From the Lab to Patients: a Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Mesenchymal Stem Cell Therapy for Stroke

There may be the potential to improve stroke recovery with mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs); however, questions about the efficacy and safety of this treatment remain. To address these issues and inform future studies, we performed a preclinical and clinical systematic review of MSC therapy for subacut...

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Veröffentlicht in:Translational stroke research 2020-06, Vol.11 (3), p.345-364
Hauptverfasser: Lalu, Manoj M., Montroy, Joshua, Dowlatshahi, Dar, Hutton, Brian, Juneau, Pascale, Wesch, Neil, Y. Zhang, Sarah, McGinn, Ryan, Corbett, Dale, Stewart, Duncan J., A. Fergusson, Dean
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container_end_page 364
container_issue 3
container_start_page 345
container_title Translational stroke research
container_volume 11
creator Lalu, Manoj M.
Montroy, Joshua
Dowlatshahi, Dar
Hutton, Brian
Juneau, Pascale
Wesch, Neil
Y. Zhang, Sarah
McGinn, Ryan
Corbett, Dale
Stewart, Duncan J.
A. Fergusson, Dean
description There may be the potential to improve stroke recovery with mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs); however, questions about the efficacy and safety of this treatment remain. To address these issues and inform future studies, we performed a preclinical and clinical systematic review of MSC therapy for subacute and chronic ischemic stroke. MEDLINE, Embase, the Cochrane Register of Controlled Trials, and PubMed were searched. For the clinical review, interventional and observational studies of MSC therapy in ischemic stroke patients were included. For the preclinical review, interventional studies of MSC therapy using in vivo animal models of subacute or chronic stroke were included. Measures of safety and efficacy were assessed. Eleven clinical and 76 preclinical studies were included. Preclinically, MSC therapy was associated with significant benefits for multiple measures of motor and neurological function. Clinically, MSC therapy appeared to be safe, with no increase in adverse events reported (with the exception of self-limited fever immediately following injection). However, the efficacy of treatment was less apparent, with significant heterogeneity in both study design and effect size being observed. Additionally, in the only randomized phase II study to date, efficacy of MSC therapy was not observed. Preclinically, MSC therapy demonstrated considerable efficacy. Although MSC therapy demonstrated safety in the clinical setting, efficacy has yet to be determined. Future studies will need to address the discordance in the continuity of evidence as MSC therapy has been translated from “bench-to-bedside”.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s12975-019-00736-5
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subjects Animals
Bias
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Biomedicine
Cardiology
Clinical trials
Ischemia
Meta-analysis
Neurology
Neurosciences
Neurosurgery
Original Article
Stem cells
Stroke
Systematic review
Validation studies
Validity
Vascular Surgery
title From the Lab to Patients: a Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Mesenchymal Stem Cell Therapy for Stroke
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