| Literature DB >> 33803227 |
Thomas J Povsic1, Bernard J Gersh2.
Abstract
Stem cell and regenerative approaches that might rejuvenate the heart have immense intuitive appeal for the public and scientific communities. Hopes were fueled by initial findings from preclinical models that suggested that easily obtained bone marrow cells might have significant reparative capabilities; however, after initial encouraging pre-clinical and early clinical findings, the realities of clinical development have placed a damper on the field. Clinical trials were often designed to detect exceptionally large treatment effects with modest patient numbers with subsequent disappointing results. First generation approaches were likely overly simplistic and relied on a relatively primitive understanding of regenerative mechanisms and capabilities. Nonetheless, the field continues to move forward and novel cell derivatives, platforms, and cell/device combinations, coupled with a better understanding of the mechanisms that lead to regenerative capabilities in more primitive models and modifications in clinical trial design suggest a brighter future.Entities:
Keywords: angina; cardiomyopathy; clinical trials; congestive heart failure; regenerative medicine; stem cells
Year: 2021 PMID: 33803227 PMCID: PMC8001267 DOI: 10.3390/cells10030600
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Evidence Supporting Possibility of Stem Cell Medicated Cardiac Repair. Top left: Primitive organisms such as zebrafish are able to regenerate significant (~25%) of resected myocardium with histologically identical myocardium. Adapted with permission [2]. Top right: early reports of use of bone marrow cells suggested significant trans-differentiation and generation of new myocardium, reports which were frequently difficult to reproduce. Adapted with permission [4]. Bottom right: Evidence of human myocardial regeneration based on 14C myocyte content suggests turnover of ~0.5% per year which decreases with age. Adapted from with permission [13]. Bottom left: A series of studies suggested replacement of transplanted endothelial, vascular, and myocyte tissue by host cells, although the rate of myocardial replacement was in most cases low (~0.04%). Adapted from with permission [14].
Key Clinical Trials of Bone Marrow and Selected Cells for Cardiovascular Disease.
| Selection/Characteristics | Key Clinical Trials | Disease State | Key Endpoints | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Ficoll gradient | REPAIR-AMI [ | Post-AMI | Δ EF | Small increase in EF (2–5%), variably reproducible |
| Sepax closed automated processing system | FOCUS [ | HFrEF | Improvement in LV dimensions, perfusion, or peak MVO2 | Powered for large treatment effect, study neutral |
| Sepax closed automated processing system | TIME and LATE-TIME [ | Post-AMI | Δ EF | U.S. multisite trials, no effect on EF post-AMI |
| Ficoll gradient | BAMI [ | Post-AMI | Mortality | Prematurely terminated, Expected: 12%; Observed: 3.5% |
|
| ||||
| Cardiac progenitor derived from cardiac explant cultures | ALLSTAR [ | Post-AMI | Δ scar size | Prematurely terminated, positive effects on BNP and remodeling |
| HOPE [ | DMD | Δ myocardial scar size | Improvements in muscle strength in DMD | |
|
| ||||
| SC of cardiac neural crest origin | SCIPIO | Ischemic CM | Δ EF post-CABG | Partial analysis published |
| CONCERT | HFrEF | Variety of exploratory endpoints | Possible synergistic effects with MSCs in CHF | |
|
| ||||
| Angioblast marker: hematopoietic and endothelial stem cells | ACT-34 and RENEW [ | Refractory angina | Improvements in angina frequency, exercise time in refractory angina | Improvements, RENEW prematurely terminated by sponsor, mortality improved |
| Vrtovec et al. [ | Non-ischemic cardiomyopathy | Mortality, BNP | Improvements (open-label study) | |
|
| ||||
| Primitive (hematopoietic) stem cell marker | Several small trials [ | Post-AMI | Δ EF | Signals of (small) improvements |
|
| ||||
| Multipotent stem cells isolated based on adherence and growth on plastic | DREAM-HF [ | HFrEF | Combined clinical endpoint | Unpublished, enrollment curtailed from 1800 to <600 |
|
| ||||
| Pluripotent mesenchymal stem cells with anti-inflammatory macrophages | ixCELL-DCM [ | HFrEF | CHF admissions, mortality | Lower risk of CHF events |
AMI indicates acute myocardial infarction; BM, bone marrow; BNP, brain natriuretic peptide; CABG, coronary artery bypass graft; CHF, congestive heart failure; CM, cardiomyopathy; DMD, Duchenne muscular dystrophy; EF, ejection fraction; HFrEF, heart failure with reduced ejection fraction; LV, left ventricular; MSCs, mesenchymal stem cells; MVO2, myocardial volume oxygen; SC, stem cells.
Summary of meta-analyses of Bone Marrow Cell Therapy for Ischemic Heart Disease.
| Population | Cells | Studies | No. of Patients | EF HR (95% CI) | Mortality | CHF MACE or CHF Hospitalizations | Ischemic MACE or MI | Other | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||
| Hristov et al. (2006) [ | AMI | BMMC | 5 | 482 | 4.21 (0.21, 8.22) | ||||
| Abdel-Latif et al. (2007) [ | IHD | BMMC, BMMesC, CPCs | 18 | 807 | 3.64 (1.56, 5.73) | No Δ | ↓LVEDD, ↓ LVESD, ↓ IS | ||
| Lipinski et al. (2007) [ | AMI | BMMC | 10 | 698 | 3.0 (1.9, 4.1) | OR 0.52 (0.16, 1.63) | OR 0.32 | OR 0.22 (0.05, 0.90) | Trend ↓LVEDD, ↓ LVESD, ↓ IS |
| Martin-Rendon et al. (2008) [ | AMI | BMMC | 13 | 811 | 2.99 (1.26, 4.72) | RR 0.62 (0.22, 1.76) | RR 0.61 | ↓ LVESD, ↓ IS | |
| Jeevanantham et al. (2012) [ | IHD | BMMC, BM-MSCs, | 50 | 2625 | 3.96 (2.90, 5.02) | OR 0.39 (0.27, 0.55) | OR 0.52 | OR 0.25 (0.11, 0.57) | 36 RCT, 14 cohort studies, ↓LVEDD, ↓ LVESD |
| Zimmet et al. (2012) [ | AMI | BMMCs | 23 | 1317 | 2.70 (1.48, 3.92) | OR 0.64 (0.22, 1.72) | OR 0.62 | RR = 0.66 (0.16, 2.45) | ↓LVEDD, ↓ LVESD |
| Delewi et al. (2013) [ | AMI | IC BMMC | 24 | 1624 | 2.23 (1.00, 3.47) | RR 0.60 (0.34, 1.08) | RR 0.59 | RR 0.44 (0.24, 0.79) | No Δ in LVEDD or LVESD |
| de Jong et al. (2014) [ | AMI | BMMC, BM-MSCs | 2.10 (0.68, 3.52) | OR 0.68 (0.36, 1.31) | OR 0.14 | OR 0.5 (0.24, 1.06) | ↓ LVESD, ↓ IS | ||
| Xu et al. (2014) [ | IHD | BMMC, CPCs | 19 | 886 | 3.54 (1.92, 5.17) | RR 0.49 (0.28, 0.84) | RR 0.29 (0.06, 1.53) | No Δ LVEDD, ↓ LVESD | |
| Fisher at al. (2016) [ | AMI | BMMC, BM-MSC, CD34+ or CD133+ cells | 41 | 2739 | 0.27 (-1.13, 1.67) | HR 0.92 (0.62, 1.36) | HR 0.36 | HR 0.63 (0.40, 1.01) | |
| Gyongyosi et al. (2015) [ | AMI | IC BMMC | 12 | 767:485 | 1.15 (-0.38, 2.69) | HR 0.81 | HR 0.52 (0.28, 1.08) | No Δ in LVEDD or LVESV, patient level analysis | |
|
| |||||||||
| Kandala et al. (2013) [ | HFrEF (ICM) | BMMC | 10 | 519 | 4.48 (2.43, 6.53) | ↓LVEDD, | |||
| Fisher et al. (2015) [ | HFrEF (ICM) | BMMC, CPCs, | 31 | 1521 | 2.06 (1.1, 3.01) | RR 0.48 (0.34, 0.69) | RR 0.39 | Multiple different study types, cells, delivery mechanisms, and additional procedures (PCI/CABG) at time of cell delivery | |
|
| |||||||||
| Fisher et al. (2013) [ | CIHD | BMMC and CD34+ Cells | 9 | 659 | RR 0.33 (0.17, 0.65) | ↓CCS angina class, ↓ AF | |||
| Li et al. (2013) [ | CIHD | BMMC and CD34+ Cells | 5 | 381 | OR 0.33 (0.08, 1.39) | OR 0.37 (0.14, 0.95) | ↑ETT (61.3 s [18.1, 104.4] | ||
| Henry et al. (2018) [ | CIHD | CD34+ Cells | 3 | 304 | K-M rate 2.5% (CD34+) vs. 12.1% (placebo) | 30.0% (CD34+) vs. 38.9% (Placebo) | ↑ETT (49.5 s [9.3, 89.7] | ||
AF indicates angina frequency; AMI, acute myocardial infarction; BMMC, bone marrow mononuclear cells; BMMesC, bone marrow derived stem cells; BM-MSC, bone marrow mesenchymal cells; CABG, coronary artery bypass graft; CCS, Canadian Cardiovascular Society; CHF, congestive heart failure; CIHD, chronic ischemic heart disease; CPC, cardiac progenitor cells; EF, ejection fraction; ETT, exercise tolerance test; HFrEF, heart failure with reduced ejection fraction; IC, intracoronary; IHD, ischemic heart disease; ICM, ischemic cardiomyopathy; IS, infarct size; K-M, Kaplan-Meier; LVEDD, left ventricular end-diastolic diameter; LVESD, left ventricular end-systolic diameter; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events; MI, myocardial infarction; PCI, percutaneous coronary intervention; RCT, randomized controlled trial; RR, Relative Risk.
Figure 2Future Approaches for Cardiac Regeneration/Rejuvenation: Top: Use of selected cells to enhance myocardial repair and rejuvenation to enhance vascular repair, reduce microvascular dysfunction, exert anti-inflammatory effects, and improve cellular function via paracrine effects. As one example, CD34+ cells may have significant clinical effects in patients with refractory angina even in the absence of myocardial generation [69]. Lower right: Confluence of bioengineering/cell therapeutic approaches to construct patches which may promote regeneration through direct mechanical and paracrine mechanisms. The left figure shows a 12-day patch of rat cardiomyocytes, the right panel shows staining for f-actin (red), collagen (green), and vimentin (purple). Adapted with permission from Jackman et al, Biomaterials, 159: 48-58 (2018). Lower left: Pluripotent stem cell sources such as cardiomyocytes derived from embryonic stem cells can permanently engraft and proliferate in the heart (green staining demonstrates green fluorescent protein expressing cardiomyocytes in non-human primate infarct model (Macaque monkey) at day 14). Adapted with permission [133].