| Literature DB >> 32775364 |
Young Woo Eom1,2, Seong Hee Kang2,3, Moon Young Kim1,2,3, Jong In Lee3, Soon Koo Baik2,3.
Abstract
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are being developed for stem cell therapy and can be efficiently used in regenerative medicine. To date, more than 1,000 clinical trials have used MSCs; of these, more than 80 clinical trials have targeted liver disease. MSCs migrate to damaged liver tissues, differentiate into hepatocytes, reduce liver inflammatory responses, reduce liver fibrosis, and act as antioxidants. According to the reported literature, MSCs are safe, have no side effects, and improve liver function; however, their regenerative therapeutic effects are unsatisfactory. Here, we explain, in detail, the basic therapeutic effects and recent clinical advances of MSCs. Furthermore, we discuss future research directions for improving the regenerative therapeutic effects of MSCs. 2020 Annals of Translational Medicine. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Cell therapy; liver disease; mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs); regenerative medicine
Year: 2020 PMID: 32775364 PMCID: PMC7347787 DOI: 10.21037/atm.2020.02.163
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Transl Med ISSN: 2305-5839
Figure 1Potential therapeutic mechanisms of MSCs in hepatic fibrosis. The potential protective mechanisms of MSCs include the following: (I) homing into damaged sites; (II) transdifferentiation into hepatocyte-like cells; (III) suppression of immune reactions; (IV) secretion of trophic factors to suppress the activated hepatic stellate cells and increase the proliferation of both resident hepatocytes and hepatic progenitor cells; and (V) antifibrotic action that results from the regulation of activated hepatic stellate cells and immune cells. The shadows represent the ECM that is secreted from the hepatic stellate cells. Modified from Eom et al. (15). MSCs, mesenchymal stem cells; ECM, extracellular matrix.
Clinical studies of MSCs in liver diseases
| Study | Patient group | MSC source | Injection route | Main improvement |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mohamadnejad [2007] | Decompensated liver cirrhosis (n=4) | Autologous BM | Peripheral vein | Creatinine and MELD score |
| Kharaziha [2009] | Liver cirrhosis (n=8) | Autologous BM | Portal vein (n=6) | Creatinine, prothrombin time, and MELD score |
| Peripheral vein (n=2) | ||||
| El-Ansary [2010] | Decompensated liver cirrhosis due to HCV or HBV (n=12) | Autologous BM | Intrasplenic (n=6) | Creatinine, prothrombin time, albumin, bilirubin, and MELD score |
| Peripheral vein (n=6) | ||||
| Amer [2011] | Decompensated liver cirrhosis due to HCV (n=40) | Autologous BM | Intrasplenic (n=10) | Ascites, peripheral edema, albumin, MELD score, and Child-Pugh score |
| Intrahepatic (n=10) | ||||
| Peng [2011] | ACLF caused by HBV (n=158) | Autologous BM | Hepatic artery | Prothrombin time, albumin, bilirubin, and MELD score |
| El-Ansary [2012] | Decompensated liver cirrhosis due to HCV (n=25) | Autologous BM | Peripheral vein | Albumin and MELD score |
| Shi [2012] | ACLF-associated HBV (n=43) | Allogeneic UC | Peripheral vein | Albumin, prothrombin time, bilirubin, ALT, survival rates, and MELD score |
| Zhang [2012] | Decompensated liver cirrhosis due to HBV (n=45) | Allogeneic UC | Peripheral vein | Albumin, bilirubin, MELD score, and ascites |
| Amin [2013] | Post-HCV (n=20) | Autologous BM | Intrasplenic | Albumin, prothrombin time, bilirubin, AST, ALT, and MELD score |
| Mohamadnejad [2013] | Decompensated liver cirrhosis (n=25) | Autologous BM | Peripheral vein | None |
| Wang [2013] | UDCA-resistant PBC (n=7) | Allogeneic UC | Peripheral vein | Alkaline phosphatase and γ-glutamyltransferase (GGT) levels |
| Jang [2014] | Alcohol-related liver cirrhosis (n=11) | Autologous BM | Hepatic artery | MELD score and liver histology |
| Salama [2014] | Post-HCV end-stage liver disease (n=40) | Autologous BM | Peripheral vein | MELD score and Child-Pugh score |
| Wang [2014] | UDCA-resistant PBC (n=10) | Allogeneic BM | Peripheral vein | ALT, AST, GGT, and IgM |
| Suk [2016] | Alcohol-related liver cirrhosis (n=72) | Autologous BM | Hepatic artery | Histologic fibrosis and Child-Pugh score |
| Detry [2017] | Liver transplant recipients | Allogenic BM | Peripheral vein | No difference in rate of infection or de novo cancer |
| Lanthier [2017] | Decompensated alcoholic hepatitis (n=58) | Autologous BM | Hepatic artery | None |
| Lin [2017] | ACLF-associated HBV (n=110) | Allogeneic BM | Peripheral vein | Bilirubin, MELD score, and survival rates |
| Liang [2017] | Autoimmune diseases-induced cirrhosis (n=26) | Allogeneic UC (n=23), UCB (n=2), or BM (n=1) | Peripheral vein | Bilirubin, albumin, prothrombin, and MELD score |
| Xu [2019] | ACLF-associated HBV (n=110) | Allogeneic UC | Peripheral vein | Bilirubin, ALT, AST, and MELD score |
ACLF, acute-on-chronic liver failure; BM, bone marrow; HBV, hepatitis B virus; HCV, hepatitis C virus; PBC, primary biliary cholangitis; RCT, randomized controlled trial; UC, umbilical cord; UDCA, ursodeoxycholic acid