Diabetes and Buergers) | RCT | 24 | 3 | Improvement in pain-free walking distance and reduction in ulcer size. |
| Procházka | IA BM-SCs | CLI patients with foot ulcer | RCT | 96 | 4 | Reduced major amputation rate and improvement in toe brachial index and toe pressure in salvaged limbs of the treatment group. |
| Wen and Huang[ | IM PB-SCs | CLI | RCT | 60 | 3 | Improvement in ABI, ulcer healing, and angiographic scores and lower amputation rates in the treatment group. |
| Lu | IM BM-MSC vs | Type 2 diabetes with bilateral CLI | BM-MSC or BM-MNC or normal saline | 41 | 6 | Ulcer healing rate; pain-free walking distance; and ABI, TCPO2, and angiographic score of BM-MSC higher than BM-MNC. No difference in pain relief or amputation rate. |
| Jain | Topically applied and locally injected | Diabetes with chronic ulcer | RCT | 48 | 3 | Increased rate of ulcer healing in the treatment group. |
| Benoit | IM BM-SCs vs peripheral blood (placebo) | No option CLI | Double-blinded pilot RCT | 48 | 6 | Lower amputation rates and longer time to amputation in the treatment group. |
| Losordo | IM CD34+ | Nonrevascularisable CLI | RCT 28 patients to 7 to 1 × 105 (low-dose) and 9-1 × 106 (high-dose) autologous CD34+ cells/kg; and 12 to placebo | 40 | 12 | Major and minor amputation rates lowest in the high dose treatment group. |
| Ozturk | G-CSF mobilized PB-MNCs delivered IM | Diabetes with CLI | RCT | 40 | 3 | Improvement in the Fontaine score, ABI, TCPO2, and 6 min walking distance. |
| Gupta | IM allogeneic | CLI | Double-blinded, randomized, placebo-controlled multicenter study | 20 | 6 | Improvement in pain score, ABI, and ankle pressure in the treatment group. Serious adverse events similar in both groups. |
| Li | IM BM-MNCs | CLI | RCT | 58 | 6 | Improvement in rest pain, skin ulcers, and ABI. |
| Mohammadzadeh | G-CSF mobilised PB-MNCs delivered IM | Diabetes with CLI | RCT | 21 | 3 | Improvement in pain, wound healing, and ABI, and lower amputation rates. |
| Szabo | IM In vitro expanded PB-SCs | No option for patients with peripheral arterial disease | RCT | 20 | 3 | Improvement in hemodynamic parameters. No deaths or major amputation in the treatment group. |
| Raval | IM cytokine mobilized CD133+ | CLI | Double-blinded, randomized, sham-controlled trial | 10 | 12 | Trends toward improved amputation-free survival, 6-minute walk distance, walking, and QOL. |
| Skóra | Autologous BM-MNC and VEGF plasmid vs pentoxifylline | CLI | RCT | 32 | 3 | Significant improvement in ABI, collateralization, ulcer healing. Lower rate of amputation. |
CLI=Critical limb ischemia, IM=Intramuscular, G-CSF=Granulocyte-colony stimulating factor, PB-MNCs=Peripheral blood mononuclear cells, RCT=Randomized controlled trial, ABI=Ankle-brachial index, QOL=Quality of life, BM-MNCs=Bone marrow mononuclear cells, PAD=Peripheral arterial disease, GDMT=Guideline-directed management and therapy, TcPO2=Transcutaneous partial pressure of oxygen, BM-MSCs=Bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells, IA=Intramuscular, BMSCs=Bone marrow stem cells, PB-SCs=Peripheral blood stem cells, VEGF=Vascular endothelial growth factor