| Literature DB >> 34221026 |
Yinghan Guo1, Yucong Peng1, Hanhai Zeng1, Gao Chen1.
Abstract
Ischemic stroke (IS) is a serious cerebrovascular disease with high morbidity and disability worldwide. Despite the great efforts that have been made, the prognosis of patients with IS remains unsatisfactory. Notably, recent studies indicated that mesenchymal stem cell (MSCs) therapy is becoming a novel research hotspot with large potential in treating multiple human diseases including IS. The current article is aimed at reviewing the progress of MSC treatment on IS. The mechanism of MSCs in the treatment of IS involved with immune regulation, neuroprotection, angiogenesis, and neural circuit reconstruction. In addition, nutritional cytokines, mitochondria, and extracellular vesicles (EVs) may be the main mediators of the therapeutic effect of MSCs. Transplantation of MSCs-derived EVs (MSCs-EVs) affords a better neuroprotective against IS when compared with transplantation of MSCs alone. MSC therapy can prolong the treatment time window of ischemic stroke, and early administration within 7 days after stroke may be the best treatment opportunity. The deliver routine consists of intraventricular, intravascular, intranasal, and intraperitoneal. Furthermore, several methods such as hypoxic preconditioning and gene technology could increase the homing and survival ability of MSCs after transplantation. In addition, MSCs combined with some drugs or physical therapy measures also show better neurological improvement. These data supported the notion that MSC therapy might be a promising therapeutic strategy for IS. And the application of new technology will promote MSC therapy of IS.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34221026 PMCID: PMC8219421 DOI: 10.1155/2021/9923566
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
Figure 1Mechanisms of MSCs in the treatment of IS. This figure contains elements available at Servier Medical Art repository, which is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
Advantages and disadvantages of different MSC transplant approaches.
| Routes | Advantages | Disadvantages | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intraparenchymal | Highest homing rate; low off-brain side effect | Highly invasiveness; additional brain tissue damage | [ |
| Intraventricular/intrathecal | Allow for migration to different parts of CNS; high homing rate | Invasiveness | [ |
| Intravenous | Low invasiveness; easy operation | Stagnation in peripheral tissue; pulmonary embolism | [ |
| Intra-arterial | Low invasiveness; considerable homing rate | Microvascular occlusion | [ |
| Intraperitoneal | Low invasiveness; high survival rate | Low homing rate | [ |
| Intranasal | Noninvasiveness; easy operation; repeated administration | Lack of clinical trial evidence | [ |
Gene transfection in the treatment of IS with MSCs.
| Transfected gene | Transfected vector | Cell type | Dose | Transplantation route | Administration time | Outcome (compared with normal MSCs) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BDNF | Adenovirus | hBM-MSCs | 5 × 105 | Intracerebral injection | 24 hours after MCAO | Fewer apoptotic cells; smaller infarcted volume; improvement of neurological function | [ |
| GDNF | Adenovirus | hBM-MSCs | 1.0 × 107 | Intravenous injection | 3 hours after MCAO | Smaller infarcted volume; higher function recovery | [ |
| HGF | Herpes sim-plex virus type-1 | BM-MSCs | 1.0 × 106 | Intracerebral injection | 2 or 24 hours after MCAO | Fewer apoptotic cells; smaller infarcted volume; higher function recovery | [ |
| PIGF | Adenovirus | hBM-MSCs | 1.0 × 107 | Intravenous injection | 3 hours after MCAO | More angiogenesis; smaller infarcted volume; higher function recovery | [ |
| FGF1 | pCMV6-entry vector | AD-MSCs | 2.0 × 106 | Intravenous injection | 0.5 hour after MCAO | Fewer apoptotic cells; smaller infarcted volume; higher function recovery | [ |
| Ang; VEGF; Ang+ VEGF | Adenovirus | hBM-MSCs | 1.0 × 106 | Intravenous injection | 6 hours after MCAO | Ang/Ang+ VEGF: more angiogenesis; smaller infarcted volume; higher function recovery. VEGF: infarct size increased; function deteriorated | [ |
| VEGF | Adenovirus | BM-MSCs | 1.0 × 106 | Intracerebral injection | 24 hours after MCAO | More angiogenesis; smaller infarcted volume; higher function recovery | [ |
| Hif-1 | Lentivirus | BM-MSCs | 1.0 × 106 | Intracerebral injection | 24 hours after MCAO | Lower level of proinflammatory cytokines; higher level of neurotrophins; smaller infarcted volume; higher function recovery | [ |
| TSP4 | Lentivirus | BM-MSCs | 2.0 × 106 | Intravenous injection | 3 hours after MCAO | Higher levels of Ang-1 and vWF; more angiogenesis; higher function recovery | [ |
| IL-10 | Adeno-associated virus | hBM-MSCs | 1.0 × 106 | Intravenous injection | 0 or 3 hours after MCAO | Lower level of proinflammatory cytokines and microglial activation; smaller infarcted volume; higher function recovery | [ |
| CCR2 | Lentivirus | BM-MSCs | 2.0 × 106 | Intravenous injection | 24 hours after MCAO | More homing; less BBB leakage; higher function recovery | [ |
| CCL2 | None | hUC-MSCs | 1.0 × 106 | Intravenous injection | 1 and 4 days after MCAO | More homing; more angiogenesis and neurogenesis; less neuroinflammation; smaller infarcted volume; higher function recovery | [ |
| Ngn1 | Retrovirus | hBM-MSCs | 1.0 × 106 | Intra-arterial injection | 2 hours after MCAO | More homing; fewer apoptotic cells; less neuroinflammation; higher function recovery | [ |
| Noggin | Adenovirus | BM-MSCs | 5.0 × 106 | Intravenous injection | 6 hours after MCAO | More neurogenesis; smaller infarcted volume; higher function recovery | [ |
Clinical trials of MSCs in the treatment of patients with IS.
| Type of trial | Stroke type | Sample sizes | Cell type | Dose/single ( | Route | Time of adm. from stroke onset | Follow-up | Result | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RCT | Acute IS | 30 | BM-MSCs/autologous | 5 × 107/ | IV | 4-5 weeks | 1 year | Significant improvement in BI. No significant difference in NIHSS and MRI scan | [ |
| RCT | Acute IS | 85 | BM-MSCs/autologous | 5 × 107/ | IV | 5 weeks | 5 years | No significant side effects. Patients with mRS 0–3 significant increased | [ |
| OL-PT | Chronic IS | 12 | BM-MSCs/autologous | 0.6–1.6 × 108/ | IV | 36–133 days | 1 year | No side effects. Decreasing of infarct volume by>20% at 1 week | [ |
| OL-PT | Subacute IS | 11 | BM-MSCs/autologous | 85 × 106/ | IV | 7–30 days | 6 months | No side effects. Improvement in NIHSS, BI, and mRS | [ |
| SB-CT | Acute IS | 20 | BM-MNCs/autologous | 1.59 × 108/ | IA | 5–9 days | 180 days | No side effects. No significant differences in neurological function | [ |
| OL-PT | Chronic IS | 36 | BM-MSCs/allogeneic | 1.5 × 106/ | IV | >60 days | 12 months | No side effects. Significant improvement in BI and NIHSS | [ |
| OL-PT | Chronic IS | 18 | SB623 cells/allogeneic | 2.5 × 106/ | IC | >60 days | 24 months | All experienced at least 1 treatment-emergent adverse event. Significant improvements in NIHSS F-M and ESS | [ |
| RCT | Subacute IS | 31 | BM-MNCs/autologous | 1.0 × 106/ | IV | <2 weeks | 2 years | No significant improvements in NIHSS, BI, and mRs. Significant improvements in motor function | [ |
| OL-PT | Chronic IS | 12 | BM-MNCs/autologous | Not provided | IV | 3-24 months | 4 years | No side effects. Significant improvements in mBI at 156 and 208 weeks | [ |
RCT: random control trial; OL-PT: open label prospective trial; SB-CT: simple blinded control trial; IV: intravenous; IA: intra-arterial; IC: intracerebral; adm: administration.