Safety and Efficacy of Autologous Progenitor Cell Transplantation for Therapeutic Angiogenesis in Patients With Critical Limb Ischemia

    • Kondo Takahisa
    • Department of Cardiology, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine
    • Izawa Hideo
    • Department of Cardiology, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine

    • Yamamoto Koji
    • Department of Transfusion Medicine, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine
    • Shintani Satoshi
    • Department of Cardiology, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine
    • Numaguchi Yasushi
    • Department of Medical Science of Proteases, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine
    • Naoe Tomoki
    • Department of Hematology and Oncology, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine

    • Takamatsu Junki
    • Department of Transfusion Medicine, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine
    • Komori Kimihiro
    • Department of Vascular Surgery, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine
    • Murohara Toyoaki
    • Department of Cardiology, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine

Abstract

Background Therapeutic angiogenesis using cell transplantation (TACT) is a treatment strategy for no-option patients with critical limb ischemia (CLI). However, because one-third of treated patients fail to respond, the present study was an exploration of the characteristics of responders and non-responders to this treatment regimen. Methods and Results Seven CLI patients (3 with Buerger's disease, 4 with arteriosclerosis obliterans undergoing chronic hemodialysis (ASO-HD)) were treated according to the TACT protocol (n=6: bone marrow-mononuclear cells (MNCs); n=1: peripheral blood-MNCs). Subjective symptoms (visual analog scale) and objective findings (extent of ulcer, ankle-brachial pressure index, transcutaneous oxygen pressure, thermography and angiography) were assessed. Numbers of transplanted CD34^+, CD133^+ and CD34^+CD133^+ cells were counted. Changes in circulating CD34^+ and CD133^+ cell numbers were also examined before and after the treatment. All responders (n=3) had Buerger's disease, and ASO-HD patients did not respond well. Among the responders, the numbers of circulating CD34^+ and CD133^+ cells persistently increased for 1 month after the treatment, but not in non-responders. Conclusions The TACT regimen improved CLI in patients with Buerger's disease but not in those with ASO-HD in this small study. In responders, post procedural circulating CD34^+ and CD133^+ cells persistently increased for 1 month (Clinical Trials. gov Identifier: NCT00145262, TACT-NAGOYA).

Journal

Circulation journal : official journal of the Japanese Circulation Society   [List of Volumes]

Circulation journal : official journal of the Japanese Circulation Society 71(2), 196-201, 2007-01-20  [Table of Contents]

Japanese Circulation Society

References:  25

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Cited by:  15

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Codes

  • NII Article ID (NAID) :
    110006163601
  • NII NACSIS-CAT ID (NCID) :
    AA11591968
  • Text Lang :
    ENG
  • Article Type :
    Journal Article
  • ISSN :
    13469843
  • Databases :
    CJP  CJPref  NII-ELS  J-STAGE