| Literature DB >> 35426592 |
Paul Williams1, Catherine Klersy2, Chitra Karki3, Dimitri Bennett3,4, Ana María Rodríguez5, Rachele Ciccocioppo6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Mesenchymal stem (or stromal) cells are a promising therapy for the treatment of various inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. This study aimed to understand awareness, knowledge, and perception of mesenchymal stem cells among gastroenterologists and colorectal surgeons, with particular focus on the perianal fistulizing Crohn's disease indication.Entities:
Keywords: Gastroenterologists/colorectal surgeons; International survey; Mesenchymal stem/stromal cells; Perianal fistulizing Crohn’s disease
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35426592 PMCID: PMC9010938 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-022-02113-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 4.070
Overview of the questionnaire administered to the participating clinicians
| Clinicians’ characteristicsa | Practice setting (academic hospital, district general hospital, other) |
| Primary specialty (gastroenterologists, colorectal surgeons) | |
| Age | |
| Duration of practicing years | |
| Attendance at conferences or congresses for gastroenterology or colorectal surgery in the last 2 years | |
| Attendance at discussions or presentations on MSCs in the last 2 years | |
| Number of patients with inflammatory bowel disease seen per month | |
| Number of patients with Crohn's disease seen per month | |
| Number of patients with perianal fistulizing Crohn's disease seen per month | |
| Awareness questionsa | Current awareness of MSC therapy (never heard, heard of it but don’t know anything about it, limited, moderate, strong awareness) |
| Clinical use questionsb | Already treated patients with MSCs |
| Number of patients treated to date with MSCs | |
| Interest and willingness to use questionsb | Regularly keep up to date with developments in the MSC field |
| Current interest in MSC therapy (no, minimal, moderate, large) | |
| Willingness to use MSCs in the clinical practice setting | |
| Explain why you are willing or not willing to use MSCs | |
| Self-perceived knowledge questionsb | Knowledge (no, limited, familiar, expert) of |
| MSCs in general | |
| Efficacy in patients with perianal fistulizing Crohn’s disease | |
| Safety in patients with perianal fistulizing Crohn’s disease | |
| Mechanism of action in perianal fistulizing Crohn’s disease | |
| Preparation or delivery in perianal fistulizing Crohn’s disease | |
| Objective knowledge questionsb | Approved MSC therapy indications |
| Term that best describes MSC therapy in general | |
| Term that best describes mechanism of action in patients with perianal fistulizing Crohn’s disease | |
| Perception questionsb | Concerns for using MSCs in patients with perianal fistulizing Crohn’s disease |
| Information needed to alleviate concerns | |
| MSCs address unmet need for patients with perianal fistulizing Crohn's disease | |
| Explain why you think MSCs address or do not address unmet needs |
MSCs mesenchymal stem/stromal cells
aShort set of questions administered to all clinicians meeting the inclusion criteria (full analysis set)
bExpanded set of questions administered only to the clinicians with limited, moderate, or strong awareness of MSCs (MSCs awareness subgroup)
Fig. 1Study population accrual. Clinicians were from Australia, Austria, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Japan, Netherlands, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, UK, USA
Fig. 2Level of awareness of MSCs within the full analysis set. The full analysis set included all clinicians agreeing to take part in the survey and meeting the selection criteria (N = 146). MSC mesenchymal stem/stromal cell
Clinicians’ characteristics and clinical experience
| Full analysis set (total = 146) | MSC awareness subgroup (total = 115) | |
|---|---|---|
| Medical specialty | ||
| Number of respondents, | 146 (100) | 115 (100) |
| Gastroenterologist, | 128 (87.7) | 101 (87.8) |
| Colorectal surgeon, | 18 (12.3) | 14 (12.2) |
| Geographic region | ||
| Number of respondents, | 146 (100) | 115 (100) |
| Europe, | 78 (53.4) | 68 (59.1) |
| Americas, | 28 (19.2) | 16 (13.9) |
| Rest of the world, | 40 (27.4) | 31 (27.0) |
| Age (years) | ||
| Number of respondents, | 138 (100) | 112 (100) |
| 25–34 years | 3 (2.2) | 2 (1.8) |
| 35–44 years | 35 (25.4) | 25 (22.3) |
| 45–54 years | 47 (34.1) | 40 (35.7) |
| 55+ years | 53 (38.4) | 45 (40.2) |
| Number of years practicing | ||
| Number of respondents, | 137 (100) | 112 (100) |
| < 5 years, | 3 (2.2) | 2 (1.8) |
| 5–10 years, | 12 (8.8) | 8 (7.1) |
| > 10 years, | 122 (89.1) | 102 (91.1) |
| Type of institution | ||
| Number of respondents, | 146 (100) | 115 (100) |
| District general hospital, | 22 (15.1) | 16 (13.9) |
| Academic hospital, | 93 (63.7) | 83 (72.2) |
| Private practice, | 23 (15.8) | 11 (9.6) |
| Research laboratory, | 1 (0.7) | 1 (0.9) |
| Other, | 7 (4.8) | 4 (3.5) |
| Patients with inflammatory bowel disease seen per month | ||
| Number of respondents, | 132 (100) | 110 (100) |
| Mean (SD) | 91.2 (113.7) | 101.8 (119.9) |
| Median (P25, P75) | 50 (15.0, 120.0) | 60 (20.0, 120.0) |
| Min–max patients per cliniciana | 0.0–600.0 | 0.0–120.0 |
| Number of patients with Crohn’s disease seen per month | ||
| Number of respondents, | 130 (100) | 109 (100) |
| Mean (SD) | 43.1 (53.4) | 48.7 (56.4) |
| Median (P25, P75) | 20 (10.0, 50.0) | 30 (10.0, 60.0) |
| Min–max patients per cliniciana | 0.0–300.0 | 0.0–300.0 |
| Number of patients with perianal fistulizing Crohn’s disease seen per year | ||
| Number of respondents, | 130 (100) | 109 (100) |
| Mean (SD) | 24.1 (39.8) | 27.5 (42.5) |
| Median (P25, P75) | 10 (5.0, 30.0) | 10 (5.0, 30.0) |
| Min–max patients per cliniciana | 0.0–250.0 | 0.0–250.0 |
| Attendance of any of the following in the past 2 years | ||
| Number of respondents, | 135 (100) | 110 (100) |
| Gastroenterology/colorectal surgery conferences, | 130 (96.3) | 108 (98.2) |
| Number of respondents, | 136 (100) | 112 (100) |
| Discussion or presentation on MSC therapy, | 83 (61.0) | 81 (72.3) |
The full analysis set included all clinicians agreeing to take part in the survey and meeting all the selection criteria (N = 146). The MSC awareness subgroup included clinicians reporting limited, moderate, or strong awareness of MSCs (N = 115)
MSC mesenchymal stem/stromal cell, P25/75 25th/75th percentile, SD standard deviation
aThis was an open question with no suggested range options. Therefore, this data is to be interpreted with caution as it may be susceptible to errors in responding (e.g., clinicians in large practice centers reporting the number of patients at the center rather than patients they personally see). To limit this potential bias, study interpretations are based on the non-parametric statistics that are less affected by single data point anomalies
Fig. 3Self-perceived knowledge within the MSCs awareness subgroup. The MSC awareness subgroup included clinicians reporting limited, moderate, or strong awareness of MSCs (N = 115). MSCs mesenchymal stem/stromal cells
Fig. 4Objective knowledge among clinicians within the MSC awareness subgroup: a term that best describes MSC therapy (N = 104); b term that best describes the mechanism of action of MSCs for patients with perianal fistulizing Crohn's disease (N = 105). The MSC awareness subgroup was defined as clinicians reporting limited, moderate, or strong awareness of MSCs (N = 115). Dark gray bars indicate the choices considered by authors as the most appropriate responses among the options provided. MSCs mesenchymal stem/stromal cells
Fig. 5Types of concerns using MSCs in the perianal fistulizing Crohn’s disease indication. Responses provided by 47 of the 49 clinicians who stated having concerns using this therapy. MSCs mesenchymal stem/stromal cells
Multivariable logistic regression for associations between clinicians’ characteristics and level of awareness of MSCs
| OR | CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Geographic region vs Europea | 0.3150b | ||
| Americas | 0.28 | 0.04–1.74 | 0.1713 |
| Rest of world | 1.08 | 0.28–4.17 | 0.9163 |
| Institution type vs academic hospitala | 0.2715b | ||
| District general hospital | 0.32 | 0.08–1.35 | 0.1225 |
| Other | 1.17 | 0.25–5.33 | 0.8437 |
| Medical specialty vs gastroenterologistsa | |||
| Colorectal surgeons | 2.04 | 0.48–8.68 | 0.3357 |
| Number of years practicing vs ≤ 10 yearsa | 0.1862b | ||
| 11–20 years | 2.27 | 0.31–16.34 | 0.4172 |
| > 20 years | 4.95 | 0.70–34.92 | 0.1083 |
| Attendance at discussion/presentation on MSCs in last 2 years vs noa | 18.64 | 4.59–75.74 | < 0.0001 |
| Increasing number of patients with perianal fistulizing Crohn’s disease seen per yeara | 1.08 | 1.04–1.12 | 0.0002 |
Multivariable logistic regression performed among clinicians within the full analysis set who had no missing responses (N = 130). The full analysis set included all clinicians agreeing to take part to the survey and meeting all the selection criteria
CI 95% confidence interval, MSCs mesenchymal stem/stromal cells, OR odds ratio
aObservations with missing responses are not included
bWald chi-square test and associated P value indicate significance of overall variable to model
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| Mesenchymal stem (or stromal) cells (MSCs) are a promising therapy for the treatment of various inflammatory and autoimmune diseases, but their uptake in routine clinical practice is lagging behind. |
| An international survey was conducted to understand clinicians’ awareness, knowledge, and perception of MSCs, with particular focus on the perianal fistulizing Crohn’s disease indication. |
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| The majority of surveyed gastroenterologists and colorectal surgeons were aware of MSC therapy, were willing to use it to treat perianal fistulizing Crohn’s disease, and believed it can address unmet needs for these patients. |
| There was a general suboptimal knowledge of MSC efficacy, safety, and mechanism of action, and many clinicians expressed concerns about using this therapy in routine practice. |
| The most common types of information requested to alleviate concerns were published data from clinical trials or real-world studies and conference or congress presentations. |