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Neurotrophic bone marrow cellular nests prevent spinal motoneuron degeneration in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients: A pilot safety study

Authors :
Salvador Martinez
Francisca Iniesta
Andrés Sánchez-Salinas
José Meca-Lallana
Ramón Villaverde
Maria Juliana Majado
Laura Vivancos
Javier Gil de Bernabé López
María Teresa Pardo Sáez
José M. Moraleda
Miguel A. Pérez-Espejo
Miguel Blanquer
Carmen Antúnez
Julia Guardiola
Pedro de la Rosa
José María García Santos
Juan F. Martínez-Lage
Silvia Torres del Río
Francisco José Ruiz-López
Rafael Carles
Pedro De Mingo
Joaquín Hernández
Virginia Izura
Patricia Bleda
Judith Jiménez
Joaquín Gómez-Espuch
Source :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
AlphaMed Press, 2012.

Abstract

Martínez, Salvador [et al.]<br />The objective of this article is to assess the safety of intraspinal infusion of autologous bone marrow mononuclear cells (BMNCs) and, ultimately, to look for histopathological signs of cellular neurotrophism in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) patients. We conducted an open single arm phase I trial. After 6 months observation, autologous BMNCs were infused into the posterior spinal cord funiculus. Safety was the primary endpoint and was defined as the absence of serious transplant-related adverse events. In addition, forced vital capacity (FVC), ALS-functional rating scale (ALS-FRS), Medical Research Council scale for assessment of muscle power (MRC), and Norris scales were assessed 6 and 3 months prior to the transplant and quarterly afterward for 1 year. Pathological studies were performed in case of death. Eleven patients were included. We did not observe any severe transplant-related adverse event, but there were 43 nonsevere events. Twenty-two (51%) resolved in ≤2 weeks and only four were still present at the end of follow-up. All were common terminology criteria for adverse events grade ≤2. No acceleration in the rate of decline of FVC, ALS-FRS, Norris, or MRC scales was observed. Four patients died on days 359, 378, 808, and 1,058 post-transplant for reasons unrelated to the procedure. Spinal cord pathological analysis showed a greater number of motoneurons in the treated segments compared with the untreated segments (4.2 ± 0.8 motoneurons per section [mns per sect] and 0.9 ± 0.3 mns per sect, respectively). In the treated segments, motoneurons were surrounded by CD90+ cells and did not show degenerative ubiquitin deposits. This clinical trial confirms not only the safety of intraspinal infusion of autologous BMNC in ALS patients but also provides evidence strongly suggesting their neurotrophic activity. © AlphaMed Press.<br />This work was supported by the Carlos III Institute (FIS EC07/90762), Advanced Therapies and Transplant General Direction (Health Ministry, Spain) (TRA-137), ISCIII Spanish Cell Therapy Network (Tercel; RD06/0010/0023), DIGESIC-MEC BFU2008-00588, Ingenio 2010 MEC-CONSOLIDER CSD2007-00023, GVA Prometeo Grant 2009/028, Rotary Club Elche-Illice and by the Fundacion Diogenes.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....97647a1c488101e8536aff2e4e1aef13