Autologous Cultured Bone Marrow-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells in a Fibrin Spray to Treat Venous Ulcers: A Randomized Controlled Double-Blind Pilot Study
Author
Other authors
Publication date
2021ISSN
1090-3941
Abstract
We treated a small cohort of venous ulcers that were very unresponsive to standard and advanced therapies
with autologous cultured bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). This pilot clinical
trial was randomized, controlled, and double-blinded. Subjects were treated with either normal saline
(Group A), fibrin spray alone (Group B), or MSCs in fibrin (1 million cells/cm2 of wound bed surface)
(Group C). The control and test materials were applied to the wound using a double-barreled syringe with
thrombin and fibrinogen (with or without MSCs) in each barrel, or saline alone in both barrels. The MSCs
were separated, cultured in vitro, and expanded in a dedicated Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) facility
from 30-50 ml of bone marrow aspirate obtained from the iliac crest in Group C subjects. To ensure that the
study remained controlled and blinded, subjects who were randomized to one of the two control arms
(saline or fibrin) underwent sham bone marrow aspiration performed by a hematologist who anesthetized the iliac crest area down to and pushing against the periosteum, but without penetrating the bone marrow.
Therefore, both the clinician who evaluated wound progress and the study subjects had no knowledge of
whether bone aspiration was actually performed and what treatment had been applied to the wound. The
study was performed after full FDA investigational new drug (IND) approval. The primary endpoint was the
rate of healing (wound closure as linear healing from the wound margins in cm/week), as measured by the
Gilman equation. One-way ANOVA was used to calculate the statistical significance of differences between
the mean healing rates of each of the 3 treatment groups every 4 weeks and over the 24 weeks of treatment.
Overall, treatment with MSCs accelerated the healing rate by about 10-fold compared to those in the saline
and fibrin control groups. Although the total number of patients in this pilot study was small (n=11), the statistical
significance was surprisingly promising: p<0.01 and f-ratio of 15.9358. No serious adverse events were
noted. This small but carefully performed prospective, controlled, randomized, and double-blinded pilot
study in a rare population of totally unresponsive patients adds to previous reports showing the promise of
MSCs in the treatment of chronic wounds and provides proof of principle for how to approach this type of
very demanding clinical and translational research.
Document Type
Article
Language
English
Keywords
Úlceres
Cèl·lules mare
Pages
8 p.
Publisher
Surgical Technology International
Citation
Falanga, V., Grada, A., Otero-Vinas, M., Lin, X., Yufit, T., David F., Carson, P. (2022). Autologous Cultured Bone Marrow-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells in a Fibrin Spray to Treat Venous Ulcers: A Randomized Controlled Double-Blind Pilot Study. Surgical Technology International, 19(40), 47-54. https://doi.org/10.52198/22.STI.40.WH1493
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Articles [1389]
Rights
Tots els drets reservats