4.2 Review

Cell-based therapies for cardiac disease: a cellular therapist's perspective

Journal

TRANSFUSION
Volume 55, Issue 2, Pages 441-451

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/trf.12826

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Funding

  1. NIBIB NIH HHS [R21 EB019509] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIGMS NIH HHS [R01 GM118300] Funding Source: Medline
  3. BLRD VA [I01 BX002337] Funding Source: Medline

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Cell-based therapy is an exciting, promising, and a developing new treatment for cardiac diseases. Stem cell-based therapies have the potential to fundamentally transform the treatment of ischemic cardiac injury and heart failure by achieving what would have been unthinkable only a few years agothe Holy Grail of myocardial regeneration. Recent therapeutic approaches involve bone marrow (BM)-derived mononuclear cells and their subsets such as mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs), endothelial progenitor cells as well as adipose tissue-derived MSCs, cardiac tissue-derived stem cells, and cell combinations. Clinical trials employing these cells have demonstrated that cellular therapy is feasible and safe. Regarding delivery methods, the safety of catheter-based, transendocardial and -epicardial stem cell injection has been established. However, the results, while variable, suggest rather modest clinical efficacy overall in both heart failure and ischemic heart disease, such as in acute myocardial infarction. Future studies will focus on determining the most efficacious cell type(s) and/or cell combinations and the most reasonable indications and optimal timing of transplantation, as well as the mechanisms underlying their therapeutic effects. We will review and summarize the clinical trial results to date. In addition, we discuss challenges and operational issues in cell processing for cardiac applications.

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