| Literature DB >> 35955628 |
Hua-Min Zhang1,2, Shuo Yuan1,2, Huan Meng2, Xiao-Ting Hou2, Jiao Li2,3, Jia-Chen Xue2,3, You Li2, Qi Wang2, Ji-Xing Nan1, Xue-Jun Jin1, Qing-Gao Zhang2.
Abstract
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic, relapsing disease that severely affects patients' quality of life. The exact cause of IBD is uncertain, but current studies suggest that abnormal activation of the immune system, genetic susceptibility, and altered intestinal flora due to mucosal barrier defects may play an essential role in the pathogenesis of IBD. Unfortunately, IBD is currently difficult to be wholly cured. Thus, more treatment options are needed for different patients. Stem cell therapy, mainly including hematopoietic stem cell therapy and mesenchymal stem cell therapy, has shown the potential to improve the clinical disease activity of patients when conventional treatments are not effective. Stem cell therapy, an emerging therapy for IBD, can alleviate mucosal inflammation through mechanisms such as immunomodulation and colonization repair. Clinical studies have confirmed the effectiveness of stem cell transplantation in refractory IBD and the ability to maintain long-term remission in some patients. However, stem cell therapy is still in the research stage, and its safety and long-term efficacy remain to be further evaluated. This article reviews the upcoming stem cell transplantation methods for clinical application and the results of ongoing clinical trials to provide ideas for the clinical use of stem cell transplantation as a potential treatment for IBD.Entities:
Keywords: Crohn’s disease; hematopoietic stem cells; inflammatory bowel disease; mesenchymal stem cells; stem cell therapy; ulcerative colitis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35955628 PMCID: PMC9368934 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23158494
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Intestinal mucosal barrier function.
Figure 2Regulation of oxidative stress through Nrf2 signaling pathway.
Figure 3Regulation of angiogenesis.
Summary of novel medications intended for the management of IBD.
| Treatments | Molecule Group | Compound | Mechanisms of Action | Limitations | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small molecule medications | Amino Salicylate | 5-ASA | Antibacterial action | Adverse gastrointestinal events: nausea, and vomiting | [ |
| Glucocorticoids | Prednisone | Interact with glucocorticoid receptors in the nucleus | Osteoporosis, systemic edema, infections, and a high drug dependence | [ | |
| Inhibit the expression of adhesion molecules | |||||
| Prevent the transport of inflammatory cells to the intestine | |||||
| Immunomodulators | Methotrexate | Inhibit several enzymes involved in the folate metabolic pathway | Nausea, vomiting, fatigue, diarrhea, leucopenia, liver fibrosis, allergic pneumonia, teratogenicity, and certain nephrotoxicity | [ | |
| Play an anti-inflammatory role by inhibiting the production of IL-1, IL-2, IL-6, and IL-8 | |||||
| Biological agents | Tumor necrosis factor inhibitors | Infliximab | Affect the downstream effects of TNF on cytokines, chemokines, acute phase reactants, apoptosis, and inflammation | Some patients present primary resistance, and may increase the risk of certain uncommon classes of infections and malignancies | [ |
| Integrin receptor antagonists | Natalizumab | Induce and maintaining clinical remission of CD through anti-α4 integrins interacts with VCAM-1 | Affect cerebral antiviral immunity, and can cause a fatal brain infection due to the reactivation of the JC virus | [ | |
| Interleukin antagonists | Ustekinumab | Bind to the p40 subunit shared by both and preventing its binding to the IL-12β1 receptor on the cell surface | Potential risks are not known | [ | |
| Inhibit pro-inflammatory cytokines | |||||
| Reduce T-cell activation |
Different types, mechanisms, advantages, and disadvantages of HSCT for IBD.
| Types | Mechanism | Advantage | Deficiency | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Autologous HSCT | The removal of reactive T-lymphocytes by chemotherapy and replacing them with more immune-tolerant lymphocytes to rebuild the immune system | Provide long-term remission | It is not possible to change the patient’s genetic susceptibility at the genetic level | [ |
| Allogeneic HSCT | A complete replacement of the recipient’s immune cells with the donor’s immune cells | Alter the patient’s susceptibility to IBD at the genetic level | High lethality, and increases the set of risks of graft rejection | [ |
The mechanism of action of MSC transplantation in the treatment of IBD.
| Biological Effects | Mechanism of Action | References |
|---|---|---|
| Local microcirculation construction | Differentiation into vascular endothelial cells, and form vessel like structures in vitro | [ |
| Induce EC proliferation by producing multiple angiogenic factors | [ | |
| Directly secrete and paracrine a variety of cytokines | [ | |
| Fixation repair | Activate the Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway, increase the number of Lgr5+ ISCs | [ |
| Repair the integrity of the intestinal epithelial barrier through recombinant cellular | [ | |
| Inhibit apoptosis | [ | |
| Immunomodulation | Alter the macrophage phenotype from M1 to M2 | [ |
| Upregulate Gal-1 expression, inhibit DC maturation, in-crease anti-inflammatory factors, diminish T-cell activation | [ | |
| Regulate the ratio of Th1 to Th2 | [ | |
| Adjust the balance between Th17/Tregs | [ |
Clinical trials in stem cell-based therapies for Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
| Disease | Clinical Indication | Source of Stem Cells | Number of Patients Enrolled | Follow-Up Period | Outcome | Author and Time | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Refractory CD | Have failed treatment with corticosteroids, mesalamine, met- ronidazole, azathioprine (or 6-mercaptopurine), and mono- clonal antibody to TNF receptor (infliximab). | Autologous HSCT | 12 | 7–37 months | 11 patients entered a sustained remission. After a median follow-up of 18.5 months, only 1 patient has developed a recurrence of active CD, which occurred 15 months after HSCT | Oyama, Y. et al., 2005 | [ |
| Severe CD | Refractory to conventional therapies including anti-TNF inhibitor | Autologous nonmyeloablative HSCT | 24 | 1–5 years | Eighteen of 24 patients are 5 or more years after transplantation | Burt, R.K. et al., 2010 | [ |
| Active moderate-severe CD | Refractory or intolerant to various conventional treatment schedules including corticosteroids and at least 2 immunosuppressors | Autologous HSCT | 7 | 1 year | Most of whom showed clinical and endoscopic complete remission and were maintained for one year without further treatment | Clerici, M. et al., 2011 | [ |
| Refractory CD | Intolerance or failure of conventional therapies including immunosuppressors and at least one anti-TNF antibody | High-dose immunosuppression and autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (autoPBSCT) | 12 | 0.5–10.3 years | 5 patients achieved a clinical and endoscopic remission within 6 months after autoPBSCT. However, relapses occurred in 7/9 patients during follow-up, but disease activity could be controlled by low-dose corticosteroids and conventional immunosuppressive therapy | Hasselblatt, P. et al., 2012 | [ |
| Refractory CD | Treatment with 3 or more immunosuppressants or biological agents and corticosteroids leads to impaired quality of life and is not suitable for surgery | Autologous HSCT | 45 | 1 year | Compared with conventional therapy, did not result in a statistically significant improvement in sustained disease remission at 1 year and was associated with significant toxicity | Hawkey, C.J. et al., 2015 | [ |
| Early onset IBD | IL-10 gene defect | Allogeneic HSCT | 66 | 2 years | Allogeneic HSCT was performed in 5 patients to induce sustained clinical remission | Kotlarz, D. et al., 2012 | [ |
| Refractory IBD | 4 CD, 3 UC | Allogeneic MSCT | 7 | Mean 19 mouths | Diarrhea frequency and abdominal pain/ cramps gradually improved in all the seven patients, accompanied by a significant reduction in CD Activity Index scores in CD patients and Clinical Activity Index scores in UC patients | Liang, J. et al., | [ |
| Luminal CD | With infliximab- or adalimumab-refractory, endoscopically confirmed | Allogeneic MSCT | 16 | 42 days | In a phase 2 study, administration of allogeneic MSCs reduced CDAI and CDEIS scores in patients with luminal CD refractory to biologic therapy | Forbes, G.M. et al., 2013 | [ |
| CD | Had a recurrent rectovaginal fistula | ASCs | 1 | 3 mouths | Since the surgical procedure 3 month ago the patient has not experienced vaginal flatus | Garcia-Olmo, D. et al., 2003 | [ |
| Complex perianal fistulas | Had a complex perianal fistula (either of cryptoglandular origin or associated with CD) with a visible external opening. | Administration of expanded ASCs in combination with fibrin glue | 24 | 1 year | Combination therapy appears to achieve higher rates of healing than fibrin glue alone | Garcia-Olmo, D. et al., 2009 | [ |
| perianal fistulas | Had received at least one dose of treatment (ASCs plus fibrin glue or fibrin glue alone) | ASCs plus fibrin glue or fibrin glue alone | 49 | 3 years | A low proportion of the stem cell-treated patients with closure after the procedure remained free of recurrence after more than 3 years of follow-up | Guadalajara, H. et al., 2011 | [ |
| complex fistula-in-ano | Complex fistula-in-ano | A dose of 20 or 60 million ASCs alone or in combination with fibrin glue | 200 | 1 year | Achieving healing rates of approximately 40% at 6 months and of more than 50% at 1-year follow-up | Herreros, M.D. et al., 2012 | [ |