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GENERAL COMMENTARY article

Front. Immunol., 29 April 2021
Sec. Vaccines and Molecular Therapeutics

Commentary: Mesenchymal Stem Cells: A New Piece in the Puzzle of COVID-19 Treatment

  • 1Multidisciplinary Laboratory of Biosciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Brasilia, Brasilia, Brazil
  • 2Hematology and Stem Cells Laboratory, Health Sciences Department, University of Brasília, Brasilia, Brazil

A Commentary on
Mesenchymal Stem Cells: A New Piece in the Puzzle of COVID-19 Treatment

By Saldanha-Araujo F, Melgaço Garcez E, Silva-Carvalho AE and Carvalho JL (2020). Front. Immunol. 11:1563. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.01563

Introduction

According to the WHO, approximately 120 million cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed worldwide, with almost 3 million deaths recorded on April 8th, 2021 [https://covid19.who.int/]. Clinically, COVID-19 ranges from an asymptomatic infection to a severe illness, in which patients require mechanical ventilation and hospitalization. Case fatality rates range from <1% up to 20%, and are heavily influenced by patient age, comorbidities [https://ourworldindata.org], as well as geographic location [https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/data/mortality]. In severe and critical patients older than 75 years, case fatality reaches 79.2% (1). Poor outcome patients frequently present progressive pulmonary infiltrates and hyperinflammatory response (2), which are targets of different experimental treatment strategies.

So far, there is no consensus on the standard treatment for critical COVID-19 patients. An overwhelming number of parallel developments are currently underway with this objective, including the administration of Mesenchymal Stem Cells (MSCs) and MSC-derived products, such as exosomes. The low levels of ACE-2 and TMPRSS2 on the MSC surface, the refractory profile of these cells when challenged with SARS-CoV-2 (3), and the successful use of MSCs to treat inflammatory disorders justify the investigation of MSCs and their products for COVID-19 management.

In July 2020, we provided a comprehensive analysis of the clinical trials underway worldwide investigating the application of stem cells and derived products to treat COVID-19 (4). At the time, 69 clinical trials had been initiated, but only 3 scientific publications and 3 company press release documents had been published reporting achieved results.

During the last 8 months, 40 new clinical trials involving MSC-based treatments for COVID-19 were registered, and 8 scientific publications have been published. Such an update constitutes an important addition to the previous comprehensive review, bringing additional data on more than 160 COVID-19 patients which have successfully received MSC and MSC-derived products. Therefore, in this general commentary, we provide an updated analysis of the current evidence regarding the use of stem cells and derived products for COVID-19 treatment with the aim of filling the present knowledge gap regarding the robust demonstration of the feasibility, safety and possible efficacy of such therapeutic alternatives for COVID-19 management.

New Evidences Regarding the Use of Stem Cells and Derived Products

Among the 8 scientific publications detected by our group during the last 8 months (Table 1), 7 report clinical results of MSC-therapy for COVID-19, and 1 reports the use of MSC-derived exosomes. Together, those recent studies describe the treatment of 162 COVID-19 patients, constituting a more robust body of evidence supporting the safety and efficacy profile of MSCs and their products, especially for critical patients.

TABLE 1
www.frontiersin.org

Table 1 Results of stem cell treatments for COVID-19 since June 2020.

Study Characteristics

In our original study published in July 2020, we identified 13 phase 1, 13 phase 2, 19 phase 1/2, 1 phase 2/3 and 1 phase 3 study. Since then, the clinical phase of published studies is now more advanced and includes the publication of a primary report of a 2/3 study. Nevertheless, most of the newly identified trials are still in phase 1 and phase 2 studies, and the information regarding 6 out of 40 trials was not clear.

Most clinical studies underway consist of randomized trials. Most frequently, the control groups include placebo and routine treatment. Some studies still lack control groups, and 1 study is a single center, retrospective investigation.

Cell-based therapy remains the most explored therapeutic strategy. While 38 studies intend to investigate the use of MSCs to treat COVID-19, two studies focus on the use of MSC-derived products (NCT04602442 and NCT04753476). Thirty-four will administer the cells intravenously. One study proposed the inhalatory route for exosome treatment, and one study proposed the intramuscular route for MSC-secretome administration. The proposed number of infused cells was similar to previously detected, ranging between 0.5x106 and 3x108 cells, with the most frequently proposed dose consisting of single or multiple infusions of 1x106 cells/kg.

In the MSC source side, the umbilical cord was the most commonly chosen MSC source (27%), as previously noticed, followed by the bone marrow (20%), adipose tissue (15%), dental pulp (7.5%), Wharton’s jelly (5%), placenta and amniotic membrane (1 study each).

Considering published results, the 8 new scientific publications detected describe the data obtained from 160 patients which received MSC-based advanced therapies for COVID-19 management. Different from the scarce safety and efficacy evidence observed in July 2020, the current evidence supporting the notion that MSC and MSC-derived therapeutic products are safe and effective are based on the reports of several different research groups distributed worldwide. The most prominent beneficial effects of MSC and MSC-derived therapeutic products include the improvement of patient breathing capacity, the mitigation of cytokine storms, the restoration of the immune system, the decrease of hospitalization time, and the increase in patient survival rates.

Discussion

The COVID-19 pandemic has provoked a rapid mobilization of the scientific community in the attempt of providing control, prevention, and treatment strategies for COVID-19. In the absence of a gold-standard treatment for the disease (13), it is important for physicians to keep the pace regarding the real evidence supporting different experimental treatment strategies. For instance, as reported by Servick et al., in the last few months, “physicians memorized treatment guidelines one day only to learn they’d changed the next” (14).

Since July 2020, important data have been published demonstrating that the use of MSCs for severe COVID-19 treatment is increasingly promising. In the last 8 months, more than 160 patients received MSC and MSC-derived therapies. In contrast to the 51 patients treated with MSC-based advanced therapies for COVID-19 between January and July 2020, current evidence is now based on the data obtained from more than 200 COVID-19 patients. Importantly, the published data available at this point clearly indicates that the infusion of MSCs is feasible, safe, and that it possibly constitutes a highly effective treatment option for severe cases of COVID-19. Evidently, a final conclusion regarding the effects of MSCs administration and its products on the mortality of patients with COVID-19 depends on the complete data of large, randomized phase 3 trials, which are eagerly awaited (14).

Possibly due to the successful data obtained at this point, no important differences were detected considering the clinical trial design, MSC source, dose, and administration route proposed by the latest clinical studies registered in clinical trial databases.

As discussed in our first manuscript, the proposal of treating COVID-19 patients with MSC and MSC-products derive from the partial knowledge regarding the COVID-19 pathophysiology, but also from previous experience in the treatment of other respiratory diseases, such as influenza. Therefore, it is important to acknowledge the importance of accumulating clinical experience in the use of MSCs, in order to rapidly expand its application in times of need. It is indeed possible that the immunization of the world’s population will constitute the main strategy to prevent COVID-19 spread, and that the current treatment alternatives based on dexamethasone, Remdesivir, and monoclonal antibodies (1315), will possibly decrease the need for advanced therapies for COVID-19.

Still, it is important to acknowledge that, especially for critically ill patients, COVID-19 importantly affects multiple organs (16), in such an extent that these patients are beyond the point where antiviral alternatives might restore organismal function. In this scenario, the pleiotropic and systemic anti-inflammatory and regenerative effects of stem cells may greatly benefit severe patients, justifying further investigation (17). Regardless of stem cell treatment becoming the gold standard for severe COVID-19, the lessons learned by the regenerative medicine research community in the short period of the last 15 months will be forever useful for future therapeutic applications of such products.

Author Contributions

JC, AS-C, EM, and FS-A researched data and wrote the manuscript. All authors contributed to the article and approved the submitted version.

Funding

This work was supported by CNPq (National Council of Technological and Scientific Development), CAPES (Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel), and FAPDF (Federal District Research Foundation).

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

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Keywords: stem cells, COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2, advanced therapies, exosomes

Citation: Carvalho JL, Silva-Carvalho AE, Garcez EM and Saldanha-Araujo F (2021) Commentary: Mesenchymal Stem Cells: A New Piece in the Puzzle of COVID-19 Treatment. Front. Immunol. 12:682195. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.682195

Received: 17 March 2021; Accepted: 15 April 2021;
Published: 29 April 2021.

Edited by:

Bertrand Kaeffer, Le nouvel Institut national de recherche sur l'agriculture, l’alimentation et l’environnement en France INRAE, France

Reviewed by:

Hasan Ashrafi-rizi, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Iran

Copyright © 2021 Carvalho, Silva-Carvalho, Garcez and Saldanha-Araujo. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Felipe Saldanha-Araujo, felipearaujo@unb.br

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