1. Cell distribution after intracoronary bone marrow stem cell delivery in damaged and undamaged myocardium: implications for clinical trials.
- Author
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Forest, Virginie F., Tirouvanziam, Ashok M., Perigaud, Christian, Fernandes, Sarah, Fusellier, Marion S., Desfontis, Jean-Claude, Toquet, Claire S., Heymann, Marie-Françoise M, Crochet, Dominique P., and Lemarchand, Patricia F.
- Subjects
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BONE marrow , *STEM cell treatment , *HEART cells , *MYOCARDIAL infarction , *MYOCARDIUM - Abstract
Introduction: Early randomized clinical trials of autologous bone marrow cardiac stem cell therapy have reported contradictory results highlighting the need for a better evaluation of protocol designs. This study was designed to quantify and compare whole body and heart cell distribution after intracoronary or peripheral intravenous injection of autologous bone marrow mononuclear cells in a porcine acute myocardial infarction model with late reperfusion. Methods: Myocardial infarction was induced using balloon infl ation in the left coronary artery in domestic pigs. At seven days post-myocardial infarction, 1×10(8) autologous bone marrow mononuclear cells were label ed with fl uorescent marker and/or 99mTc radiotracer, and delivered using intracoronary or peripheral intravenous injection (leg vein). Results: Scintigraphic analyses and ?-emission radioactivity counting of harvested organs showed a signifi cant cell fraction retained within the heart after intracoronary injection (6 ± 1.7% of injected radioactivity at 24 hours), whereas following peripheral intravenous cell injection, no cardiac homing was observed at 24 hours and cells were mainly detected within the lungs. Importantly, no diff erence was observed in the percentage of retained cells within the myocardium in the presence or absence of myocardial infarction. Histological evaluation did not show arterial occlusion in both animal groups and confi rmed the presence of bone marrow mononuclear cells within the injected myocardium area. Conclusions: Intravenous bone marrow mononuclear cell injection was ineff ective to target myocardium. Myocardial cell distribution following intracoronary injection did not depend on myocardial infarction presence, a factor that could be useful for cardiac cell therapy in patients with chronic heart failure of non-ischemic origin or with ischemic myocardium without myocardial infarction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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