| Literature DB >> 34315546 |
Patricia Rieken Macêdo Rocco1,2,3, Bruno Solano de Freitas Souza4,5,6, Kátia Nunes da Silva7,8,9, André Luiz Nunes Gobatto9, Zaquer Suzana Munhoz Costa-Ferro8,9, Bruno Raphael Ribeiro Cavalcante7, Alex Cleber Improta Caria10, Luciana Souza de Aragão França8,9, Carolina Kymie Vasques Nonaka8,9, Fernanda de Macêdo Lima9, Miquéias Lopes-Pacheco1.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic, caused by the rapid global spread of the novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2), has caused healthcare systems to collapse and led to hundreds of thousands of deaths. The clinical spectrum of COVID-19 is not only limited to local pneumonia but also represents multiple organ involvement, with potential for systemic complications. One year after the pandemic, pathophysiological knowledge has evolved, and many therapeutic advances have occurred, but mortality rates are still elevated in severe/critical COVID-19 cases. Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) can exert immunomodulatory, antiviral, and pro-regenerative paracrine/endocrine actions and are therefore promising candidates for MSC-based therapies. In this review, we discuss the rationale for MSC-based therapies based on currently available preclinical and clinical evidence of safety, potential efficacy, and mechanisms of action. Finally, we present a critical analysis of the risks, limitations, challenges, and opportunities that place MSC-based products as a therapeutic strategy that may complement the current arsenal against COVID-19 and reduce the pandemic's unmet medical needs.Entities:
Keywords: Acute respiratory distress syndrome; COVID-19; Cell therapy; Mesenchymal stromal cells; SARS-CoV-2
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34315546 PMCID: PMC8314259 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-021-02502-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1Mechanisms of action of mesenchymal stromal cells
Fig. 2Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) and immune modulation in COVID-19. DC, dendritic cell; IFN-γ, interferon-γ; IL, interleukin; TGF-β, transforming growth factor-β; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; Treg, regulatory T cell
Clinical trials of cell-based therapies in COVID-19 patients registered in clinicaltrials.gov
| Title | ID | Interventions | Primary outcome | Age | Phases | Enrollment | Location | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | The Mesenchymal coviD-19 Trial: a Pilot Study to Investigate Early Efficacy of MSCs in Adults With COVID-19 (MEND | NCT04537351 | CYP-001 | Trend in trajectory of PaO2/FiO2 ratio (P/F ratio) between in 7 days | < 18 years | Phase I Phase II | 24 | Australia |
| 2 | Treatment of Covid-19 Associated Pneumonia with Allogenic Pooled Olfactory Mucosa-derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells | NCT04382547 | Allogenic pooled olfactory mucosa-derived MSCs | Treatment: Number of cured patients in 3 weeks | 18 to 70 Years | Phase I Phase II | 40 | Belarus |
| 3 | Mesenchymal Stromal Cell Therapy for Severe Covid-19 Infection | NCT04445454 | BM-MSC | Adverse events in 28 days | 18 to 70 years | Phase 1 Phase 2 | 20 | Belgium |
| 4 | MSC-based Therapy in COVID-19-associated Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome | NCT04525378 | MSCs | Intrahospital mortality, incidence of adverse events in 28 days and quantification of biomarkers | ≥ 18 years | Phase 1 | 20 | Brazil |
| 5 | This is phase II study to assess the efficacy of NestaCell® (mesenchymal stem cell) to treat severe COVID-19 pneumonia | NCT04315987 | NestaCell® (MSCs) | Change in clinical condition in 10 days | ≥ 18 years | Phase II | 90 | Brazil |
| 6 | Safety and Feasibility of Allogenic MSC in the Treatment of COVID-19 | NCT04467047 | MSCs | Overall survival in 60 days | Child, Adult, Older Adult | Phase I | 10 | Brazil |
| 7 | Cellular Immuno-Therapy for COVID-19 Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome - Vanguard (CIRCA-19) | NCT04400032 | BMCs | Number of Participants with Treatment-Related Adverse Events as Assessed by CTCAE v4.0 to determine the maximum feasible tolerated dose (MFTD) of BM-MSCs given to patients with COVID-19 | ≥ 18 years | Phase I | 9 | Canada |
| 8 | Safety and Efficacy of Mesenchymal Stem Cells in the Management of Severe COVID-19 Pneumonia | NCT04429763 | UC-MSCs | Clinical deterioration or death in 4 weeks | 18 to 79 Years | Phase II | 30 | Colombia |
| 9 | Safety and Efficacy of Intravenous Wharton's Jelly Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Due to COVID 19 | NCT04390152 | WJ-MSC | Evaluation of efficacy of WJ-MSC defined by mortality at 28 days of application | 18 to 80 years | Phase I Phase II | 40 | Colombia |
| 10 | Mesenchymal Stem Cell Treatment for Pneumonia Patients Infected With COVID-19 | NCT04252118 | MSCs | Size of lesion area by chest radiograph or CT and side effects in 28 days | 18 to 70 years | Phase 1 | 20 | China |
| 11 | Clinical Research of Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells in the Treatment of COVID-19 Pneumonia | NCT04339660 | UC-MSCs | Immune function and blood oxygen saturation | 18 to 75 years | Phase 1 Phase 2 | 30 | China |
| 12 | Safety and Effectiveness of Mesenchymal Stem Cells in the Treatment of Pneumonia of Coronavirus Disease 2019 | NCT04371601 | MSCs versus control | Improvement of pulmonary function in 12 months | 18 to 70 years | Phase I | 60 | China |
| 13 | Safety and Efficacy Study of Allogeneic Human Dental Pulp Mesenchymal Stem Cells to Treat Severe COVID-19 Patients | NCT04336254 | DPSCs | Clinical improvement in 28 days | 18 to 65 years | Phase 1 Phase 2 | 20 | China |
| 14 | Study of Human Umbilical Cord Mesenchymal Stem Cells in the Treatment of Severe COVID-19 | NCT04273646 | UC-MSCs | Evaluation of pneumonia improvement | 18 to 65 years | Not Applicable | 48 | China |
| 15 | Bone Marrow-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cell Treatment for Severe Patients with Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) | NCT04346368 | BM-MSCs | Changes of oxygenation index (PaO2/FiO2) at baseline, 6-hour, day 1, day 3 week 1, week 2, week 4, month 6 Evaluation of pneumonia improvement | 18 to 75 years | Phase I Phase II | 20 | China |
| 16 | Pilot Clinical Study on Inhalation of Mesenchymal Stem Cells Exosomes Treating Severe Novel Coronavirus Pneumonia | NCT04276987 | MSCs-Exo | Safety evaluation within 28 days after first treatment, including frequency of adverse reaction (AE) and severe adverse reaction (SAE) | 18 to 75 years | Phase I | 24 | China |
| 15 | Novel Coronavirus Induced Severe Pneumonia Treated by Dental Pulp Mesenchymal Stem Cells | NCT04302519 | Dental pulp MSCs | Disappear time of ground-glass shadow in the lungs in 14 days | 18 to 75 years | Phase I | 24 | China |
| 16 | Umbilical Cord (UC)-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells (MSCs) Treatment for the 2019-novel Coronavirus (nCOV) Pneumonia | NCT04269525 | UC-MSCs | Oxygenation index on after 14 days | 18 to 80 years | Phase II | 16 | China |
| 17 | Treatment with Human Umbilical Cord-derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells for Severe Corona Virus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) | NCT04288102 | UC-MSCs | Change in lesion proportion (%) of full lung volume from baseline to day 28 Evaluation of pneumonia improvement | 18 to 75 years | Phase II | 100 | China |
| 18 | Cell Therapy Using Umbilical Cord-derived Mesenchymal Stromal Cells in SARS-CoV-2-related ARDS | NCT04333368 | UC-MSC | PaO2/FiO2 ratio from baseline to day 7 | ≥ 18 years | Phase 1 Phase 2 | 40 | France |
| 19 | Mesenchymal Stem Cells (MSCs) in Inflammation-Resolution Programs of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Induced Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) | NCT04377334 | BM-MSCs | Lung injury score in 10 days Improvement of lung injury score (LIS), 0-16 points, severity increasing with higher points | ≥ 18 years | Phase II | 40 | Germany |
| 20 | Administration of Allogenic UC-MSCs as Adjuvant Therapy for Critically-Ill COVID-19 Patients | NCT04457609 | UC-MSCs | Clinical improvement in 15 days | 18 to 95 years | Phase I | 40 | Indonesia |
| 21 | Treatment of Severe COVID-19 Patients using Secretome of Hypoxia-Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Indonesia | NCT04753476 | S-MSCs | Change in patients clinical manifestation in 1 months (mild, moderate, or severe) | Child, Adult, Older Adult | Phase II | 48 | Indonesia |
| 22 | Therapeutic Study to Evaluate the Safety and Efficacy of DW-MSC in COVID-19 Patients (DW-MSC) | NCT04535856 | MSCs | Treatment-emergent adverse event All adverse reactions in treatment group in 28 days | ≥ 19 years | Phase I | 9 | Indonesia |
| 23 | Mesenchymal Stem Cell Therapy for SARS-CoV-2-related ARDS | NCT04366063 | MSCs and EVs | Adverse events in 28 days and blood oxygen saturation | 18 to 65 years | Phase 2 Phase 3 | 60 | Iran |
| 24 | An Exploratory Study of ADR-001 in Patients with Severe Pneumonia Caused by SARS-CoV-2 Infection (COVID-19) | NCT04522986 | MSCs | Safety: adverse event in 12 weeks | ≥ 20 years | Phase I | 6 | Japan |
| 25 | Mesenchymal Stem Cell for Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Due for COVID-19 | NCT04416139 | UC-MSCs | PaO2/FiO2 ratio and clinical changes in 3 weeks | 18 years and older | Phase 2 | 10 | Mexico |
| 26 | ||||||||
| 27 | Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Patients Diagnosed With COVID-19 | NCT04611256 | MSCs | Change form baseline in Arterial oxygen saturation up to 25 days Pulmonary lesion area will be taken by a chest X-ray or computed axial tomography | 18 to 65 years | Phase I | 20 | Mexico |
| 28 | Use of Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Caused by COVID-19 | NCT04456361 | WJ-MSCs | Oxygen saturation Baseline, and at days 2, 4 and 14 post-treatment Number of patients with changes in percentage of resting oxygen saturation (%O2) | ≥ 18 years | Phase I | 9 | Mexico |
| 29 | Efficacy of Intravenous Infusions of Stem Cells in the Treatment of COVID-19 Patients | NCT04437823 | UC-MSCs | Adverse events, improvements in chest radiograph or chest CT scan in 30 days | 30 to 70 years | Phase 2 | 20 | Pakistan |
| 30 | Mesenchymal Stem Cell Infusion for COVID-19 Infection | NCT04444271 | MSC | Overall survival in 30 days | 10 years and older | Phase 2 | 20 | Pakistan |
| 31 | Investigational Treatments for COVID-19 in Tertiary Care Hospital of Pakistan | NCT04492501 | MSCs | Survival in 28 days | 18 to 90 years | Not Applicable | 600 | Pakistan |
| 32 | Treatment of Severe COVID-19 Pneumonia with Allogeneic Mesenchymal Stromal Cells (COVID_MSV) | NCT04361942 | MSC | Proportion of patients who have achieved withdrawal of invasive mechanical ventilation in 7 days and mortality rate in 28 days | ≥18 years | Phase 2 | 24 | Spain |
| 33 | Clinical Trial of Allogeneic Mesenchymal Cells from Umbilical Cord Tissue in Patients With COVID-19 | NCT04366271 | UC-MSC | Mortality rate in 28 days | 40 to 80 years | Phase 2 | 106 | Spain |
| 34 | Clinical Trial to Assess the Safety and Efficacy of Intravenous Administration of Allogeneic Adult Mesenchymal Stem Cells of Expanded Adipose Tissue in Patients With Severe Pneumonia Due to COVID-19 | NCT04366323 | AD-MSCs | Adverse event rate in 12 months; survival rate in 28 days | 18 to 80 years | Phase 1 Phase 2 | 26 | Spain |
| 35 | BAttLe Against COVID-19 Using MesenchYmal Stromal Cells | NCT04348461 | AD-MSCs | Efficacy of the administration of allogeneic AD- MSCs by survival rate in 28 days Safety of the administration of allogeneic AD-MSCs by adverse event rate in 6 months | ≥ 18 years | Phase II | 100 | Spain |
| 36 | Efficacy and Safety Evaluation of Mesenchymal Stem Cells for the Treatment of Patients with Respiratory Distress Due to COVID-19 (COVIDMES) | NCT04390139 | WJ-MSC | All-cause mortality at day 28 | 18 to 70 years | Phase I Phase II | 30 | Spain |
| 37 | Treatment of Severe COVID-19 Pneumonia with Allogeneic Mesenchymal Stromal Cells (COVID-MSV) | NCT04361942 | MSCs | Proportion of patients who have achieved withdrawal of invasive mechanical ventilation in 7 days | ≥ 18 years | Phase II | 24 | Spain |
| 38 | Mesenchymal Stromal Cell Therapy for The Treatment of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome | NCT04447833 | BM-MSC | Incidence of pre-specified adverse events in 10 days | 18 to 65 years | Phase 1 | 9 | Sweden |
| 39 | Investigational Treatments for COVID-19 in Tertiary Care Hospital of Pakistan | NCT04492501 | MSCs | Survival in 28 days | 18 to 90 years | 600 | Pakistan | |
| 40 | Evaluation of Safety and Efficiency of Method of Exosome Inhalation in SARS-CoV-2 Associated Pneumonia | NCT04491240 | EXO 1, EXO 2 | Number of participants with non-serious and serious adverse events during trial 30 days after clinic discharge Number of participants with non-serious and serious adverse during inhalation procedure after each inhalation during 10 days | 18 to 65 years | Phase I Phase II | 30 | Russian |
| 41 | Safety and Efficiency of Method of Exosome Inhalation in COVID-19 Associated Pneumonia | NCT04602442 | EXO 1, EXO 2 | Number of participants with non-serious and serious adverse events during trial in 2 months Number of participants with non-serious and serious adverse during inhalation procedure in 10 days during inhalation procedures | 18 to 65 years | Phase II | 90 | Russian |
| 42 | Clinical Use of Stem Cells for the Treatment of Covid-19 | NCT04392778 | MSC | Clinical improvement in 3 months | 40 to 60 years | Phase 1 Phase 2 | 30 | Turkey |
| 43 | Mesenchymal Stem Cells Therapy in Patients With COVID-19 Pneumonia | NCT04713878 | MSCs | Clinical symptoms as respiratory distress | 18 to 90 years | Not Applicable | 21 | Turkey |
| 44 | Repair of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome by Stromal Cell Administration (REALIST) (COVID-19) | NCT03042143 | UC-MSCs | Oxygenation index in 7 days and incidence of serious adverse events in 28 days | ≥16 years | Phase 1 Phase 2 | 75 | United Kingdom |
| 45 | Treatment of Coronavirus COVID-19 Pneumonia (Pathogen SARS-CoV-2) with Cryopreserved Allogeneic P_MMSCs and UC-MMSCs | NCT04461925 | P-MMSCs Anticoagulant Therapy | PaO2/FiO2 ratio and mortality rate in 28 days | 18 to 75 years | Phase 1 Phase 2 | 30 | Ukraine |
| 46 | Use of UC-MSCs for COVID-19 Patients | NCT04355728 | UC-MSCs + Heparin alongside best supportive care | Incidence of pre-specified infusion-associated adverse events in 5 days and incidence of severe adverse events in 90 days | ≥18 years | Phase 1 Phase 2 | 24 | United States |
| 47 | hCT-MSCs for COVID-19 ARDS | NCT04399889 | UC-MSCs | Safety of the investigational product in 28 days | ≥18 years | Phase 1 Phase 2 | 30 | United States |
| 48 | Umbilical Cord Lining Stem Cells (ULSC) in Patients With COVID-19 ARDS (ULSC) | NCT04494386 | UC-MSCs | Incidence of dose-limiting toxicity and adverse events in 12 months | ≥18 years | Phase 1 Phase 2 | 60 | United States |
| 49 | Cord Blood-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells for the Treatment of COVID-19 Related Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome | NCT04565665 | CB-MSC | Incidence of serious adverse events | ≥18 years | Phase II | 70 | United States |
| 50 | Study of Intravenous Administration of Allogeneic Adipose-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells for COVID-19-Induced Acute Respiratory Distress | NCT04728698 | COVI-MSCs | Mortality at day 28 | ≥ 18 years | Phase II | 100 | United States |
| 51 | A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Clinical Trial to Determine the Safety and Efficacy of Hope Biosciences Allogeneic Mesenchymal Stem Cell Therapy (HB-adMSCs) to Provide Protection Against COVID-19 | NCT04348435 | HB-adMSCs | Incidence of hospitalization for COVID-19 (week 0 through week 26 end of study Number of subjects that must be hospitalized for COVID-19 during the conduct of this study | ≥ 18 years | Phase II | 100 | United States |
| 52 | Regenerative Medicine for COVID-19 and Flu-Elicited ARDS Using Longeveron Mesenchymal Stem Cells (LMSCs) | NCT04629105 | LMSCs | Incidence of treatment-emergent serious adverse events (TE-SAEs) within 4 weeks after treatment | ≥ 18 years | Phase I | 70 | United States |
| 53 | A Clinical Trial to Determine the Safety and Efficacy of Hope Biosciences Autologous Mesenchymal Stem Cell Therapy (HB-adMSCs) to Provide Protection Against COVID-19 | NCT04349631 | HB-adMSCs | Number of subjects that require hospitalization for COVID-19 | ≥ 65 years | Phase II | 56 | United States |
| 54 | Efficacy and Safety Study of Allogeneic HB-adMSCs for the Treatment of COVID-19 | NCT04362189 | HB-adMSC | Interleukin-6, C-reactive protein, oxygenation, NF alpha, IL-10 from change from baseline and time to return to room air | ≥ 18 years | Phase II | 100 | United States |
| 55 | Umbilical Cord Tissue (UC) Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells (MSCs) Versus Placebo to Treat Acute Pulmonary Inflammation Due to COVID-19 | NCT04490486 | UC-MSCs | Safety of UCMSCs will be reported as the percentage of participants in each treatment group that experienced a treatment-related serious adverse events (SAEs) | ≥ 18 years | Phase I | 21 | United States |
| 56 | A Phase II Study in Patients with Moderate to Severe ARDS Due to COVID-19 | NCT04780685 | hMSCs | Survival in 14 days post-treatment | ≥ 18 years | Phase II | 40 | United States |
| 57 | ACT-20 in Patients with Severe COVID-19 Pneumonia | NCT04398303 | CT-20-MSC, or ACT-20-CM | Mortality day 30 post-treatment | 18 to 85 years | Phase I Phase II | 70 | United States |
| 58 | MSCs in COVID-19 ARDS | NCT04371393 | Remestemcel-L | Number of all-cause mortality within 30 days of randomization Change in IL6, IL-8, TNF-alpha inflammatory marker level in 7,14, 21, 30 days | 18 to 75 years | Phase III | 223 | United States |
| 59 | Multiple Dosing of Mesenchymal Stromal Cells in Patients with ARDS (COVID-19) | NCT04466098 | MSCs | Incidence of grade 3–5 infusional toxicities and predefined hemodynamic or respiratory adverse events related to the infusion of MSC in 6 hours of the start of the infusion | 18 to 80 years | Phase II | 30 | United States |
| 60 | A Study of Cell Therapy in COVID-19 Subjects with Acute Kidney Injury Who Are Receiving Renal Replacement Therapy | NCT04445220 | SBI-101 | Safety and tolerability as measured by incidence of IP-related serious adverse events in 180 | ≥ 18 years | Phase I Phase II | 22 | United States |
| 61 | Study of Descartes-30 in Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome | NCT04524962 | Descartes 30 | To assess the safety of Descartes-30 in patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS in 2 years | ≥ 18 years | Phase I Phase II | 30 | United States |
| 62 | Mesenchymal Stem Cells for the Treatment of COVID-19 | NCT04573270 | Primepro | Survival rate in COVID-19 infected patients admitted to hospital for complications Contraction rate of COVID-19 in healthy healthcare workers following patients admitted to hospital for complications due to COVID-19 | ≥ 18 years | Phase I | 40 | United States |
| 63 | Mesenchymal Stromal Cells for the Treatment of SARS-CoV-2 Induced Acute Respiratory Failure (COVID-19 Disease) | NCT04362189 | MSCs versus control | Treatment-related serious adverse events (tSAEs) 28 days post cell infusion and Change in clinical status in 14 days post infusion | ≥ 18 years | Phase I Phase II | 30 | United State |
| 64 | Study of the Safety of Therapeutic Tx With Immunomodulatory MSC in Adults With COVID-19 Infection Requiring Mechanical Ventilation | NCT04397796 | BM-Allo.MSC versus Placebo | Incidence of AEs, mortality, death, within 30 days of randomization Number of ventilator-free days in 60 days | ≥ 18 years | Phase I | 45 | United States |
| 65 | The Use of Exosomes for the Treatment of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome or Novel Coronavirus Pneumonia Caused by COVID-19 (ARDOXSO) | NCT04798716 | MSC-Exo | Evaluate the efficacy of ARDOXSO™ as an interventional exosome therapy in COVID-19 patients in 90 days | ≥ 18 years | Phase I Phase II | 55 | United States |
| 66 | Adipose Mesenchymal Cells for Abatement of SARS-CoV-2 Respiratory Compromise in COVID-19 Disease | NCT04352803 | AD-MSCs | Safety Incidence of unexpected adverse events within 28 days following IV administration of MSCs and efficacy | 18 to 90 Years | Phase I | 20 | United States |
| 67 | Use of hUC-MSC Product (BX-U001) for the Treatment of COVID-19 With ARDS | NCT04452097 | HU-MSCs | Incidence of infusion-related adverse events in day 3 Incidence of any treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) and treatment-emergent serious adverse events (TE-SAEs) in day 28 | 18 to 80 years | Phase I Phase II | 39 | United States |
MSCs, mesenchymal stem/stromal cells; BM-MSCs, bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells; UC-MSCs, umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stem cells; ESCs, embryonic stem cells; WJ-MSCs, Wharton’s jelly-derived mesenchymal stem cells; P-MMSCs, placenta-derived multipotent mesenchymal stem cells; AD-MSCs, adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells; DPSCs, dental pulp stem cells; EVs-CDCs, extracellular vesicles from cardiosphere-derived cells; DSC, decidual stroma cells; MSCs-Exo, mesenchymal stem cell derived exosomes; hCT-MSCs, human cord tissue mesenchymal stromal cells; ULSC, umbilical cord lining stem cells; ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome; CB-MCS, cord blood–derived mesenchymal stem cell; S-MSCs, secretome-MSCs; COVI-MSC, allogeneic culture-expanded adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs); HB-adMSCs, Hope Biosciences allogeneic adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells; LMSCs, Longeveron mesenchymal stem cells; HB-adMSCs, autologous adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells; ACT-20-MSC, allogenic human umbilical derived mesenchymal stem cells; ACT-20-CM, allogenic human umbilical derived mesenchymal stem cells in conditioned media; CYP-001, Cymerus mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). Remestemcel-L is a third-party of adult human mesenchymal stem cells; SBI-101 is a combination product: allogeneic human mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) and an FDA-approved plasmapheresis device; Descartes 30, mesenchymal stem cells or MSCs RNA-engineered to secrete a combination of DNases. Primepro, umbilical cord–derived stem cell
Reports of clinical use of MSCs in COVID-19 patients
| Study phase/type | Country | Sample size | Patient characteristics | Cell product | Dose and administration regimen | Main findings | Adverse events | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pilot study | China | 10 patients, | COVID-19 pneumonia confirmed by RT-PCR, with no improvement under standard treatment | Allogeneic, UC-MSC | Single dose of 1 × 106 MSCs/kg, i.v. infusion | Improvement of pulmonary function and symptoms, increase of peripheral lymphocytes, decrease in C-reactive protein, disappearance of overactivated cytokine-secreting immune cells, decrease of TNF-α levels and increase of IL-10 levels | No treatment-related adverse events | Leng et al, 2020 [ |
| Phase 1, controlled, open label | China | 41 patients, | Severe COVID-19, clinical symptoms were not alleviated under standard treatment for 7 to 10 days | Allogeneic, UC-MSC | Single dose of 2 × 106 MSCs/kg, i.v. infusion | Relief of clinical symptoms, reduction of inflammatory factors, increase of lymphocytes, patients with diabetes used less exogenous insulin after hUC-MSC infusion than usual | No treatment-related adverse events | Shu et al, 2020 [ |
| Primary safety trial, open-label cohort study | USA | 27 patients | Severe or critical COVID-19 SpO2 < 94% on room air (RA), with fever and dyspnea ( | Allogeneic, MSC-Exo | 15 ml of ExoFlo was added to 100 mL of normal saline, i.v. infusion Quantification and characterization of exosomes were not provided | Reversal of hypoxia, immune reconstitution, modulation of cytokine storm | No treatment-related adverse events | Sengupta et al, 2020 [ |
| Case series/Retrospective study | China | 25 patients | Severe COVID-19 confirmed by real-time RT-PCR assay; patients in respiratory distress, with RR ≥ 30 beats/min, oxygen saturation level ≤ 93% in resting state and arterial partial pressure of oxygen (PaO2)/fraction of inspiration O2 (FiO2) ≤ 300 mmHg | MSCs of non-specified origin | 1 × 106 MSCs/kg, i.v. infusion, single dose ( | Effectiveness, serum levels of LAC, cTnT and CK-MB were elevated significantly after MSCs therapy | Three cases experienced treatment-related side effects, specifically liver dysfunction, heart failure and allergic rash | Chen |
| Case report | China | 1 patient | RT-PCR assay confirmed that the patient’s specimen tested positive for COVID-19, severe shortness of breath, SpO2 of 87.9%, computerized tomography evidences pneumonia and ground-glass opacity in bilateral lungs | Allogeneic, UC-MSC | Single dose of 1 × 106 MSCs/kg, i.v. infusion | Improvement of pulmonary function and symptoms, increase of lymphocyte subsets, decrease of IL-6, TNF-α, and C-reactive protein levels, safety and efficiency | No treatment-related adverse events | Zhang et al, 2020 [ |
| Pilot study | China | 2 patients | Severe COVID-19; patient 1 with increased leukocyte count and neutrophils, decreased hemoglobin and lymphocytes, X-ray indicates large, patchy, high-density lesions in bilateral lungs; patient 2 with increased neutrophils and decreased leukocyte counts and lymphocytes, chest X-ray indication of patchy high-density shadows in the lower lung fields and left middle lung | Allogeneic, menstrual blood–derived MSC | Three infusions of 1 × 106 MSCs/kg, i.v. infusion | MSC transplantation increases the immune indicators (including CD4 and lymphocytes) and decreases the inflammation indicators (interleukin-6 and C-reactive protein), improvement of dyspnea and lung function | No treatment-related adverse events | Tang et al, 2020 [ |
| Proof of concept | Spain | 13 patients | COVID-associated pneumonia requiring mechanical ventilation in the ICU | Allogeneic AT-MSC | Median number of AT-MSCs per dose was 0.98 (IQR 0.5) × 106/kg Single dose ( | 9 patients improved clinically and 7 were extubated with a median time from the first MSC dose to extubation of 7 days. Radiological improvement in sequential X-rays was confirmed in 40% of evaluable patients. A decrease in inflammatory parameters at day 5 after infusion with a decrease in C-reactive protein in 8 patients (88%), LDH in 9 (100%), and D-dimer and ferritin in 5 of 8 evaluable patients (63%), increase in the levels of total lymphocytes was observed in responders patients (B, CD4, CD8) | No treatment-related adverse events | Sánchez-Guijo |
| Case series | Brazil | 10 patients, | COVID-associated pneumonia, presenting severe acute respiratory syndrome | MSCs of non-specified origin | Single dose of 1 × 106 MSCs/kg, i.v. infusion | Improvement in symptoms, significant reduction ofchest infiltration, reduction of pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α), increase of peripheral lymphocyte counts (CD4+ T cells and dendritic cells), increase of anti-inflammatory gene expression and trophic factors | No treatment-related adverse events | Mazzeo and Santos, 2020 [ |
| Case report | China | 1 patient | Severe COVID-19 confirmed by RT-PCR, SpO2 90%, P/F 243 mmHg, pulmonary exudative lesions in bilateral lungs showed in X-ray | Convalescent plasma + UC-MSC | Three infusions of 1 × 106 MSCs/kg, i.v. infusion | Restoration of lung diffusion, improvement of pulmonary function, increase of oxygenation index, PaO2 and absolute lymphocyte count, decline in absolute neutrophils count and IL-6 | No treatment-related adverse events | Peng et al, 2020 [ |
| Pilot study | China | 31 patients | Severe ( | Allogeneic, UC-MSC | Single ( | Restoration of oxygenation, downregulation of cytokine storm, improvement of lung function. Laboratory parameters tended to improve after UC-MSC therapy compared to the status before UC-MSC therapy, including elevated lymphocyte count, decreased C-reactive protein level and procalcitonin level, decreased D-Dimer levels | No treatment-related adverse events | Guo et al, 2020 [ |
| Case report | China | 1 patient | Severe COVID-19, SpO2 of 81%, chest tightness, blood pressure of 160/91 mmHg and X-ray showing ground-glass opacity in right lung | Allogeneic, UC-MSC | Three cycles (5 × 107 cells each time) with a 3-day interval, i.v. infusion | Improvement of clinical indexes and symptoms, reversal of lymphopenia (increase in counts of CD3+ T cell, CD4+ T cell and CD8+ T cell) | No treatment-related adverse events | Liang et al, 2020 [ |
| Phase 1, controlled, open label | China | 18 patients; | Moderate and severe COVID-19 confirmed by RT-PCR; pneumonia was evidenced using chest radiography or CT; moderate cases were defined as fever, respiratory symptoms and confirmed pneumonia; severe cases included symptoms of shortness of breath or dyspnea after activity | Allogeneic, UC-MSC | Three cycles of i.v. infusion of allogeneic UC-MSCs (3 × 107 cells each infusion) on days 0, 3, and 6 | Decrease of serum IL-6 biomarker of disease progression, improvement of percentage of inspired oxygen ratio, faster absorption of lung lesions | Two patients developed transient facial flushing and fever, and one patient developed transient hypoxia at 12 h post UC-MSCs infusion | Meng et al, 2020 [ |
| Case report | China | 1 patient | COVID-19 confirmed by RT-PCR, acute respiratory distress, SpO2 90%, computerized tomography showed ground-glass opacity in both lungs, multiple organ injury (hepatic respiratory system), immunosuppression | Allogeneic, UC-MSC | Single infusion of 1 × 106 MSCs/kg BW, i.v. infusion | Patient’s SpO2 returned to the normal level 48 h after MSC infusion, non-invasive ventilator was successfully removed after 6 days. BUN, PCT, CRP, AST, and ALT levels decreased, leucocytes gradually recovered after 13 days | No treatment-related adverse events | Zhu |
Phase 2, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled | China | 101 patients; | Severe COVID-19 confirmed by RT-PCR; pneumonia was evidenced using chest computed radiography (CT) imaging. Dyspnea (respiratory rate ≥ 30 times/min), oxygen saturation of 93% or lower on room air; arterial oxygen partial pressure (PaO2)/fraction of inspired oxygen ≤ 300 mmHg; pulmonary imaging showing that the foci progressed by > 50% in 24–48 h | Allogeneic, UC-MSCs | Three cycles of i.v. infusions of UC-MSCs (4 × 107 cells) each on days 0, 3, and 6 | UC-MSC administration was safe and accelerated resolution of lung solid component lesions and improvement in the integrated reserve capability after UC-MSC administration | Adverse events reported during the study was similar in the MSC group and the placebo group. All adverse events during the observation period were judged by the site investigators and found to be unrelated to UC-MSC intervention. No deaths were observed in this trial. | Shi et al, 2021 [ |
| Phase 1 | Iran | 11 patients | COVID-19 confirmed by RT-PCR or chest X-ray; SpO2/FiO2 ≤ 315, SOFA score between 2 and 13 point, required mechanical ventilation and/or supplemental oxygen | (UC-MSC) or (PL-MSC) | Three i.v. infusions (200 × 106 cells) every other day for a total of 600 × 106 human umbilical cord MSCs (UC-MSCs; 6 cases) or placental MSCs (PL-MSCs; 5 cases) | MSCs from a prenatal source is relatively safe, tolerable, and could rapidly improve respiratory symptoms and reduce inflammatory conditions in some critically ill COVID-19 patients | Two patients developed shivering that occurred during the initial PL-MSC infusion, which was relieved by supportive treatment in less than 1 h. This shivering did not develop again during the second and third infusions. | Hashemian et al. 2021 [ |
| Pilot study | China | 17 patients, | Severe COVID-19 with respiratory distress, RR ≥ 30 min−1, oxygen saturation ≤ 93% at rest state, oxygenation index ≤ 300 mmHg, 1 mmHg = 0.133 kPa or critically severe with respiratory failure needs mechanical ventilation Shock, combined with other organ failure, patients need ICU monitoring and treatment | Allogeneic UC-MSCs | Four i.v. infusions of (1 × 108 cells) with 1-day intervals in between | UC-MSCs was safe in severe and critically severe COVID-19 pneumonia and that administration of UC-MSCs is associated with clinical benefit and changes in inflammatory and immune populations | There were two severe adverse events (SAE) during the trial. The two SAEs were considered to have no relationship with UC-MSCs transplantation. | Feng et al. 2020 [ |
| Pilot study | China | 7 patients, | COVID-19 confirmed by RT-PCR | MSC-derived exosomes | Nebulization of MSC-derived exosomes. The concentration of exosomes for nebulization for each patient ranged from 7.66e+0.8 to 7.00e+0.7 particles/ml based on NanoSight. | The nebulization of MSC-derived exosomes is safe and beneficial for the absorption of pulmonary lesions in mild cases of COVID-19 pneumonia and in reducing cellular residue in severe cases. | No adverse events were reported | Chu et al. 2021 [ |
Phase I double-blind, randomized, controlled | USA | 28 patients, | COVID-19 confirmed by RT-PCR, peripheral capillary oxygen saturation (SpO2) ≤ 94% at room air, or requiring supplemental oxygen at screening, PaO2/FiO2 ratio < 300 mmHg, Bilateral infiltrates on frontal chest radiograph or bilateral ground-glass opacities on a chest CT scan | Allogeneic UC-MSC | Two i.v. infusions of (100 ± 20 × 106) | UC-MSC treatment was safe, reduced mortality and recovery time. Inflammatory cytokines were significantly decreased in UC-MSC-treated subjects at day 6. | In the UC-MSC treatment group, the only reported adverse event occurred in a subject with bradycardia required transient vasopressor treatment. | Lanzoni et al., 2021 [ |
MSCs, mesenchymal stem/stromal cells; UC-MSCs, umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stem cells; AT-MSCs, adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells; MSCs-Exo, mesenchymal stem/stromal cell exosomes; ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome; BW, body weight; PL-MSC, placenta-derived mesenchymal stem cells