基于人胎盘干细胞的腹腔粘连预防疗法:前瞻性随机临床前试验。

IF 2.9 2区 医学 Q2 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-12-14 DOI:10.1097/TA.0000000000004476
Samuel P Carmichael, Prafulla K Chandra, John W Vaughan, David M Kline, John B Holcomb, Anthony Atala
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:腹部粘连是术后器官间形成的纤维化组织网络。目前的预防策略不能重复地预防整个腹部粘连性小肠阻塞。人类胎盘来源的干细胞产生抗炎分泌组,已应用于多种纤维化疾病。本项目的目的是在临床相关的大鼠模型中测试基于人胎盘干细胞(hPSC)的治疗方法预防腹部粘连。方法:54只(n = 54, n = 6/组)雄性Sprague-Dawley大鼠(250 ~ 350 g)在麻醉下造模和随机分组。实验组包括人胎盘源性干细胞(hPSC, 5 × 106个细胞/10 mL Plasmalyte A)、透明质酸(HA-Mal-hPSC)水凝胶中的人胎盘源性干细胞、条件培养基中10 mL Plasmalyte A中的人胎盘源性干细胞分泌组、透明质酸(HA-Mal- cm)水凝胶中的人胎盘源性干细胞条件培养基、Plasmalyte A(单独培养基,10 mL)、透明质酸单独水凝胶(HA-Mal)、sepil薄膜(Baxter, Deerfield, IL)、对照组为未治疗模型(MNT)和假动物。治疗方法为腹腔注射,研究期为术后14天。在尸检时对粘连进行评分,并作为指标统计平均值(动物指数评分)与MNT的差异进行分析。通过功能基因组分析和腹膜组织组织学探讨了潜在的分子机制。结果:与MNT相比,透明质酸水凝胶、HA-Mal-CM水凝胶和sepil薄膜在14天的平均动物指数评分中显著减少了腹部粘连的整体外观。人胎盘干细胞、HA-Mal- hpsc水凝胶、HA-Mal- cm水凝胶、HA-Mal水凝胶和sepilfilm均可显著降低损伤腹膜组织的胶原含量。人胎盘干细胞和HA-Mal-hPSC水凝胶抑制了大多数促纤维化基因的表达。条件培养基、单独的HA-Mal水凝胶和单独的培养基显著改变了与腹膜纤维化途径相关的蛋白质的表达。结论:在一项前瞻性随机临床前试验中,基于人胎盘干细胞的疗法可减少腹部粘连。这种作用是由纤维化基因组和蛋白质组学途径的抑制所支持的。
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Human placental stem cell-based therapies for prevention of abdominal adhesions: A prospective randomized preclinical trial.

Background: Abdominal adhesions are networks of fibrotic tissues that form between organs postoperatively. Current prophylactic strategies do not reproducibly prevent adhesive small bowel obstruction across the entire abdomen. Human placental-derived stem cells produce an anti-inflammatory secretome that has been applied to multiple fibrosing diseases. The purpose of this project is to test human placental stem cell (hPSC)-based therapies for prevention of abdominal adhesions in a clinically relevant rat model.

Methods: Fifty-four (n = 54, n = 6/group) male Sprague-Dawley rats (250-350 g) underwent model creation and treatment randomization under anesthesia. Experimental groups included human placental-derived stem cells (hPSC, 5 × 106 cells/10 mL Plasmalyte A), human placental-derived stem cells in a hyaluronic acid (HA-Mal-hPSC) hydrogel, the human placental-derived stem cell secretome from conditioned media in 10 mL Plasmalyte A, human placental-derived stem cells' conditioned media in a hyaluronic acid (HA-Mal-CM) hydrogel, Plasmalyte A (media alone, 10 mL), hyaluronic acid hydrogel alone (HA-Mal), Seprafilm (Baxter, Deerfield, IL), and the control groups, model with no treatment (MNT) and sham animals. Treatments were administered intraperitoneally, and the study period was 14 days postoperation. Adhesions were scored at necropsy and analyzed as the difference between means of an index statistic (Animal Index Score) versus MNT. Underlying molecular mechanisms were explored by functional genomic analysis and histology of peritoneal tissues.

Results: Hyaluronic acid hydrogel alone, HA-Mal-CM hydrogel, and Seprafilm significantly reduced the overall appearance of abdominal adhesions by mean Animal Index Score at 14 days versus MNT. Human placental stem cell, HA-Mal-hPSC hydrogel, HA-Mal-CM hydrogel, HA-Mal hydrogel alone, and Seprafilm significantly reduced the collagen content of injured peritoneal tissues. Human placental stem cell and HA-Mal-hPSC hydrogel suppressed expression of the most profibrotic genes. Conditioned media, HA-Mal hydrogel alone, and media alone significantly altered the expression of proteins associated with peritoneal fibrotic pathways.

Conclusion: Human placental stem cell-based therapies reduce abdominal adhesions in a prospective randomized preclinical trial. This effect is supported by suppression of profibrotic genomic and proteomic pathways.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
11.80%
发文量
637
审稿时长
2.7 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery® is designed to provide the scientific basis to optimize care of the severely injured and critically ill surgical patient. Thus, the Journal has a high priority for basic and translation research to fulfill this objectives. Additionally, the Journal is enthusiastic to publish randomized prospective clinical studies to establish care predicated on a mechanistic foundation. Finally, the Journal is seeking systematic reviews, guidelines and algorithms that incorporate the best evidence available.
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