| Literature DB >> 35841079 |
Lichao Yao1, Xue Hu1, Kai Dai1, Mengqin Yuan1, Pingji Liu1, Qiuling Zhang1, Yingan Jiang2.
Abstract
Liver fibrosis is a wound-healing process that occurs in response to severe injuries and is hallmarked by the excessive accumulation of extracellular matrix or scar tissues within the liver. Liver fibrosis can be either acute or chronic and is induced by a variety of hepatotoxic causes, including lipid deposition, drugs, viruses, and autoimmune reactions. In advanced fibrosis, liver cirrhosis develops, a condition for which there is no successful therapy other than liver transplantation. Although liver transplantation is still a viable option, numerous limitations limit its application, including a lack of donor organs, immune rejection, and postoperative complications. As a result, there is an immediate need for a different kind of therapeutic approach. Recent research has shown that the administration of mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) is an attractive treatment modality for repairing liver injury and enhancing liver regeneration. This is accomplished through the cell migration into liver sites, immunoregulation, hepatogenic differentiation, as well as paracrine mechanisms. MSCs can also release a huge variety of molecules into the extracellular environment. These molecules, which include extracellular vesicles, lipids, free nucleic acids, and soluble proteins, exert crucial roles in repairing damaged tissue. In this review, we summarize the characteristics of MSCs, representative clinical study data, and the potential mechanisms of MSCs-based strategies for attenuating liver cirrhosis. Additionally, we examine the processes that are involved in the MSCs-dependent modulation of the immune milieu in liver cirrhosis. As a result, our findings lend credence to the concept of developing a cell therapy treatment for liver cirrhosis that is premised on MSCs. MSCs can be used as a candidate therapeutic agent to lengthen the survival duration of patients with liver cirrhosis or possibly reverse the condition in the near future.Entities:
Keywords: Exosome; Immunomodulatory effects; Liver cirrhosis; Mesenchymal stromal cells; Paracrine effects; Trans-differentiation
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35841079 PMCID: PMC9284869 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-022-03001-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 8.079
Completed clinical trials using MSCs transplantation to treat liver cirrhosis, registered under ClinicalTrials.gov
| NCT number | Dates | Conditions | Study phase | Interventions | Cell source | No. of patients | Primary outcome measures | Locations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT01342250 | 2010.10–2011.10 | Liver Cirrhosis | Phase 1 Phase 2 | Conventional therapy plus hUC-MSCs treatment | hUC-MSCs | 20 | Overall Survival | China |
| NCT01591200 | 2021.06–2016.04 | Alcoholic Liver Cirrhosis | Phase 2 | Allogeneic MSCs injected through the hepatic artery | BM-MSCs | 40 | Safety | India |
| NCT01875081 | 2012.11–2016.03 | Alcoholic Liver Cirrhosis | Phase 2 | 5*107 autologous BM-MSCs injected through the hepatic artery | BM-MSCs | 72 | Histopathological evaluation | Korea |
| NCT01220492 | 2009.05–2016.04 | Liver Cirrhosis | Phase 1 Phase 2 | Taken i.v. once per 4 weeks, at a dose of 0.5*106 MSC/kg body for 8 weeks | UC-MSCs | 266 | 1.Survival time; 2. Incidence of HCC events | China |
| NCT00420134 | 2006.02–2009.06 | Liver Failure Cirrhosis | Phase 1 Phase 2 | Progenitor of hepatocyte derived from Mesenchymal stem cell injected into portal vein | From the end-stage liver disease | 30 | 1.Liver function test; 2. MELD score | Iran |
| NCT04243681 | 2019.07–2020.09 | Liver Cirrhosis | Phase 4 | MSCs and Hematopoietic Stem cell injected through hepatic artery | CD34 + cell and MSCs | 5 | Safety | India |
| NCT01454336 | 2010.06–2013.07 | Liver Fibrosis | Phase 1 | Autologous MSCs injected via portal vein; 30 mg pioglitazone daily for 24 months | BM-MSCs | 3 | 1. ALT, AST, Serum Albumin levels; 2. The decrease in grade of liver fibrosis | Iran |
| NCT01062750 | 2012.10–2015.05 | Liver Cirrhosis | Not Applicable | Autologous AT-MSCs via intrahepatic arterial catheterization | AT-MSCs | 4 | All cause harmful events | Japan |
Fig. 1Pathogenesis of liver cirrhosis. Liver fibrosis is initiated by hepatic injury and the subsequent imbalance of ECM synthesis and degradation mediated by activated HSCs. Cirrhosis is the most advanced stage of liver fibrosis. ECM, extracellular matrix; HSCs, hepatic stellate cells; TIMP, tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinase; PDGF, platelet-derived growth factor; TGF-β, transforming growth factor-β
Fig. 2The potential mechanisms of MSCs in liver cirrhosis
Fig. 3Pretreatments enhance the therapeutic effects of MSCs in liver cirrhosis