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Umbilical Cord Blood and Cord Tissue-Derived Cell Therapies for Neonatal Morbidities: Current Status and Future Challenges

期刊

STEM CELLS TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
卷 11, 期 2, 页码 135-145

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/stcltm/szab024

关键词

umbilical cord blood stem cells; umbilical cord tissue-derived cells; cell therapy

资金

  1. European Society for Paediatric Research (ESPR)

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Cell therapies using umbilical cord blood and cord tissue have emerged as a promising approach for preventing and treating neonatal morbidities. Published clinical studies mainly focus on safety and feasibility, with limited assessment of efficacy. There are ongoing trials investigating the potential of these therapies in neonates.
Cell therapies are an emerging focus for neonatal research, with benefits documented for neonatal respiratory, neurological, and cardiac conditions in pre-clinical studies. Umbilical cord blood (UCB) and umbilical cord (UC) tissue-derived cell therapy is particularly appealing for preventative or regenerative treatment of neonatal morbidities; they are a resource that can be collected at birth and used as an autologous or allogeneic therapy. Moreover, UCB contains a diverse mix of stem and progenitor cells that demonstrate paracrine actions to mitigate damaging inflammatory, immune, oxidative stress, and cell death pathways in several organ systems. In the past decade, published results from early-phase clinical studies have explored the use of these cells as a therapeutic intervention in neonates. We present a systematic review of published and registered clinical trials of UCB and cord tissue-derived cell therapies for neonatal morbidities. This search yielded 12 completed clinical studies: 7 were open-label phase I and II safety and feasibility trials, 3 were open-label dose-escalation trials, 1 was a open-label placebo-controlled trial, and 1 was a phase II randomized controlled trial. Participants totaled 206 infants worldwide; 123 (60%) were full-term infants and 83 (40%) were preterm. A majority (64.5%) received cells via an intravenous route; however, 54 (26.2%) received cells via intratracheal administration, 10 (4.8%) intraoperative cardiac injection, and 9 (4.3%) by direct intraventricular (brain) injection. Assessment of efficacy to date is limited given completed studies have principally been phase I and II safety studies. A further 24 trials investigating UCB and UC-derived cell therapies in neonates are currently registered.

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