| Literature DB >> 32297205 |
Abstract
Stem cell therapy offers a breakthrough opportunity for the improvement of ischemic heart diseases. Numerous clinical trials and meta-analyses appear to confirm its positive but variable effects on heart function. Whereas these trials widely differed in design, cell type, source, and doses reinjected, cell injection route and timing, and type of cardiac disease, crucial key factors that may favour the success of cell therapy emerge from the review of their data. Various types of cell have been delivered. Injection of myoblasts does not improve heart function and is often responsible for severe ventricular arrythmia occurrence. Using bone marrow mononuclear cells is a misconception, as they are not stem cells but mainly a mix of various cells of hematopoietic lineages and stromal cells, only containing very low numbers of cells that have stem cell-like features; this likely explain the neutral results or at best the modest improvement in heart function reported after their injection. The true existence of cardiac stem cells now appears to be highly discredited, at least in adults. Mesenchymal stem cells do not repair the damaged myocardial tissue but attenuate post-infarction remodelling and contribute to revascularization of the hibernated zone surrounding the scar. CD34+ stem cells - likely issued from pluripotent very small embryonic-like (VSEL) stem cells - emerge as the most convincing cell type, inducing structural and functional repair of the ischemic myocardial area, providing they can be delivered in large amounts via intra-myocardial rather than intra-coronary injection, and preferentially after myocardial infarct rather than chronic heart failure.Entities:
Keywords: Acquired heart diseases; Cell therapy; Key success factors; Myocardial infarction; Regenerative medicine
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32297205 PMCID: PMC7253501 DOI: 10.1007/s12015-020-09961-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Rev Rep ISSN: 2629-3277 Impact factor: 5.739
List of cell therapy clinical trials in cardiac diseases according to the type of cells used
| Cell types | Studies | Auto Allo | Random | Diseases | Average Cell doses | Route | Number of patients | Results | F.U. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MAGIC | Auto | Yes:3 groups C; LD; HD | MI | LD: 4 .108 HD: 8.108 | IM | Subjects: 97 Controls: 30 | Neutral | 6 months | |
Meta-Analysis | Auto | Yes: 2 groups C; MNCs | AMI | 1.107 to 2,5.109 | IC | Subjects: 326 Controls: 312 | LVEF: ↗ LVESV: ↗ | 6 to 12 months | |
Meta-Analysis | Auto | Yes: 2 groups C; MNCs | AMI/CHF | 107 to 108 | IC:20 trials IM: 5 trials | Subjects: 565 Controls: 526 | IC - LVEF: 0 IM - LVEF: ↗ AMI > IHD | 6 months | |
Am Heart J 2006 | Auto | Yes: 3 groups C; LD; HD | AMI | LD: 107 HD: 108 | IC | 66 (22 in each group) | LVEF ↗ in HD LVESV↘ in HD | 3 months | |
Meta-Analysis | Auto | Yes: 35 trials No: 15 trials | AMI/CHF | 106 to 109 | Trials Nb: IC:38 IM:12 | Subjects:1460 Controls1165 | LV function ↗ Remodelling ↗ | 4 to 36 months | |
Meta-Analysis | Auto | Yes:2 groups C; MNCs | AMI | 50–400.106 | IC | Subjects: 984 Controls: 657 | LV function ↗ in younger and severe patients | 3 to 6 months | |
ACCRUE Meta-Analysis | Auto | Yes (Prospective) C; MNCs | AMI | 150 .106 | IC | Subjects: 767 Controls: 485 | Neutral | 3 to 12 months | |
REPAIR-AMI trial | Auto | Yes: 2 groups C; MNCs | AMI | 198.106 | IC | Subjects: 101 Controls: 103 | LVEF↗ only in more severe patients | 12 months | |
BOOST trial | Auto | Yes: 2 groups C; MNCs | AMI | 24,6 ± 9,4.106 | IC | Subjects: 30 Controls: 30 | Neutral | 18 months | |
POC Study | Auto (PB) | No | AMI | 52.106 | IM | Subjects: 7 | LVEF ↗↗↗ Cardiac repair | 24 months | |
Amer Heart J 2011 | Auto (BM) | Yes: 4groups LD; MD; HD C | AMI | 5;10;15.106 | IC | Subjects: 16 Controls: 15 | LVEF ↗↗ if 34 | 6 months | |
REGENT | Auto (BM) | Yes: 2 groups MNC, 34 | AMI | MNC:1,8.108 34 | IC | MNCs: 80 34 | Neutral | 6 months | |
PRESERVE – AMI | Auto (BM) | Yes C; 34 | AMI | 8–44.106 | IC | Subjects: 78 Controls: 83 | LVEF ↗↗ if 34+SCs ≥20 × 106 | 12 months | |
Circ Res 2013 | Auto (PB) | Yes C; 34+SC | CHF | 113 ± 26.106 | IC | Subjects: 55 Controls: 55 | LV function↗ TET ↗ | 60 months | |
Circ Res 2011 | Auto (PB) | Yes:3 groups C; LD; HD | RA | LD: 1.105/kg HD:5.105/kg | IM | Subjects: 111 LD: 55 HD: 56 Controls: 56 | Less angina crisis (LD) TET ↗ (LD) | 12 months | |
RENEW trial | Auto (PB) | Yes:3 groups SOC; C; 34 | RA | 1.105/kg | IM | Subjects: 50 SOC: 6 Controls: 28 | Less angina TET ↗ Less MACE | Early closure | |
Meta-analysis | Auto [ Allo [ | Yes: 2 groups C, MSCs | AMI: 6 IHF: 6 | Auto:1–25.106 Allo: 2–72.106 | IM:4 trials IC: 5 trials IV: 3 trials | Subjects: 509 Controls: 441 | LVEF ↗ Mass scar: | 24 months | |
JACC 2009 | Allo (BM) | Yes: 4 groups C; LD; MD; HD | AMI | LD: 0,5.106/kg MD:1,6,106/kg HD: 5.106/kg | IV | Subjects: 39 Controls: 21 | LVEF ↗ | 6 months | |
POSEIDON trial | Auto vs Allo (BM) | Yes dose ranging: 6 sub-groups | IHF | LD: 20.106 MD: 100.106 HD: 200.106 | IM | Auto: 15 Allo: 15 | Trends towards infarct size reduction and reverse remodeling | 12 months | |
Cytotherapy 2015 | Allo (BM) | Yes C, MSCs | AMI | 2.106/kg | IV | Subjects: 10 Controls: 10 | Neutral | 24 months | |
Circ Res 2015 | Allo (BM) | Yes: 4 groups LD; MD;HD C | IHF NIHF | LD: 25.106 MD: 75.106 HD: 150.106 | IM | Subjects: 45 Controls: 15 | LVESV LVEDV ↘ with HD | 36 months | |
TRIDENT Study | Allo (BM) | Yes: 2 groups LD, HD | MI | LD: 20.106 HD: 100.106 | IM | LD: 15 HD: 15 | Scar size reduction LVEF ↗ in HD | 12 months | |
Am J Cardiol 2004 | Auto (BM) | Yes: 2 groups C, MSCs | AMI | 8–10.109 | IC | Subjects: 35 Contols: 34 | Wall movement ↗ LVEF ↗ | 24 months | |
Inter J Cardiol 2013 G | Auto (BM) | Yes: 2 groups C, MSCs | AMI | 3,08 ± 0,52.106 | IC | Subjects: 21 Controls: 22 | Neutral | 12 months | |
MSC--HF trial | Auto (BM) | Yes: 2 groups C, MSCs | MI | 77.5 ± 67.9.106 | IM | Subjects: 40 Controls: 20 | LVESV ↘ LVEF ↗ | 6 months | |
CADUCEUS trial | Auto (Cardiac Biopsy) | Yes: 2 groups C; CDCs | MI | 12,5–25.106 | IC | Subjects: 17 SOC: 8 | Scar mass ↘ Wall thickening | 6 months | |
C - CURE trial | Auto (BM) | Yes: 2 groups SOC, CPCs | ICHF | ≥ 600 .106 | IM | Subjects: 32 Controls: 15 | LVEF ↗ TET ↗ LVESV ↘ | 6 months | |
| CHART-1 trial | Auto (BM) | Yes: 2 groups Sham, CPCs | ICHF | ≥ 600 .106 | IM | ||||
Subjects: 120 Sham: 151 Subjects: 157 Sham: 158 | Neutral primary endpoint LVESV↘ LVEDV↘ | 39 weeks 52 weeks | |||||||
Abbreviations: Auto/Allo, autologous/allogeneic; F.U., follow-up; BM, bone marrow; PB, peripheral blood; BM-MNCs, bone marrow mononuclear cells; 34+ SC, CD34+ stem cells; MSCs, mesenchymal stem cells; CDCs, cardiosphere-derived cells; CPCs, cardiopoietic cells; C, controls; LD/ MD/HD, low/mid/high doses; MI, myocardial infarct; AMI, acute myocardial infarct; CHF, chronic heart failure; RA, refractory angina; IHF, ischemic heart failure; NIHF, non-ischemic heart failure; IM/IC/ IV, intra-myocardial/intra-coronary, intra-venous cell delivery; LV, left ventricle; LVEF, left ventricle ejection fraction; LVESV, left ventricle end systolic volume; LVEDV, left ventricle end diastolic volume; TET, total exercise time; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events; SOC, standard of care; POC, proof of oconcept. ↗/↗↗/↗↗↗, weak/ significant/ highly significant increase. ↘, weak decrease
Fig. 1Proposed schema of developmental interrelationship between very small embryonic-like stem cells (VSELs), and tissue-committed cells. Quiescent VSELs deposited longlife into the bone marrow, may migrate into the blood once activated and give rise not only to HSCs and EPCs but also to other tissue-committed cells, and are also a source of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). More particularly, their capability to differentiate along both the cardiac and endothelia pathways favours their clinical use in cardiac diseases. Dotted line pathway still under investigation. Abbreviations: MSC, mesenchymal stem cell; HSC, hematopoietic stem cell; EPC, endothelial progenitor cell; CPC, cardiac progenitor cell; LPC, liver progenitor cell; OPC, osteoblastic progenitor cell
Fig. 2Key factors that prevent secondary heart failure. The four important points are CD34+ stem cells; high cell doses; intramyocardial injection route; and acute or sub-acute myocardial ischemia indication