| Literature DB >> 35008675 |
Sally L Elshaer1, Salma H Bahram2, Pranav Rajashekar3, Rajashekhar Gangaraju4, Azza B El-Remessy5.
Abstract
Mesenchymal stem cells are multipotent stem cells isolated from various tissue sources, including but not limited to bone marrow, adipose, umbilical cord, and Wharton Jelly. Although cell-mediated mechanisms have been reported, the therapeutic effect of MSCs is now recognized to be primarily mediated via paracrine effects through the secretion of bioactive molecules, known as the "secretome". The regenerative benefit of the secretome has been attributed to trophic factors and cytokines that play neuroprotective, anti-angiogenic/pro-angiogenic, anti-inflammatory, and immune-modulatory roles. The advancement of autologous MSCs therapy can be hindered when introduced back into a hostile/disease environment. Barriers include impaired endogenous MSCs function, limited post-transplantation cell viability, and altered immune-modulatory efficiency. Although secretome-based therapeutics have gained popularity, many translational hurdles, including the heterogeneity of MSCs, limited proliferation potential, and the complex nature of the secretome, have impeded the progress. This review will discuss the experimental and clinical impact of restoring the functional capabilities of MSCs prior to transplantation and the progress in secretome therapies involving extracellular vesicles. Modulation and utilization of MSCs-secretome are most likely to serve as an effective strategy for promoting their ultimate success as therapeutic modulators.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; immune modulation; inflammation; ischemic heart disease; ischemic retina; mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs); peripheral limb ischemia; repair; scar; wound healing
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35008675 PMCID: PMC8745455 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23010249
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Postulated mechanisms for therapeutic effects of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) including differentiation to other cell types, immunomodulation from M1 to M2 as well as the main paracrine effect of MSCs-derived secretome (growth factors, cytokines and exosomes). Exosomes from MSCs contain multiple proteins, lipids, RNAs (mRNA, miRNA, ncRNA). MSCs secretome obtained for therapeutic application can be tailored or modified to the desired cell-specific effects. Therapeutic effects of MSCs-were examined in ischemic heart, retina, wound healing and critical limb ischemia disease states.
Clinical Trials that utilized MSCs in ischemic heart diseases.
| Study | Clinical Trials Identifier: | Intervention | Delivery Method | Disease | Phase | Status | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-escalation study of intravenous adult human MSC (prochymal) after acute myocardial infarction | NCT00114452 | Allogeneic hMSCs | IV | myocardial infarction | Phase I | Completed | [ |
| Safety Study of Adult Mesenchymal Stem Cells (MSC) to Treat Acute Myocardial Infarction | NCT00114452 | Provacel | IV | Myocardial Infarction | Phase I | Completed | [ |
| Intramyocardial Injection of Autologous Bone Marrow-Derived Ex Vivo Expanded Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Acute MI Patients is Feasible and Safe up to 5 Years of Follow-up | Dutch trial registry (NTR1553) | Autologous BM-MSCs | Intramyocardial injection | Acute ST-segment elevation MI | Completed | [ | |
| Intracoronary cardiosphere-derived cells for heart regeneration after MI (CADUCEUS): a prospective, randomized phase I trial | NCT00893360 | Autologous stem cell infusion | Intracoronary infusion | Recent Myocardial Infarction | Phase I | Completed | [ |
| Comparison of allogeneic vs. autologous BM-MSC delivered by transendocardial injection in patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy: the POSEIDON randomized trial | NCT01087996 | Auto-hMSCs | Transendocardial Injection | LV dysfunction due to ICM | Phase I | Completed | [ |
| Prospective Randomized Study of Mesenchymal Stem Cell Therapy in Patients Undergoing Cardiac Surgery (PROMETHEUS) | NCT00587990 | MSC injection | Intramyocardial injection | Left Ventricular Dysfunction | Phase I | Terminated (Difficulty in recruitment.) | [ |
| Adipose-derived regenerative cells in patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy: The PRECISE Trial | NCT00426868 | Direct injection of (ADRCs) | Direct injection into the Left Ventricle | coronary artery disease refractory to revascularization | Phase I | Completed | [ |
| Rationale and design of the first randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of intramyocardial injection of autologous BM-MSCs in chronic ischemic Heart Failure (MSC-HF Trial) | NCT00644410 | Autologous BM-MSC | Intramyocardial injection | Congestive Heart Failure | Phase I | Completed | [ |
| Cardiopoietic stem cell therapy in heart failure: the C-CURE (Cardiopoietic stem Cell therapy in heart failURE) | NCT00810238 | BM- cardiopoietic cells | LV endocardial injection | heart failure Class II or III of ischemic origin | Phase II | Completed | [ |
| Prochymal® (Human Adult Stem Cells) Intravenous Infusion Following Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI) | NCT00877903 | Prochymal® (Human Adult Stem Cells) | IV infusion | Myocardial Infarction | Phase II | Completed | - |
| Safety Study of Allogeneic Mesenchymal Precursor Cell Infusion in MyoCardial Infarction (AMICI) | NCT01781390 | Mesenchymal Precursor Cells (MPC) | Intracoronary infusion | Acute Myocardial Infarction | Phase II | Active, not recruiting | - |
Clinical Trials that utilized MSCs in ischemic Retinopathy.
| Study | Clinical Trials Identifier | Intervention | Delivery Method | Disease | Phase | Status | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stem Cell Ophthalmology Treatment Study (SCOTS) | NCT01920867 | Autologous BM-MSC | Retrobulbar, subtenon, | Degenerative, ischemic or physical damage | N/A | Completed | [ |
| Stem Cell Ophthalmology Treatment Study II (SCOTS2) | NCT03011541 | Autologous BM-MSCs | Retrobulbar, subtenon, | Degenerative, ischemic or physical damage | N/A | Recruiting | [ |
| Randomized trial for patients with neuromyelitis optica | NCT02249676 | BM-MSC | IV infusion | neuromyelitis optica | phase II | Completed |
Clinical Trials that utilized MSCs in wound healing.
| Study | Clinical Trials Identifier | Intervention | Delivery Method | Disease | Phase | Status | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stem Cell Therapy to Improve Burn Wound Healing | NCT02104713 | Allogeneic MSCs | Topical Application | Skin burns 2nd degree | Phase I | Completed | |
| Safety and Exploratory Efficacy Study of Collagen Membrane with Mesenchymal Stem Cells in the Treatment of Skin Defects (SEESCMMSCTSD) | NCT02672280 | MSC with Medical Collagen Membrane | Topical application | Wounds | Phase I | Unknown | |
| Human Placental Mesenchymal Stem Cells Treatment on Diabetic Foot Ulcer | NCT04464213 | Human placental MSC gel | Topical application | Diabetic Foot Ulcer | Phase I | Recruiting | |
| Phase I, open-label safety study of umbilical cord lining mesenchymal stem cells (corlicyte®) to heal chronic diabetic foot ulcers | NCT04104451 | Expanded UC-MSC (Corlicyte®) | Chronic Diabetic Foot Ulcers | Phase I | Recruiting | ||
| Clinical Application of MSC Seeded in Chitosan Scaffold for Diabetic Foot Ulcers | NCT03259217 | ASC seeded in Curcumin loaded into collagen-alginate | Topical application | Diabetic Foot Ulcers | Phase I | Unknown | |
| Comparison of Autologous MSC and Mononuclear Cells on Diabetic Critical Limb Ischemia and Foot Ulcer | NCT00955669 | MSCs or MNCs transplantation | Intramuscular injection | Diabetic Foot | Phase I | Completed | [ |
| Allogeneic ABCB5-positive Stem Cells for Treatment of DFU “Malum Perforans | NCT03267784 | allogeneic ABCB5-positive MSCs | Topical application | Diabetic Neuropathic Ulcer | Phase I | Completed | [ |
| Therapeutic Potential of Stem Cell Conditioned Medium on Chronic Ulcer Wounds | NCT04134676 | hWJ-MSC conditioned media | Topical application | chronic skin ulcers | Phase I | Completed | |
| Safety of MSC Extracellular Vesicles (BM-MSC-EVs) for the Treatment of Burn Wounds | NCT05078385 | AGLE-102 (BM-MSCs- derived EVs) | Direct application | 2nd degree burn | Phase I | Not yet recruiting |
Clinical Trials that utilized MSCs in peripheral limb ischemia.
| Study | Clinical Trial Identifier | Intervention | Delivery Method | Disease | Phase | Status | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cellular therapy with Ixmyelocel-T to treat critical limb ischemia: RESTORE-CLI trial | BM-MSC | Intramuscular injections | PLI patients with no options for revascularization | Phase II | Completed | [ | |
| Comparison of BM-MSC for treatment of diabetic critical limb ischemia and foot ulcer: | IM BM-MSCs | Intramuscular injection | Diabetic patients with bilateral CLI and foot ulcer | [ | |||
| The safety and efficacy of allogeneic BM-MSC in critical limb ischemia | NCT00883870 | BM-MSCs | Intramuscular injection | Critical limb Ischemia | Phase I | Completed | [ |
| The use of autologous cultured ASC- to treat patients with non-revascularizable CLI | NCT01211028 | Adipose-derived stroma/stem cells | Intramuscular injection | Non-revascularizable critical limb ischemia | Phase I | Completed | [ |
| BM-derived Cell Therapy in Critical Limb Ischemia | Bone marrow-derived stem cells | - | Critical limb ischemia | Meta-analysis | [ | ||
| Autologous Cell Therapy for Peripheral Arterial Disease: | Randomized, Nonrandomized, and Noncontrolled Studies | - | Critical limb ischemia | Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis | [ | ||
| Safety and Efficacy of Allogeneic Adipose Tissue-MSCs in Diabetic Patients with CLI | NCT04466007 | Low and high dose IM Allogeneic ASC | Intramuscular injection | Limb Ischemia Diabetic Foot | Phase II | Recruiting |