Mesenchymal stem cell derived secretome and extracellular vesicles for acute lung injury and other inflammatory lung diseases

A Monsel, Y Zhu, V Gudapati, H Lim… - Expert opinion on …, 2016 - Taylor & Francis
A Monsel, Y Zhu, V Gudapati, H Lim, JW Lee
Expert opinion on biological therapy, 2016Taylor & Francis
Introduction: Acute respiratory distress syndrome is a major cause of respiratory failure in
critically ill patients. Despite extensive research into its pathophysiology, mortality remains
high. No effective pharmacotherapy exists. Based largely on numerous preclinical studies,
administration of mesenchymal stem or stromal cell (MSC) as a therapeutic for acute lung
injury holds great promise, and clinical trials are currently underway. However, concern for
the use of stem cells, specifically the risk of iatrogenic tumor formation, remains unresolved …
Abstract
Introduction: Acute respiratory distress syndrome is a major cause of respiratory failure in critically ill patients. Despite extensive research into its pathophysiology, mortality remains high. No effective pharmacotherapy exists. Based largely on numerous preclinical studies, administration of mesenchymal stem or stromal cell (MSC) as a therapeutic for acute lung injury holds great promise, and clinical trials are currently underway. However, concern for the use of stem cells, specifically the risk of iatrogenic tumor formation, remains unresolved. Accumulating evidence now suggest that novel cell-free therapies including MSC-derived conditioned medium and extracellular vesicles released from MSCs might constitute compelling alternatives.
Areas covered: The current review summarizes the preclinical studies testing MSC conditioned medium and/or MSC extracellular vesicles as treatment for acute lung injury and other inflammatory lung diseases.
Expert opinion: While certain logistical obstacles limit the clinical applications of MSC conditioned medium such as the volume required for treatment, the therapeutic application of MSC extracellular vesicles remains promising, primarily due to ability of extracellular vesicles to maintain the functional phenotype of the parent cell. However, utilization of MSC extracellular vesicles will require large-scale production and standardization concerning identification, characterization and quantification.
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