Five-year follow-up of phase II trial of stromal cells for bronchopulmonary dysplasia

Author:

Ahn So YoonORCID,Chang Yun Sil,Lee Myung Hee,Sung Sein,Kim Ai-Rhan,Park Won Soon

Abstract

BackgroundWe previously performed a phase II randomised double-blind clinical trial of mesenchymal stromal cell (MSCs) transplantation to prevent bronchopulmonary dysplasia in extremely premature infants. Subsequently, we followed the infants enrolled in this clinical trial to determine the safety and effectiveness of MSCs against bronchopulmonary dysplasia at 5-year follow-up.MethodsWe evaluated infants at 5 years of age receiving placebo or MSCs in a prospective follow-up study.ResultsIn terms of the primary end point of composite respiratory morbidities, including respiratory problem-related readmission, emergency department visits or oxygen therapy, the MSC group had a rate of 60.7% for composite morbidities, while the control group showed a tendency of higher rate of 83.9% for the same outcomes without statistical significance. In terms of the secondary outcomes, the MSC group infants showed a tendency of being less likely to visit emergency department (control 67.7% vs MSC 35.7%) and to receive oxygen therapy (control 29.0% vs MSC 3.6%). No difference was observed in the incidence of respiratory problem-related hospital readmission or wheezing episodes between the groups.ConclusionIntratracheally instilled MSCs showed the possibility of potential to decrease respiratory symptom-related emergency department visits and oxygen therapy episodes in infants born extremely preterm during the 5 years after a phase II randomised controlled, double-blind trial of MSCs transplantation for bronchopulmonary dysplasia. This small size study suggests preliminary insights that can be further tested using larger sample sizes.Trial registration numberNCT01897987.

Funder

Samsung Medical Center

Korea Drug Development Fund

MEDIPOST

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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