Acute Kidney Injury Successfully Treated with Autologous Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor-mobilized Peripheral Blood CD34-Positive Cell Transplantation: A first-in-Human Report

Author:

Suzuki Hiroyuki1ORCID,Ohtake Takayasu1ORCID,Tsukiyama Toshitaka2,Morota Marie1,Ishioka Kunihiro1,Moriya Hidekazu1,Mochida Yasuhiro1,Hidaka Sumi1,Sato Tsutomu3,Asahara Takayuki4,Kobayashi Shuzo1

Affiliation:

1. Kidney Disease and Transplant Center  Shonan Kamakura General Hospital, Kamakura, Japan

2. Department of Radiology and Interventional Radiology  Shonan Kamakura General Hospital, Kamakura, Japan

3. Clinical Laboratory  Shonan Kamakura General Hospital, Kamakura, Japan

4. Regenerative Medicine Science  Tokai University School of Medicine, Isehara, Japan

Abstract

Abstract A 36-year-old man with severe acute kidney injury (AKI) was admitted to Shonan Kamakura General Hospital in Japan. He was diagnosed with refractory hypertension based on a severely elevated blood pressure of 224/116 mmHg and retinal, cardiac, and brain damage revealed by electrocardiogram, fundoscopy, and magnetic resonance imaging, respectively. Although hemodialysis was withdrawn following strict blood pressure control by an angiotensin receptor blocker, severe kidney insufficiency persisted. Therefore, we performed an autologous granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-mobilized peripheral blood CD34-positive cell transplantation. Collected CD34-positive cells were directly infused to both renal arteries. The patient's general condition was unremarkable after intervention, and the serum creatinine level gradually improved to 2.96 mg/dL 23 weeks after cell therapy. Although transient fever and thrombocytosis were observed after intervention, no major adverse events were observed. This patient is the first case in a phase I/II clinical trial of autologous granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-mobilized peripheral blood CD34-positive cell transplantation for severe AKI with a CD34-positive cell dose-escalating protocol (trial number jRCTb030190231).

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,General Medicine

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