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The purpose of this study is to investigate the safety of intracoronary cardiac stem cells (CSCs) therapy in humans. Currently, there is no effective intervention to regenerate (regrow) dead heart muscle after a heart attack.
The central hypothesis is that CSCs infused into nonviable myocardial segments will regenerate infarcted myocardium by differentiating into cardiomyocytes and other cell types. According to our hypothesis, CSC infusion regenerates myocardium with consequent improvement in contractile function of the heart and general clinical status.
Full description
This will be a randomized, open-label study involving 20 patients and 20 controls. This study will be done as a collaborative project between Brigham Women's Hospital and The University of Louisville. This study is a phase I trial assessing the safety and feasibility of intracoronary autologous CSC [harvested from the right atrial appendage (RAA)] transplantation in patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy. The study will be conducted in two stages: Stage A, in which the investigators will obtain an initial assessment of safety and feasibility, and stage B, in which the investigators will adopt a block randomization strategy that will enable us to assess the feasibility of conducting a subsequent, randomized phase II trials. While the investigators also hope to have an estimate of efficacy, this focus will be the specific aim of future phase II trials. All patients who are undergoing on-pump CABG will be screened twice. The initial screening will be done to determine the preliminary eligibility (before-CABG screening) of patients for the study. If the patients satisfy the preliminary eligibility criteria stated below, the right atrial appendage, which is routinely resected during all on-pump bypass surgeries, will be collected and processed. Thereafter, the CSCs will be cultured and expanded from the RAA. The second screening will occur an average of 4 ± 1 months after CABG surgery, and will utilize a LVEF of < 40% assessed by cardiac MRI and/or the disk summation method [or Simpson's method] using echocardiography, for final enrollment.
Worldwide, more than 500 patients have received intracoronary infusions of stem cells (derived from the bone marrow and peripheral blood). None of these patients have had any adverse events as a result of these infusions.
The overall objective of this project is to determine whether intracoronary delivery of CSCs can regenerate non-viable myocardial segments in patients with ICM. CSCs will be harvested from right atrial appendages (RAAs) of patients with ICM during surgical revascularization, cultured and expanded in vitro, and then transplanted back into the same patient.
The specific aims are:
In addition to these safety data, we hope to obtain initial evidence that CSC administration results in clinical improvement.
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33 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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