Current perspectives on mesenchymal stromal cell therapy for graft versus host disease.
Nadir KadriSylvie AmuEllen IacobaeusErik BobergKatarina Le BlancPublished in: Cellular & molecular immunology (2023)
Graft versus host disease (GvHD) is the clinical condition in which bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) have been most frequently studied. In this review, we summarize the experience from clinical trials that have paved the way to translation. While MSC-based therapy has shown an exceptional safety profile, identifying potency assays and disease biomarkers that reliably predict the capacity of a specific MSC batch to alleviate GvHD has been difficult. As GvHD diagnosis and staging are based solely on clinical criteria, individual patients recruited in the same clinical trial may have vastly different underlying biology, obscuring trial outcomes and making it difficult to determine the benefit of MSCs in subgroups of patients. An accumulating body of evidence indicates the importance of considering not only the cell product but also patient-specific biomarkers and/or immune characteristics in determining MSC responsiveness. A mode of action where intravascular MSC destruction is followed by monocyte-efferocytosis-mediated skewing of the immune repertoire in a permissive inflammatory environment would both explain why cell engraftment is irrelevant for MSC efficacy and stress the importance of biologic differences between responding and nonresponding patients. We recommend a combined analysis of clinical outcomes and both biomarkers of disease activity and MSC potency assays to identify patients with GvHD who are likely to benefit from MSC therapy.
Keyphrases
- clinical trial
- cell therapy
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- rheumatoid arthritis
- disease activity
- peritoneal dialysis
- bone marrow
- mesenchymal stem cells
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- prognostic factors
- stem cells
- type diabetes
- oxidative stress
- dendritic cells
- coronary artery
- acute myeloid leukemia
- allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
- rheumatoid arthritis patients
- pet ct
- endothelial cells
- peripheral blood