A Novel Approach to Therapeutic Angiogenesis for Patients With Critical Limb Ischemia by Sustained Release of Basic Fibroblast Growth Factor Using Biodegradable Gelatin Hydrogel : An Initial Report of the Phase I-IIa Study

    • Marui Akira
    • Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine
    • Tabata Yasuhiko
    • Department of Biomaterials, Institute for Frontier Medical Sciences, Kyoto University
    • Kojima Shinsuke
    • Division of Clinical Trial Design & Management, Translational Research Center, Kyoto University
    • Yamamoto Masaya
    • Department of Biomaterials, Institute for Frontier Medical Sciences, Kyoto University

    • Tambara Keiichi
    • Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine
    • Nishina Takeshi
    • Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine
    • Saji Yoshiaki
    • Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine

    • Onodera Rie
    • Division of Clinical Trial Design & Management, Translational Research Center, Kyoto University
    • Ikeda Tadashi
    • Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine

    • Fukushima Masanori
    • Division of Clinical Trial Design & Management, Translational Research Center, Kyoto University
    • Komeda Masashi
    • Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine

Abstract

Background Limb ischemia remains a challenge. To overcome shortcomings or limitations of gene therapy or cell transplantation, a sustained release system of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) using biodegradable gelatin hydrogel has been developed. Methods and Results A phase I-IIa study was performed, in which 7 patients had critical limb ischemia. They were intramuscularly injected with 200μg of bFGF-incorporated gelatin hydrogel microspheres into the gastrocnemius of the ischemic limb. End-points were safety and feasibility of treatment after 4 and 24 weeks. One patient was excluded from the study for social reasons, but only after symptomatic improvements. In the evaluation of the other 6 patients, significant improvements were observed in the distance walked in 6min (295±42m vs 491±85m for pretreatment vs after 24 weeks, p=0.023) and in transcutaneous oxygen pressure (53.5± 5.2mmHg vs 65.5±4.0mmHg, p=0.03). The rest pain scale also improved (3.5±0.2 vs 1.0±0.6, p=0.022). The ankle-brachial pressure index improved at 4 weeks but not at 24 weeks. Among 5 patients who had a non-healing foot ulcer, the ulcer was completely healed in 3 patients, reduced in 1, and there was no change in 1 patient at 24 weeks. The blood levels of bFGF were undetected or within the normal level in all patients. Conclusions The sustained release of bFGF from gelatin hydrogel might be simple, safe, and effective to achieve therapeutic angiogenesis because it did not need genetic materials or collection of implanted cells, and because it did not have any general effects, which was supported by there being no elevation of the bFGF serum level.

Journal

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

Circulation journal : official journal of the Japanese Circulation Society 71(8), 1181-1186, 2007-07-20  [Table of Contents]

Japanese Circulation Society

References:  33

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Cited by:  13

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Codes

  • NII Article ID (NAID) :
    110006368839
  • NII NACSIS-CAT ID (NCID) :
    AA11591968
  • Text Lang :
    ENG
  • Article Type :
    Journal Article
  • ISSN :
    13469843
  • Databases :
    CJP  CJPref  NII-ELS  J-STAGE