| Literature DB >> 33370477 |
Federica Casiraghi1, Norberto Perico1, Manuel A Podestà1,2, Marta Todeschini1, Marco Zambelli3, Michele Colledan3, Stefania Camagni3, Stefano Fagiuoli4, Antonio D Pinna5, Matteo Cescon5, Valentina Bertuzzo5, Lorenzo Maroni5, Martino Introna6, Chiara Capelli6, Josee T Golay6, Marina Buzzi7, Marilena Mister1, Pamela Y R Ordonez1, Matteo Breno1, Caterina Mele1, Alessandro Villa1, Giuseppe Remuzzi1.
Abstract
Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSC) have emerged as a promising therapy to minimize the immunosuppressive regimen or induce tolerance in solid organ transplantation. In this randomized open-label phase Ib/IIa clinical trial, 20 liver transplant patients were randomly allocated (1:1) to receive a single pretransplant intravenous infusion of third-party bone marrow-derived MSC or standard of care alone. The primary endpoint was the safety profile of MSC administration during the 1-year follow-up. In all, 19 patients completed the study, and none of those who received MSC experienced infusion-related complications. The incidence of serious and non-serious adverse events was similar in the two groups. Circulating Treg/memory Treg and tolerant NK subset of CD56bright NK cells increased slightly over baseline, albeit not to a statistically significant extent, in MSC-treated patients but not in the control group. Graft function and survival, as well as histologic parameters and intragraft expression of tolerance-associated transcripts in 1-year protocol biopsies were similar in the two groups. In conclusion, pretransplant MSC infusion in liver transplant recipients was safe and induced mild positive changes in immunoregulatory T and NK cells in the peripheral blood. This study opens the way for a trial on possible tolerogenic efficacy of MSC in liver transplantation. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02260375.Entities:
Keywords: clinical research/practice; liver transplantation/hepatology; stem cells; tolerance
Year: 2021 PMID: 33370477 DOI: 10.1111/ajt.16468
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transplant ISSN: 1600-6135 Impact factor: 8.086