| Literature DB >> 35664388 |
Emmanouil I Damianakis1, Ioannis S Benetos2, Dimitrios Stergios Evangelopoulos2, Aikaterini Kotroni1, John Vlamis2, Spyridon G Pneumaticos2.
Abstract
Spinal cord injury (SCI) remains an incurable, life-changing neurological condition, causing permanent loss of motor and sensory function in millions of people worldwide and affecting them in every aspect of their personal and social life. In the last two decades, after its success in various fields of medicine, stem cell therapy has been investigated in the research field as a potential treatment for SCI. This review focuses on the pathophysiology of SCI, the characteristics of the different stem cell therapies used for its treatment, and the results of these therapies in recently published clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: cell therapy; clinical trial; functional recovery; paraplegia; spinal cord injury; stem cells; tetraplegia
Year: 2022 PMID: 35664388 PMCID: PMC9148387 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.24575
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Selection process
Summary of clinical trials
ADL: activities of daily living, AIS: the American Spinal Injury Association Impairment Scale, BMSC: bone marrow–derived mesenchymal stromal cell, EMG: electromyography, FIM: functional independence measure, GRASSP: graded redefined assessment of strength, sensation and prehension, HUCBC: human umbilical cord blood cell, huCNS-SC: human central nervous system stem cell, IANR-SCIRFS: International Association of Neural Restoration Spinal Cord Injury Functional Rating Scale, ISCSCI-92: International Standards for Neurological and Functional Classification of Spinal Cord Injury, MEP: motor evoked potential, MRC: Medical Research Council's scale, NCS: Nerve Conduction Studies, NSC: neural stem cell, OEC: olfactory enseathing cell, QoL: quality of life, SC: Schwann cell, SEP: somatosensory evoked potential, SCIM: Spinal Cord Independence Measure, UCMSC: umbilical cord–derived mesenchymal stromal cell, WJ: Wharton jelly
| Author | Phase of clinical trial | Cell origin | Cell type | Dose | Administration route | Number of patients | AIS classification or level of injury | Time from Injury (acute/subacute/chronic phase) | Follow up | Main outcome (functional improvement/adverse effects) |
| Honmou et al. [ | Phase II | Autologous | BMSC (auto-serum expanded) | 84 − 150 × 106 | Intravenous | 13 | AIS A: 6, B: 2, C: 5 | Subacute | 6 months | AIS A→B (3/6 patients), A→C (2/6), B→C (1/2), B→D (1/2), C→D (5/5). Functional improvements according to ISCSCI-92 and SCIM-III scales. |
| Phedy et al. [ | Case report | Autologous | BMSC | 10 − 17 × 106 (× 7 times) | Intrathecal x1 Intravenous x6 | 1 | AIS A T12 | Chronic | 5 years | AIS A→C. Increase in AIS score: 10→30. Increase in MRC score for L1 and L2 innervated muscles: 0/5→3/5. |
| Vaquero et al. [ | Phase II | Autologous | BMSC | 100 × 106 × 3 doses | Intrathecal | 11 | A: 3, B: 4, C: 3, D: 1 | Chronic | 10 months | AIS improvement in 27% of patients. |
| Vaquero et al. [ | Phase II | Autologous | BMSC | 100 × 106 | Intramedullary | 6 | A: 3, B: 2, D: 1 | Chronic | 6 months | AIS improvement in 2 patients. Bowel and bladder function improved. 4 patients improved in NCS findings. |
| Guadala-jara et al. [ | Case report | Autologous | BMSC | 300 × 106 × 3 doses (1/month) | Intrathecal | 1 | AIS A T12 | Chronic | 6 months | Improvement in functionality and especially in Krogh's Neurogenic Bowel Dysfunction scale. |
| Vaquero et al. [ | Phase II | Autologous | BMSC | 30 × 106 × 4 doses | Intrathecal | 10 | Cervical, Thoracic, Lumbar | Chronic | 12 months | AIS Improvement. Motor and sensory scores improved. |
| Deng et al. [ | Phase I | Allogeneic | UCMSC+ Scaffold | 40 × 106 (Collagen scaffold) | Intramedullary | 20 | AIS A Cervical | Acute | 12 months | AIS A→B (9 patients), AIS A→C (2patients). Improvement in ADL scores. Improvement in bowel and bladder function. |
| Yang et al. [ | Phase I/II | Allogeneic | UCMSC | 1 × 106/kg (× 4 times) | Intrathecal | 41 | C1-C7: 24, T1-T9: 7, T10-L1: 10 | Subacute or Chronic | 12 months | Statistical increase in AIS and IANR-SCIRFS scores. Decrease in muscle spasticity. No serious adverse effects. |
| Xiao et al. [ | Phase I | Allogeneic | UCMSC+ Scaffold | 40 × 106 | Intramedullary | 2 | AIS A C4, T11 | Acute | 12 months | AIS A→C in both patients. |
| Albu et al. [ | Phase I/IIa | Allogeneic | WJ-MSC | 10 × 106 | Intrathecal | 10 | T3-T11 | Chronic | 6 months | Significant improvement in pinprick sensation in compared with placebo group. No changes in motor function, independence, QoL, SEPs, MEPs, spasticity or bowel function. |
| Curt et al. [ | Phase I/IIa | Allogeneic (Stemcells Inc.) | huCNS-SC® | 20 × 106 | Intramedullary | 12 | A: 7, B: 5 (T2-T11) | Subacute or Chronic | 6 years | Sensory improvements in 5 out of 12 patients. No motor improvements were observed. |
| Levi et al. [ | Phase I/II | Allogeneic (Stemcells Inc.) | huCNS-SC® | 15 + 30 + 40 × 106(Coh.I) 40 × 106 (Coh.II) | Intramedullary | 17 Cohort I:6, Cohort II:11 6/11 monitored | AIS A, B Cervical | Subacute or Chronic | 12 months | Trial terminated prematurely by sponsor. Improvement in UEMS score. No adverse effects. |
| Levi et al. [ | Phase I/II | Allogeneic (Stemcells Inc.) | huCNS-SC® | 15 − 40 × 106 | Intramedullary | 29 | Cervical: 17 (Cohort I: 6, Cohort II: 11) Thoracic: 12 | Subacute | Up to 56 months | Improvement in AIS motor scores. 15 serious adverse effects in cervical group and 4 in thoracic. |
| Curtis et al. [ | Phase I | Allogeneic (Seneca Biopharma) | NSI-566® | 6 injections (Mean number) | Intramedullary | 4 | AIS A Thoracic | Chronic | 60 months | Improved AIS scores, neurological levels and EMG findings. No improvement in QoL. No serious adverse effects. |
| Zamani et al. [ | Phase I | Autologous | OEC+ BMSC | 15 × 106, OEC/BMSC = 1/1 | Intrathecal | 3 | AIS A | Chronic | 24 months | AIS A→B: 1 and 6 points improvement in SCIM. Mild adverse effects. |
| Gant et al. [ | Phase I | Autologous (sural nerve) | SC | 50 − 200 × 106 (Depended on patient’s cyst volume) | Intramedullary | 8 | Cervical: 4 Thoracic: 4 | Chronic | 5 years | The neurological level improved by 1 level in 1 patient. Improvement in Sensory score in all patients with thoracic and in 2 patients with cervical lesion. |
| Anderson et al. [ | Phase I | Autologous (sural nerve) | SC | 5, 10 or 15 × 106 | Intramedullary | 6 | Thoracic | Subacute | 12 months | AIS A→B:1. Improvement in FIM and SCIM III scores. No adverse effects. |
| Smirnov et al. [ | Phase I/IIa | Allogeneic | HUCBC | 14.8 × 106/kg (Total cell number for 4 infusions) | Intravenous | 10 | A: 6, B: 4 | Acute (within 3 days of Injury) | 12 months | No serious adverse effects related to therapy. AIS A→C: 3, AIS B→D: 2, AIS B→E: 2, AIS A→D: 1 |