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Evaluate the efficacy and safety of haMPC-Exos treatment with pulmonary infection caused by gram-negative bacilli resistant to carbapenems.
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Pulmonary infection is a critical disease threatening human health. With the extensive use of antibiotics, the incidence of clinical drug resistance has been on the rise significantly in recent years. Once drug resistance occurs, we will see a high mortality rate due to scarce therapies and a poor prognosis. It is almost impossible to surmount the severe pulmonary infection caused by drug-resistant bacteria only by upgrading antibiotics. The commonly used supportive therapies clinically, such as glucocorticoids and immunomodulators, also lack forceful medical evidence. Therefore, it is urgent to explore new treatments.
Mesenchymal stem/progenitor cell exosomes are nano-sized vesicles secreted by mesenchymal stem/progenitor cells under certain conditions, which contain a lot of proteins, lipids and nucleic acids with tissue repair and immunomodulatory functions.
Mesenchymal stem/progenitor cell exosomes are nano-sized vesicles secreted by mesenchymal stem/progenitor cells under certain conditions, which contain a lot of proteins, lipids and nucleic acids with tissue repair and immunomodulatory functions.
Currently, it has been confirmed that stem cells can visibly improve the pathological changes of lungs caused by infection, lighten pulmonary edema, reduce protein exudation, mitigate alveolar inflammation, and remove bacteria. Thus, it brings new hope for the treatment of pulmonary infection caused by extensively drug-resistant bacteria.
Patients were treated, in the research project, with well-suited noninvasive haMPC-Exos aerosol inhalation, in an attempt to verify the efficacy and safety of haMPC-Exos treatment with pulmonary infection caused by gram-negative bacilli resistant to carbapenems.
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Inclusion criteria
The patients had at least one of the following clinical manifestations:
The patients had at least one of the following signs:
The chest X-ray of the patients showed new or progressive infiltration, and pneumonia was considered.
4.The pathogenic test of the lower respiratory tract specimens revealed carbapenem-resistant Gram-negative bacilli (Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae or Acinetobacter baumannii), which were consistent with the drug resistance spectrum and intermediate or resistant to all carbapenem antibiotics, namely, the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of meropenem or imipenem ≥ 2 μg/ml (2 μg/ml was intermediate and 4 μg/ml was drug-resistant). The MIC of ertapenem ≥ 1 μg/ml, of which 1 μg/ml was intermediate and ≥ 2 μg/ml was drug-resistant.
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60 participants in 3 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Jieming Qu, MD,PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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