A first-in-human clinical study of an allogenic iPSC-derived corneal endothelial cell substitute transplantation for bullous keratopathy

A first-in-human investigator-initiated clinical study of a corneal endothelial cell substitute (CLS001) derived from a clinical-grade induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) line shows improvement of visual acuity and corneal stromal edema, with no adverse events for up to 1 year after surgery for the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cell reports. Medicine 2025-01, Vol.6 (1), p.101847, Article 101847
Hauptverfasser: Hirayama, Masatoshi, Hatou, Shin, Nomura, Masaki, Hokama, Risa, Hirayama, Osama Ibrahim, Inagaki, Emi, Aso, Kumi, Sayano, Tomoko, Dohi, Hiromi, Hanatani, Tadaaki, Takasu, Naoko, Okano, Hideyuki, Negishi, Kazuno, Shimmura, Shigeto
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A first-in-human investigator-initiated clinical study of a corneal endothelial cell substitute (CLS001) derived from a clinical-grade induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) line shows improvement of visual acuity and corneal stromal edema, with no adverse events for up to 1 year after surgery for the treatment of bullous keratopathy. While preclinical tests, including multiple whole-genome analysis and tumorigenicity tests adhering to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) draft guidelines, are negative, an additional whole-genome analysis conducted on transplanted CLS001 cells reveals a de novo in-frame deletion of exon22 in the EP300 gene. No adverse events related to the mutation are observed. Our study demonstrates the feasibility of using iPSC-derived cells to replace donor transplant for bullous keratopathy, while shedding light on risk management of gene mutation in cell products. Further follow-up is required for long-term analysis of clinical safety and efficacy.
ISSN:2666-3791
2666-3791
DOI:10.1016/j.xcrm.2024.101847