| Literature DB >> 35208590 |
Daisuke Sakai1, Jordy Schol1, Masahiko Watanabe1.
Abstract
Low back pain is critical health, social, and economic issue in modern societies. This disease is often associated with intervertebral disc degeneration; however, contemporary treatments are unable to target this underlying pathology to alleviate the pain symptoms. Cell therapy offers a promising novel therapeutic that, in theory, should be able to reduce low back pain through mitigating the degenerative disc environment. With the clinical development of cell therapeutics ongoing, this review aims to summarize reporting on the different clinical trials and assess the different regenerative strategies being undertaken to collectively obtain an impression on the potential safety and effectiveness of cell therapeutics against intervertebral disc-related diseases.Entities:
Keywords: cell therapy; clinical trials; degeneration; intervertebral disc; low back pain; minimally invasive surgery; regeneration; spine; stem cells
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35208590 PMCID: PMC8878570 DOI: 10.3390/medicina58020267
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Figure 1Illustration depicting (A) a healthy IVD with hydrated nucleus pulposus (NP) and organized annulus fibrosus (AF), (B) subsequent degenerative cascade resulting in AF disorganization loss of NP hydration, endplate vascularization, and disc height, and (C) Injection of de novo cells into the NP and their three proposed potential therapeutic mechanisms; i.e., (i) attraction of regenerative cells or limiting catabolic/inflammatory cells into the IVD, (ii) reactive and directing local cells to produce extracellular matrix (ECM), and (iii) integration into the IVD and contribution to ECM production directly.
Figure 2Illustrative plot depicting the contemporary treatment gap for low back pain associated with disc degeneration, in which only treatment options are available (oval) in either the mild or severe disc degeneration and low back pain range. New proposed techniques (blocks) likely will be most effective at different stages of degeneration and are likely less invasive than the surgical intervention currently employed.
Overview of reported clinical trials, case series, and case reports on cell transplantation for IVD repair.
| Trial Design | Outcomes | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sponsor, | Trial Type | Control | Product | Dose (Cell/mL) | Cohort (n) | FU | Pain | Disability | MRI | SAE | |
| Mesenchymal Stromal Cells | Piccirilli [ | Case series | None | AD-MSC | ns/~1 mL | 8 | 1 | Trend of VAS improvement | Trend of ODI improvement | 80% of disc regained signal intensity | None |
| Kumar | PhaseI/IIa trial | None | AD-MSC | 20 × 106/ | 5 | 1 | Significantly enhanced VAS | Significantly enhanced ODI and SF-36 | 3/10 patients presented enhanced intensity | None | |
| 40 × 106/ | 5 | ||||||||||
| Henriksson [ | Prospective study | None | BM-MSC | 1 × 106/ns | 10 | <3 | - | - | - | Calcium deposits observed in 1/4 patients | |
| Wang | Prospective study | None | BM-MSC | 4 × 1 × 106 (/kg BW)/10 mL * | 31 | <1 | - | - | Ankylosing spondylitis features mitigated | None | |
| Elabd | Unspecified | None | BM-MSC | 31 (±14) × 106/0.25–1 mL PL | 5 | 6 | - | Trend of improvement in strength and mobility | - | None | |
| Yoshikawa [ | Case series | None | BM-MSC | ns/ns | 2 | 2 | Trend of VAS improvement | Trend of amended JOA scores | Trend increased signal intensity | None | |
| Citospin/TerCel, | RCT, blinded, phase I/II | Paravertebral muscle anesthesia | BM-MSC | 25 × 106/ | 12 | 1 | Significant VAS improvement, significantly higher than control | Significant ODI improvement, significantly higher than control | Significantly enhanced Pfirrmann grading while worsening in control | None | |
| ITRT, | Phase I/II trial | None | BM-MSC | 10 (±5) × 106/ns | 10 | 1 | Significant VAS improvement | Significant ODI and SF-36 improvements | Significant increase in signal intensity | None | |
| Regenexx, | Prospective study | None | BM-MSC + PL | 1–3 × 106/10–20% PL 1–2 mL, +3–5 mL PL (epidural) | 33 | 7 | Significant NPS improvement | Trend of FRI score improvement | 85% showed reduction in disc bulge size | None | |
| Mesoblast, | RCT, blinded, phase II | (1) Saline | BM-MSC | 6 × 106/2 mL HA | 30 | 2 | Significant VAS improvement, significantly higher than sham control | Significant ODI improvement, significantly higher than sham control | No clear difference in Pfirrmann grades | 8/60 SAE compared to 4/40 in control, 1 case of discitis | |
| 18 × 106/2 mL HA | 30 | ||||||||||
| Pang [ | Case series | None | UC-MSC | 10 × 106/1 mL | 2 | 2 | Trend of VAS improvement | Trend of ODI improvement | 1/2 patients showed increase in signal intensity | None | |
| Chondrogenic cells | NOVOCART®, | RCT, blinded phase I/II | PEG-HA injection | IVD cells | ns/0.5–2 mL PEG-HA | 12 | <1 | - | - | No improvements reported | None |
| Meisel [ | RCT | Sequestrectomy only | IVD cells + Sequestrectomy | ns/ns | 22 | >5 | Trend of VAS improvement compared to control | Trend of ODI improvement compared to control | Significant improvement signal intensity compared to control | None | |
| Mochida [ | Case series | None | IVD cells | 1 × 106/0.7 mL | 9 | 3 | Trend of LBP subscale improvement | Trend of JOA improvement | Signal intensity maintained. 1/9 showed Pfirrmann-grade improvement | None | |
| NuQu®, | Phase I trial | None | AC | 10–20 × 106/1–2 mL | 15 | 1 | Significant NRS improvement | Significant ODI and SF-36 improvements | 10/13 patients presented MRI ameliorations | None | |
| Vivex Biomedical, | RCT, crossover study | (1) placebo, (2) conservative care | “Spine-derived” cells in NP tissue allograft | >6 × 106/1.25–1.75 mL NP allograft | 140 (+37) ** | 1 | Significant VAS improvement, not different from placebo group | Significant ODI improvement, not different from placebo group, unless stratified for younger patients (<42 y) | - | 11 SAE in allograft and 1 in crossover cohort, 6 considered treatment related; including osteomyelitis and bacteremia | |
| Other/Combined | Bioheart, | Prospective study | None | SVF + PRP (Autologous) | 30–60 × 106/1–3 mL PRP | 15 | 1 | Trend of VAS and pain rating improvements | Minimal improvements in disability and QoL scores | - | None |
| Pettine [ | Prospective study | None | BMC | 1–2 × 242–363 × 106/2–3 mL | 26 | 3 | Significant VAS improvements | Significant ODI improvements | 40% present Pfirrmann-grade improvement | None | |
| Subach | Case report | None | BMA + Adipose tissue + Plasma | ns/3 mL | 1 | 1 | - | - | - | Disc extrusion, discitis with osteomyelitis requiring in emergency surgery | |
| Haufe | Prospective study | None | HSC | ns/ns | 10 | 1 | No pain improvement | - | - | None | |
* Cells administered per intravenous infusion as opposed to an intradiscal injection, ** following crossover. Abbreviations: AC; articular cartilage cells, AD; adipose derived, BM; bone marrow derived, BMA; bone marrow aspirate, BMC; bone marrow concentrate, BW; body weight, FRI; functional index rating, FU; maximum follow-up time, HA; hyaluronic acid, HSC; hematopoietic stem cells, ITRT; Instituto de Terapia Regenerativa Tissular, IVD; intervertebral disc, JOA; Japanese orthopaedic association, MRI; magnetic resonance imaging, NP; nucleus pulposus, NPS; numerical pain score, ns; not specified, ODI; Oswestry disability index, PEG; polyethylene glycol, PL; platelet lysate, PRP; platelet-rich plasma, QoL; quality of life, RCT: randomized controlled clinical trial SAE; serious adverse events, SF; short form, SVF; stromal vascular fraction, UC; umbilical cord derived, VAS; visual analog (pain) score.
Figure 3(A) NP cell suspension after coculture with autologous MSC for 1 week. (B) Cells are injected into adjacent segments with moderate degeneration next to the fused disc via fluoroscopic visualization. (C) A needle injectable access provides an advantage compared to other target organs for the application of regenerative medicine as the patient does not require surgical exposure for receiving their regenerative medicinal product.