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Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT01337011

Intra-coronary Versus Intramyocardial Application of Enriched CD133pos Autologous Bone Marrow Derived Stem Cells

Pilot Study Comparing the Effect of Intra-coronary Versus Intramyocardial Application of Enriched CD133pos Autologous Bone Marrow Derived Stem Cells for Improving Left Ventricular Function in Chronic Ischemic Cardiomyopathy

Status
Terminated
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
10 (actual)
Sponsor
Asklepios proresearch · Industry
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This is a pilot study comparing the effect of intra-coronary versus intramyocardial application of enriched CD133pos autologous bone marrow derived stem cells for improving left ventricular function in chronic ischemic cardiomyopathy.

Detailed description

Recent years have seen a tremendous improvement of possibilities to restore normal cardiac perfusion of the coronary arteries both by surgical and interventional techniques. In addition, several pharmacological approaches are available to block the mal-adaptive molecular signaling initiated by the Renin/Angiotensin/Aldosteron (RAAS) system. Device therapy achieving resychronisation has lowered morbidity and mortality. However, heart failure therapy still falls short to address the underlying disease of the heart muscle: loss of contractile force. To achieve this aim and restore contractile force a regenerative approach is required. Early experimental studies suggested bone marrow cells to be able to differentiate towards functional cardiomyocytes when injected into the scar area after ischemic injury.2 These and other studies lead to clinical trials, where bone marrow cells were injected into the coronary circulation. Lately, the first completed multi-center, placebo-controlled, double-blinded study found several end points to be improved including global left ventricular function 3. At the same time genetically labelled experimental mouse models demonstrated differentiation of bone marrow cells towards a cardiomyocyte lineage to be a rare event,4 questioning at least the proposed molecular and cellular mechanism of intra-coronary cell therapy. Furthermore, several other clinical trials recently performed did either find no or a very limited effect of intra-coronary applied bone marrow cells. The effect appears to be related to improved angiogenesis. Our group has recently shown that in mammals endogenous regeneration of myocardium does occur after injury and can be enhanced via specific signaling pathways.5 Whether intra-coronary cell therapy is the ideal approach to enhance this process is currently unclear. References: 1. Nieminen MS, Brutsaert D, Dickstein K, Drexler H, Follath F, Harjola VP, Hochadel M, Komajda M, Lassus J, Lopez-Sendon JL, Ponikowski P, Tavazzi L. EuroHeart Failure Survey II (EHFS II): a survey on hospitalized acute heart failure patients: description of population. Eur Heart J. 2006;27:2725-2736. 2. Orlic D, Kajstura J, Chimenti S, Limana F, Jakoniuk I, Quaini F, Nadal-Ginard B, Bodine DM, Leri A, Anversa P. Mobilized bone marrow cells repair the infarcted heart, improving function and survival. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2001;98:10344-10349. 3. Schachinger V, Erbs S, Elsasser A, Haberbosch W, Hambrecht R, Holschermann H, Yu J, Corti R, Mathey DG, Hamm CW, Suselbeck T, Assmus B, Tonn T, Dimmeler S, Zeiher AM, the R-AMII. Intracoronary Bone Marrow-Derived Progenitor Cells in Acute Myocardial Infarction. N Engl J Med. 2006;355:1210-1221. 4. Murry CE, Soonpaa MH, Reinecke H, Nakajima H, Nakajima HO, Rubart M, Pasumarthi KB, Virag JI, Bartelmez SH, Poppa V, Bradford G, Dowell JD, Williams DA, Field LJ. Haematopoietic stem cells do not transdifferentiate into cardiac myocytes in myocardial infarcts. Nature. 2004;428:664-668. 5. Zelarayan L, Noack C, Sekkali B, Kmecova J, Gehrke C, Renger A, Zafiriou MP, Nagel Rvd, Dietz R, Windt LJd, Balligand J-L, Bergmann MW. beta-catenin downregulation attenuates ischemic cardiac remodeling through enhanced resident precursor cell differentiation. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008;105:19762-19767. 6. Krause KT, Jaquet K, Geidel S, Schneider C, Mandel C, Stoll HP, Hertting K, Harle T, Kuck KH. Percutaneous endocardial injection of erythropoietin: assessment of cardioprotection by electromechanical mapping. Eur J Heart Fail. 2006;8:443-450.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERautologous CD133pos stem cell applicationThe study aims to show efficacy of both intra-myocardial autologous CD133pos bone marrow cell application as well as intra-coronary CD133pos cell application in patients with symptomatic ischemic heart disease. In addition, efficacy between the two delivery routes will be compared.

Timeline

Start date
2011-07-01
Primary completion
2016-03-02
Completion
2017-07-17
First posted
2011-04-18
Last updated
2021-08-24

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Germany

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01337011. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.