Abstract
In 2020, we suggested that umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stem cell (UC-MSC) transplantation can significantly improve COVID-19 symptoms based on evidential relations (10.4252/wjsc.v12.i8.721). One year later, this review aims to summarize and update the clinical evidence regarding UC-MSC usage in COVID-19 treatment. The publications on applications of UC-MSCs were searched in the PubMed, Web of Science, and Google scholar databases with the keywords “umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stem cells” and “COVID-19”. All publications about clinical studies, from case reports to randomized controlled trials (RCTs), were used as clinical evidence in this review. The results showed 16 publications (4 randomized clinical trials, 3 pilot studies/phase 1 clinical trials, 3 case series reports, and 6 case reports) with a total of 395 COVID-19 patients that were provided with UC-MSC transplantation. All publications demonstrated that UC-MSC transplantation is safe, well tolerated, improved COVID-19 symptoms, and significantly decreased mortality. These findings support our suggestion for the usage of off-the-shelf UC-MSCs for COVID-19 as an adjuvant therapy.
Introduction
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a new pandemic that has affected hundreds of millions of people worldwide. As of August 2021, more than 200 million people were confirmed as positive for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), and more than 4 million people had died due to the disease this virus (COVID-19) caused1. Affected patients are characterized by typical pneumonic symptoms such as fever, cough, and shortness of breath. COVID-19 patients with comorbidities tend to be more affected by this disease and have a higher mortality rate2, 3, 4 than children and young people.
The current therapies for COVID-19 treatment are antiviral drugs, dexamethasone, anti-inflammatory drugs, convalescent plasma therapy, and even medicinal plants5, 6, 7, 8. Indeed, most COVID-19 patients are now treated symptomatically. Other methods related to mechanical ventilation are also used in case of severe respiratory distress in some patients9, 10. Currently, many therapies are being developed to effectively treat and manage COVID-19, one of which is stem cell therapy.
Based on the pathophysiology of COVID-19 and biological characteristics of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), these cells have been used at an early clinical stage in some clinical trials to treat severe and critical COVID-19 patients11. MSCs are the most frequently isolated adult stem cells from various tissues in the body. In contrast to embryonic and other adult stem cells, MSCs are easily isolated and can be expanded substantially with various automatic cell culture factory systems; therefore, MSCs based on stem cell drugs (off-the-shelf stem cells) have been developed and commercialized since 201212, 13. MSCs can participate in disease treatment and management through at least three mechanisms: immune modulation, multilineage differentiation, and regeneration triggering through their cytokines14. Hence, MSCs are clinically used to treat various diseases, from autoimmune conditions to vascular regeneration. More interestingly, in contrast to other stem cells, MSCs express HLA to only a small degree and have low immunogenicity; therefore, they can be used in allogenic transplantation without HLA matching15, 16.
Although MSCs can be isolated from various tissues, such as bone marrow, adipose tissue, peripheral blood, the potency of MSCs from different sources has been found to vary17, 18, 19. In comparison to bone marrow-MSCs (BM-MSCs) and adipose tissue-derived MSCs (ADSCs), umbilical cord-derived MSCs (UC-MSCs) display the strongest immunomodulation17. Based on early evidence of the usage of MSCs in COVID-19 treatment11 and from published clinical usages of UC-MSCs in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)20 and septic illnesses21, 22, 23, we have suggested the usage of off-the-shelf UC-MSC products for COVID-1914. This review aims to outline the opinions based on pooled published clinical evidence regarding UC-MSC transplantation in COVID-19 patients.
Publications on UC-MSC transplantation for COVID-19 patients
Sixteen publications involved the use of UCMSC transplantation to treat COVID-19 patients, including 4 randomized clinical trials (110 patients), 3 pilot studies/phase 1 clinical trials (52 patients), 3 case series reports (227 patients), and 6 case reports (6 patients). Thus, to date, 395 COVID-19 patients have been infused with UC-MSCs. In addition, there are eight publications from China, two from Turkey, and one from Iran, the Philippines, Brazil, Indonesia, the USA, and Italy (Table 1, Table 2).
Kinds of clinical study | No of studies | Total patients treated with UC-MSCs | Adverse effects |
---|---|---|---|
Randomized clinical trial | 4 | 110 | 0 |
Pilot study/Phase 1 clinical trial | 3 | 52 | 0 |
Case series report | 3 | 227 | 0 |
Case report | 6 | 6 | 0 |
Total | 16 | 395 | 0 |
No | Year | Kind of study | No of patients | Follow-up time | Interventions | Efficacy | Country | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2021 | Single center open label, individually randomized, standard treatment controlled trial | 12 patients in UC-MSC, 29 in control | 28 days and follow-up to 3 months for lung function recovery | 2 x10 6 fresh UC-MSCs/kg, suspended in 100 mL of normal saline and infusion in 1 hour | 100% (12/12) patients in the treatment group improved, discharged, no invasive ventilation, 0% mortality; 4 patients in the control group went to invasive ventilartion, 3 of them died, 10.34% mortality; CRP and IL-6 clearly reduced in the treatment group from day 3; chest CT scanning showed that absorption of lung inflammation was faster in the treatment group compared to the control group. | China | 5 |
2 | 2021 | Pilot study with control, not randomly | 12 patients in treatment; and 12 patients in conventional therapy (alone) | 16 days for efficacy and 60 days for safety | 10 6 UC-MSCs/kg; cells suspended in 100 mL of normal saline, infusion with 60 drops per minutes for 30 min | 1/12 patient in treatment died (not related to MSC infusion); the biomarkers of CRP, IL-6, TNF-alpha were no significantly after UC-MSC infusion; 11/12 patients with MSCs improved the CT images for lung imflammation. | China | 24 |
3 | 2021 | Case series | 210 patients (99 patients with intubated, and 111 unintubated) | 2-3 wks | 1 - 2 x10 6 UC-MSCs/kg, suspended in 100 mL of normal saline, infused with rates of 2 mL/min in 50 - 60 min | SpO 2 improved after transplantation in both groups of intubated and unintubated. But there was not statsitically sigificant between 2 groups; 52.5% (52/99) (critical illness); 86/111 (77.5%) (serve illness) were good progress/discharged from ICU; 47/99 (47.5% critical), 22.5% (25/111 severe) died. | Turkey | 25 |
4 | 2021 | Case report | 1 patient (66 years old), critically ill patient | 28 days | 10 6 fresh UC-MSCs/kg, 3 times of infusions per round for 2 rounds; 40 drops/min for 40 - 50 min | After 2 nd round of UCMSC, patients stayed in critical care unit (CCU) for 20 days; most of vital signs and clinical lab recovered to normal range; IL-6 significant reduced after UC-MSC transplantation. | China | 26 |
5 | 2021 | Case report | 1 patient (69 years old) | 8 days | 1.1 x10 6 freshly thawed UC-MSCs diluted (1:1) with final volume of 50 mL, intravenous infusion for 30 min | Clinical findings showed that improvement of the inflammatory, respiratory, thrombotic, and renal parameters after 2 and 8 days after MSC infusion; IL-1beta, IL-1RA, IL-6 and TNF-alpha reduced after 2 days of MSC infusion. | Italy | 27 |
6 | 2020 | Phase 1, Clinical trial | 18 patients with 9 patients in treatment group, 9 patients in control | 14 days | 3 x10 7 fresh UCMSCs per each infusion, for 3 times on day 0, 3 and 6. The total vol in UC-MSCs was 60 mL. | All patients (18/18 patients in both treatment and control) were discharged from hospital; the duration from admission to discharge in both groups was same; TNF-alpha, MCP-1, IP-10, IL-22, IL-1RA, IL-18, and MIP-1 levels reduced in the treatment group within 14 days. | China | 28 |
7 | 2021 | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 2 trial | 66 patients in treatment group, 35 patients in placebo | 28 days | 4 x10 7 UC-MSCs/100 mL/dose, cool preservation (8 - 12 o C) shipping less than 6 h; each patient on day 0, 3, and 6 (3 doses) | Chest CT examination at baseline, day 10 and day 28; after 28 days, solid component lesions were differently significant in MSC and placebo groups; the decrease in the ground-glass lesions in MSC group than the placebo group but not statistically different; there was not significant differences in subsets of CD4 + T cells, CD8 + T cells, B cells and NK cells; and plasma marker (IL-6, IL-8, IFN-γ, IL-1Ra, IL-18, MCP-1, MIP-1α, and IP-10) between 2 groups. | China | 29 |
8 | 2021 | A double-blind, phase 1/2a randomized controlled trial | 24 patients (12 in treatment, 12 in control) | 31 days | 80 - 120 x10 6 freshly thawed UC-MSCs/infusion, prepared in 50 mL; infusion from 5-15 mins, at day 0 and day 3 (2 doses) | No serious adverse events (SAEs) were observed in group of UC-MSC transplantation; Inflammatory cytokines were significantly decreased in UCMSC at day 6; UC-MSC transplantation significantly improved patient survival (91% versus 42% in control); time to recovery is reduced compared to control. | USA | 30 |
9 | 2021 | A randomized controlled trial | 40 patients (20 in treatment, 20 in control) | 45 days | 10 6 fresh UC-MSCs/kg in 100 mL saline | Survival rate in UC-MSC group was 2.5 times higher than that in the control; UCMSC administration increased the survival rate by 4.5 times compared to controls; UCMSC significantly decreased IL-6 compared to control. | Indonesia | 31 |
10 | 2021 | Case report | 1 (51 year old) | 120 days | Three infusions with 500.000 fresh UC-MSCs/kg each infusion in combination with 2 infusions of 400 mg of Tocilizumab. MSCs were diluted in 30 mL of saline supplemented with 20% HAS, 5% ACD, infused at 5 mL/min. | The cretinine, TGO, ferritin, D-dimer, and CRP decreased; the increase in absolute number of total lymphocytes (CD4, Treg T cells); plasmablasts decrease; CT image showed ground-glass opacities associated with crosslinking and subpleural lines, predominantly peripheral and basal at the beginning of treatment with an increase in D14, completedly regression in D120. | Brazil | 32 |
11 | 2020 | Pilot study | 31 patients (media age: 70 years) | NS | 10 6 fresh UC-MSCs/kg, suspended in 100 mL normal saline 11 patients with single infusion; 9 patients with 2 infusions; 11 patients with 3 infusions | 96.8% (30/31) patients became negative after 10.7 days; laboratory parameters (lymphocyte count, CRP, procalcitonin level, IL-6, D-dimer level, PaO2/FiO2) were significant improved compared to before applied UCMSC therapy; 96.8% (30/31) Sars-CoV-2 clearance, 87.1% (27/31) discharged, 12.9% (4/31) death. | China | 33 |
12 | 2020 | Case report | 1 patient (65 year old) | NS | 3 infusions with 5 x10 7 freshly thawed UC-MSCs per infusion with 3-day interval together with thymosin alpha 1 and antibiotic daily injection | Most laboratory indexes and CT images showed remission of the inflammation sympton, patient was transferred out ICU and negative with virus 4 days later. | China | 34 |
13 | 2020 | Case report | 1 patient (72 year old) | NS | 2 doses of 0.7 x10 6 UC-MSCs/kg for intravenous infusion, 0.3 x10 6 cells/kg intratracheal with 4 units of heparin, with 5 day interval | After MSC transplantation, the need for inotropic agents started to disappear, acidosis, electrolyte imbalance and hypoxemia started to improve, CRP level regressed; on day 19, lung chest X-ray showed slight regression of the ground-glass imaged infiltration in the middle right lung periphery, and signigicant regression in the low density infiltrations in the lower right ling and lateral left lung. | Turkey | 35 |
14 | 2021 | Case series | 11 patients | NS | 4 doses of 0.5 x10 6 fresh UCMSCs/kg in 100 mL D5LR per dose on day 1, 3, 5, and 7 with duration 40 mins (40 drops/min) for 9 patients; 1 patient with 2 doses (because UC-MSCs expired), 1 patient with 1 dose (developed arrhythemia) | 100% patients CRP decreased; all patients with 4 doses decreased cytokine levels (IL-6, IL10, IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha). | Phillipines | 36 |
15 | 2020 | Case report | 1 patient (75 year) | 68 days | 3 doses of 5 x10 7 cells per dose, interval 3 days, suspended in 100 mL saline, 40 drops/min | Symptons related to Covid-19 improved after 30 days of MSC transplantation; after 13 days of transplantation, CT image showes that pneumonia infiltration was suppressed; IL2, IL4, IL6, IL10, TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma significant decreased. | China | 37 |
16 | 2021 | Case series | 11 patients | 60 days | 3 doses of 200 x10 6 freshly thawed UC-MSCs/infusion for each other day, IV, 50 drops/min, for 30 - 45 min; 6 patients with washed freshly thawed UC-MSCs, 5 patients with fresh placenta MSCs | 6/11 survived, 5 in 6 patients significantly improved and discharged from ICU on 2 - 7 days after infusions; proinflammatory cytokines (IL-9, TNF-alpha, CRP) significant reduced; lung CT were available after therapy in 3 survived cases; 2/3 patients showed significant resolution of opacities. | Iran | 38 |
Adverse effects and safety of UC-MSC transplantation in COVID-19 patients
In 395 patients infused with UC-MSCs in 16 publications, 3 patients reported side effects, where 2 patients had side effects at the first infusion and 1 patient had side effects at the third infusion. 1 patient noted facial flushing within 4 h after UC-MSC infusion and was relieved within 24 h; 1 patient had transient fever that was no more than 38 °C within 2 h after UC-MSC transplantation and was relieved within 24 h; 1 patient reported hypoxemia that occurred 12 h after UC-MSC transplantation, although this effect was considered to be a progression of COVID-19, and the patient recovered after humidified high-flow nasal cannula oxygen therapy28. Hashemian et al. (2021) reported that 2 (of a total 11) patients in their study developed shivering in the first infusion that did not develop further in the 2nd and 3rd infusions38. However, both patients were recorded in the group of placenta-derived MSCs, not in the UC-MSC group38.
Feng et al. (2021) conducted an open-label randomized trial in 12 patients following hospital discharge for 3 months to evaluate UC-MSC transplantation's safety and showed that intravenous transplantation of UC-MSCs accelerated partial pulmonary function recovery and improved health-related quality of life (HRQL) without any side effects detected39. Similarly, Hashemian et al. (2021) followed-up 12 patients with UC-MSC transplantation for 60 days and found no allergic reactions or SAEs during this time38.
These results suggested that UC-MSC transplantation in COVID-19 patients is safe, and without severe side effects. Although these UC-MSC transplantation findings for COVID-19 patients are early and primary results, some published works that used UC-MSCs in other diseases supported the safety of UC-MSC transplantations over the longer term. In a study using UC-MSC transplantation for rheumatoid arthritis (RA), Wang et al. (2019) showed that UC-MSC treatment is safe after three years of UC-MSC transplantation through routine blood analyses, liver and kidney function, and immunoglobulin examinations40. In another study, Wang et al. (2017) also demonstrated that UC-MSC infusions with two doses in systemic lupus erythematosus are safe with no changes in peripheral red/white blood cell count and platelet number after being followed-up for six years41. The safety of high-dose UC-MSCs was evaluated in 2020 by Chin et al. The authors compared the safety and anti-inflammatory nature of UC-MSCs at two doses (65 and 130 x 106 cells/infusion as low and high doses, respectively) in healthy volunteers, and all groups were followed up for 6 months. All subjects in both groups tolerated the doses well without any adverse reactions. After 6 months, subjects in the high-dose group displayed significantly higher anti-inflammatory markers and lower proinflammatory markers than subjects in the low-dose group42. In severe sepsis patients, He et al. (2018) showed that a single high dose of UC-MSCs (3 x 106 cells/kg) is safe and well tolerated43.
Therapeutic effects of UC-MSC transplantation in COVID-19 patients
All 16 published studies concluded that UC-MSC transplantation is beneficial in treating subjects with COVID-19 respiratory distress syndrome. Clinically, UC-MSC transplantation could significantly reduce the mortality ratio. The results from 4 RCT studies with a control (conventional treatment) showed that UC-MSC transplantation helped considerably reduce mortality31, 5. For example, in the RCT study by Lei et al. (2021), there was a 0% (0/12) death rate, whereas in the control, there was a 10.34% (3/29) death rate5. In another RCT study, Dilogo et al. (2021) reported a survival rate of the UC-MSC transplantation group that was 2.5 times higher than in the control31. In a recent RCT study, Lanzoni et al. (2021) also showed that UCMSC transplantation significantly improved patient survival by 91% in the transplanted group whilst only displaying an improvement of 42% in the control30.
The UC-MSC transplantation significantly reduced the time for recovery compared to the control. For example, Lei et al. (2021) showed that the time for recovery in the treatment group was 6 days compared to 12 days in the control5. Furthermore, Lanzoni and colleagues (2021) reported that the time for recovery was also reduced in the UC-MSC transplantation compared to the control30.
Lung inflammation was found to be significantly reduced in UC-MSC transplantation compared to a control according to lung imaging (CT or X-ray) and biochemical laboratory tests. Chest CT scanning showed that absorption of lung inflammation was faster in the treatment than control5, 24. After 28 days of treatment, solid component lesions were significantly different in MSC and placebo groups; there was a decrease in ground-glass lesions in the MSC vs. placebo group, but this difference was not statistically significant29. In some case reports, the UC-MSC transplantation also improved lung inflammation based on lung CT images38, 32, 34, 35. The laboratory tests showed that almost all patients treated with UC-MSC transplantation had decreased CRP, IL-6, and TNF-α5, 31, 26, 28, 27, and this reduction could be detected early in days 2 – 3 post-transplantation [31, 40] or later at 7 – 14 days post-transplantation28, 26. However, Wei et al. (2021) showed that although there were significant improvements in symptoms, the biomarkers of CRP, IL-6, and TNF-α were not significantly reduced after 1 – 3, 5 – 8, and 12 – 16 days following UC-MSC infusion24 in a study of 12 patients.
Doses of UC-MSCs, treatment efficacy, and anti-inflammatory activity
Through obtaining information from 16 publications that detail the application of UC-MSCs for COVID-19, two methods are employed to determine the UC-MSC dose for transplantation. Six publications used the total cell numbers per patient, with similar numbers for each study’s patients, whereas ten publications determined the dose of UC-MSCs based on the patients' body weight. Based on the cell count per patient, the lowest dose was reported as 4029 and the highest 60038 x 106 cells/patient. In the case of a high dose, almost all studies shared cells into 2 – 3 infusions with 3-day intervals. In a second approach, the cell dose was calculated based on body weight, with the lowest dose approximately 106 cells/kg of body weight31, 24, 33. Almost all studies used doses from 1 – 2 x 106 cells/kg with a single infusion. In some case reports, patients could receive 2 – 3 infusions so that the total cells per patient did not exceed 6 x 106 cells26, 36.
With these doses, all patients showed significantly improved clinical signs and reduced mortality. However, there is currently insufficient data to analyze the dose-dependent effects of UC-MSCs in COVID-19 patients. In a previous study, Chin et al. (2020) found that at a dose of 130 x 106 cells of UC-MSC per infusion, the anti-inflammatory effect was better than at a dose of 65 x 106 cells in healthy volunteers until six months post-transplantation42. From 16 of the most recent publications, one study discussed 12 patients treated with UC-MSCs; although the clinical observations were improved, anti-inflammatory biomarkers (CRP, IL-6, TNF-α) were not significantly decreased after 1 – 3, 5 – 8, and 12 – 16 days post-UC-MSC infusion, similar to the control (without UC-MSC infusion)24. To explain this difference compared to other publications, Wei et al. (2021) found no apparent cytokine storm in transplanted patients. It seems that the UC-MSC transplantation in the late stage of a cytokine storm can be responsible for these subtle changes24. The authors also suggested that UC-MSC transplantation in the early stage of a cytokine storm can effectively alter anti-inflammation markers24.
However, in our experience, the second reason for a non-significant change in anti-inflammatory biomarkers in transplanted patients is due to the low UC-MSC dose used in this study. An in vitro study of the immune modulation of UC-MSCs clearly showed that these cells’ potency depends on the ratios of UC-MSCs and immune cells17. Chin et al. (2020) confirmed this observation in healthy volunteers when comparing two doses (low and high = 1.0 and 2.1 x 106 cells/kg, respectively)42. Therefore, depending on the desired effects of UC-MSCs in COVID-19 patients, such cells can be used with a suitable dose and for a particular stage of this disease. Furthermore, the physiological parameters were also used to evaluate the effects of UC-MSCs in the patients.
Fresh versus freshly thawed cells in treatment efficacy and exploring off-the-shelf UC-MSC product use for COVID-19 treatment
Both fresh and thawed UC-MSCs were utilized in the treatment of COVID-19. In 16 publications (included 6 case reports), 9 studies used fresh UC-MSCs prepared in the laboratory5, 28, 24, 32, 26, 33, 36, 25, 4 studies used freshly thawed cryopreserved UC-MSCs that had not been refreshed by in vitro culture before use38, 30, 34, 27, and 1 study used UC-MSCs that had been shipped and maintained at 8–12 °C for less than 6 h before they were used38. Two studies did not provide information regarding whether their UC-MSCs were fresh or thawed35, 37.
With the limitation of patients and studies, it is difficult to demonstrate and compare the efficacy of fresh or cool-kept and freshly thawed UC-MSCs with respect to COVID-19 treatment. There are controversial results in the literature about the potency of fresh versus freshly thawed MSCs. Immune modulation of thawed and fresh MSCs are comparable in vitro and in vivo in acute inflammatory diseases of septic animals44 in ischemic models45. At the same time, some previous publications have suggested that cryopreserved MSCs have impaired immunomodulation potency46, 47. More interestingly, Chabot et al. (2017) demonstrated that freshly thawed and fresh UC-MSCs displayed comparable viability, functionality, and integrity48; however, if cryopreserved MSCs were left at RT for 2–10 min and then transferred to liquid nitrogen, they are functionally impaired and exhibit cellular damage despite being highly viable after thawing48. This impairment is correlated to a loss of adhesion and altered cell size49. Hence, the warming events and then re-cryopreservation cause the loss of adhesion and altered cell size of UC-MSCs resulting in functional impairment.
We noticed this information from a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 2 trial by Shi et al. (2021)29. However, the authors concluded that UC-MSC treatment is a safe and potentially effective therapeutic approach for COVID-19 patients with lung damage and suggested a phase 3 trial for this therapy. There are few differences in clinical and laboratory test findings between treatment versus control groups. Indeed, after 28 days, whole-lung lesion volume improved in the treatment group compared to the placebo with a p-value of 0.08; the proportions of solid component lesion volume were significantly reduced compared to the control with a p-value of 0.043; the 6-minute walking distance was longer in the MSC versus placebo group with a p-value of 0.057. Similarly, there were no significant differences in subsets of CD4+ T, CD8+ T, B, and NK cells. Notably, plasma markers for inflammation (IL-6, IL-8, IFN-γ, IL-1Ra, IL-18, MCP-1, MIP-1α, and IP-10) also showed no significant difference between groups 0, 6, 10, and 14 days after infusion29.
These findings appear to demonstrate that UC-MSC treatment is of a lower efficacy compared to in other publications. In our opinion, these unexpected results could be due to the MSC quality. Indeed, the cell dose was not low (90 x106 cells shared between 3 infusion times on days 0, 3, and 6). MSC potency may have been reduced during shipments in cold conditions (8 – 12 °C) by railway from the cell factory to the hospital for less than 6 h (as the authors stated). We do not have experimental evidence that the UC-MSC potency was reduced during cold storage. Nevertheless, Nikolaev et al. (2012), who analyzed bone marrow-derived MSCs, showed that in cold storage (2 – 8 °C), BM-MSCs reduced the expression of CD29, CD44, CD105, and CD166. After 24 h in this condition, CD29 and CD166 were noticeably down-regulated, whereas CD105 and CD166 were negative, although these cells showed a high expression of CD29, CD44, CD105, and CD166 before storage50. In another study, Petrenko et al. (2019) stored BM-MSCs in some clinically relevant solutions (Plasma-Lyte® 148, HypoThermosol® FRS, and Ringer's solution) at 4 °C and investigated the effects of cold storage on the viability, surface marker expression as well as their immune modulation potency. The authors showed a non-significant difference in surface markers for cold storage at 24, 48, and 72 h for CD105, CD90, CD73, CD34, CD45, CD19, CD14, and HLA-DR. However, the immune modulation potency was significantly reduced after 72 h of cold storage in all investigated media51. In Ringer's solution, the immune modulation capacity of storage BM-MSCs lost more than 50% compared to fresh cells (as the control)51.
Freshly thawed UC-MSCs were used in 1 RCT study, 1 case series report, and 2 case reports to treat COVID-19 patients with a total of 20 COVID-19 patients infused with freshly thawed UC-MSCs. The results from the RCT study showed that freshly thawed UC-MSCs significantly reduced inflammatory cytokines compared to the control at day 6 and significantly improved patient survival (91% in UC-MSC transplantation versus 42% in the control). The time to recovery was also reduced in transplanted patients compared to the control30. From this discussion, we believe that our proposal for use of off-the-shelf UC-MSC products for COVID-19 treatment is a suitable approach14. However, further studies investigating the immune modulation potency of freshly thawed UC-MSCs for COVID-19 are essential to support this idea.
UC-MSCs not only target cytokine storms but also trigger tissue regeneration
Lei et al. (2021) followed-up patients who had been discharged from hospital in both groups treated with UC-MSCs and standard therapy in a study over 3 months39. The effects of UC-MSC transplantation not only targeted cytokine storms that significantly reduced inflammation in COVID-19 patients5 but also accelerated partial pulmonary function recovery and improved HRQL39. Feng et al. (2021) examined liver, kidney, and pulmonary function, coagulation, tumor markers, and vision for all discharged patients after UC-MSC transplantation and standard therapy. Patients were also subjected to electrocardiography (ECG), tested with St. George's respiratory questionnaire (SGRQ), and had computed tomography (CT) imaging performed to assess lung changes. The results showed that blood routine index, CRP, procalcitonin, liver and kidney function, coagulation, ECG, tumor markers, and vision were almost within the normal ranges in both the UC-MSC transplantation group and control. However, the lung function recovered in the UC-MSC transplantation group compared to the control group. Both forced expiratory volumes in 1 s (FEV1) and FEV1/forced vital capacity (FEV1/FVC) ratios in the UC-MSC group were significantly higher than in the control group. SGRQ scores were clearly lower in the UC-MSC vs. control group.
These preliminary results suggest that UC-MSC transplantation is not essential for attenuating cytokine storms in COVID-19 patients but also for accelerating tissue regeneration. Indeed, Wei et al. (2021) also found that transplantation of UC-MSCs in COVID-19 patients did not reduce the levels of CRP, IL-6, and TNF-α. Still, the oxygenation index was significantly improved after 12 – 16 days. These results confirmed the roles of UC-MSCs in pulmonary recovery again24.
Suggested UC-MSC protocol for COVID-19 treatment
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion criteria: patients currently hospitalized with respiratory distress rate ≥ 30 times/min, SpO2 ≤ 94% at room air, PaO2/FiO2 ratio < 300 mmHg, willing and able to provide written informed consent.
Exclusion criteria: patients with PaO2/FiO2 ≥ 300 mmHg at the time of enrollment, infused with MSCs, history of pulmonary hypertension (WHO class III/IV), history of left arterial hypertension, pregnant or lactating, present active malignancy, moderate or severe liver disease.
UC-MSC products
As suggested in the previously published article14, cryopreserved UC-MSCs (off-the-shelf stem cells) should be used for COVID-19 treatment. Indeed, such off-the-shelf UC-MSC products provide multiple benefits: (1) Ready-to-use products for use in all emergency cases, particularly for COVID-19. If UC-MSC transplantation is used to suppress cytokine storms in COVID-19 patients, ready-to-use products such as off-the-shelf UC-MSC cells are essential so that medical doctors can choose a suitable time for transplantation. (2) Off-the-shelf UC-MSC products are produced at a large scale with strictly controlled quality, therefore their cost is significantly reduced as opposed to a freshly prepared batch for each case. In particular, the strictly controlled quality for each batch improves the treatment’s stability.
Infusion protocol
The UC-MSC products should be used as freshly thawed samples without re-freezing. Depending on the components of cryopreservation media, the samples can be washed to remove the cryopreservation media, or the freshly thawed samples can directly be used without the washing step. The UC-MSCs should be re-suspended or diluted in 50 – 100 mL of normal saline supplemented with 10% HSA and anticoagulation (heparin or citrate dextrose). The cell suspension is intravenously infused into the patient through a blood filter tubing set with a pore size of 170 µm, with 40 – 50 drops per min over 45 – 60 min (Figure 1).
Monitoring and efficacy evaluation
Patients will be monitored for COVID-19 symptoms, lung recovery, and inflammation response before and after UC-MSC transplantation. SpO2 and PaO2/FiO2 should be used as indicators for respiratory recovery. CT lung images can be used to evaluate lung inflammation, and some biomarkers, such as CRP, IL-6, TNF-α, can be utilized to monitor the inflammation response. SpO2 and PaO2/FiO2 should be observed every day, whereas biomarkers should be evaluated every two days for 7 – 14 days. For lung recovery and tissue regeneration after hospital discharge, patients should be evaluated with respect to their respiratory, liver, kidney, and vision functions 30 — 60 days after discharge.
Conclusion
COVID-19 has caused a rapidly evolving global pandemic with effects on hundreds of millions of people. Therefore, besides the established standard therapy and vaccination, UC-MSC transplantation should be considered as an adjuvant therapy for standard treatment to significantly reduce mortality and accelerate pulmonary regeneration. Furthermore, with large-scale UC-MSC manufacturing in GMP-compliant conditions, off-the-shelf UC-MSC products can be used as freshly thawed with or without washing to remove the cryopreserved media. Because data for the clinical application of freshly thawed UC-MSC transplantation for COVID-19 is limited, additional well-controlled clinical trials with an increased number of patients should be performed. I believe that with the current evidence, UC-MSC transplantation is a highly suitable option for medical doctors to use for COVID-19 treatment.
Abbreviations
BM: Bone marrow
Covid-19: Coronavirus disease 2019
GMP: Good manufacture practice
HRQL: Health-related quality of life
MSC: Mesenchymal stem cell
SpO2: Blood oxygen saturation
UC-MSC: Umbilical cord derived mesenchymal stem cell
Acknowledgments
None.
Author’s contributions
Authors equally contributed to this work. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Funding
None.
Availability of data and materials
Not applicable.
Ethics approval and consent to participate
Not applicable.
Consent for publication
Not applicable.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
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Article Details
Volume & Issue : Vol 8 No 9 (2021)
Page No.: 4583-4595
Published on: 2021-09-30
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