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Abstract 5 Umbilical Cord Blood Treatment to Improve Gross Motor Function in Individuals with Cerebral Palsy: Results from an Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis

INTRODUCTION: Umbilical cord blood (UCB) is a novel treatment for cerebral palsy (CP) with clinical trials indicating UCB is safe and can improve gross motor function. However, heterogeneity across research design, participant selection and treatment protocols has limited the ability to interpret ov...

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Autores principales: Finch-Edmondson, Megan, Paton, Madison, Webb, Annabel, Ashrafi, Mahmoud, Blatch-Williams, Remy, Cox, Jr., Charles, Crompton, Kylie, Griffin, Alexandra, Kim, MinYoung, Kosmach, Steven, Kurtzberg, Joanne, Nouri, Masoumeh, Sun, Jessica, Zarrabi, Morteza, Novak, Iona
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10476953/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/stcltm/szad047.006
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author Finch-Edmondson, Megan
Paton, Madison
Webb, Annabel
Ashrafi, Mahmoud
Blatch-Williams, Remy
Cox, Jr., Charles
Crompton, Kylie
Griffin, Alexandra
Kim, MinYoung
Kosmach, Steven
Kurtzberg, Joanne
Nouri, Masoumeh
Sun, Jessica
Zarrabi, Morteza
Novak, Iona
author_facet Finch-Edmondson, Megan
Paton, Madison
Webb, Annabel
Ashrafi, Mahmoud
Blatch-Williams, Remy
Cox, Jr., Charles
Crompton, Kylie
Griffin, Alexandra
Kim, MinYoung
Kosmach, Steven
Kurtzberg, Joanne
Nouri, Masoumeh
Sun, Jessica
Zarrabi, Morteza
Novak, Iona
author_sort Finch-Edmondson, Megan
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Umbilical cord blood (UCB) is a novel treatment for cerebral palsy (CP) with clinical trials indicating UCB is safe and can improve gross motor function. However, heterogeneity across research design, participant selection and treatment protocols has limited the ability to interpret overall treatment effect, identify best responders and dosing thresholds. OBJECTIVES: We sought to conduct a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis (IPDMA) to 1) determine the effect of UCB treatment measured by Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM) in individuals with CP, and 2) determine the effect of UCB cell dose on clinical improvement. METHODS: CENTRAL, Embase and Medline were systematically searched for clinical studies administering UCB to individuals with CP with or without a control group/comparator, collecting GMFM scores at baseline and 1, 3, 6 and/or 12 months. Individual de-identified participant data were obtained before being cleaned and coded. A one-stage IPDMA was conducted in R to obtain the pooled effect of UCB and the pooled cell dose effect via linear mixed models, including random effects terms to investigate between-study heterogeneity. RESULTS: Individual participant data from nine published and two unpublished studies (seven RCTs and four single-arm studies) were obtained, comprising 285 UCB (+/- erythropoietin, EPO)- treated participants and 171 controls for analysis. Median baseline age was 43 months (range 8-227). Most UCB infusions were allogeneic (80%), and 10/11 studies applied UCB intravenously. The median pre-thaw dose of intravenous-infused UCB was 46.7x10^6 total nucleated cells/kg (range 7.7-210.3). The pooled effect at 6 months post-intravenous UCB was an average change from baseline GMFM-66 of 0.93 (95% CI: 0.12, 1.75; p=0.027) points greater among UCB-treated participants (+/- EPO) compared to controls. There was also a statistically significant positive pooled cell dose effect at 6 months post-intervention (p=0.005), indicating that higher cell doses were associated with greater GMFM-66 increases. There was negligible between-study heterogeneity in both the treatment effect and the cell dose effect at 6 months. DISCUSSION: UCB improves gross motor function, and higher dose is beneficial. Future exploration of additional timepoints in addition to co-variates including age at infusion, severity, and etiology is underway and may elucidate responder subgroups and reveal increased efficacy.
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spelling pubmed-104769532023-09-05 Abstract 5 Umbilical Cord Blood Treatment to Improve Gross Motor Function in Individuals with Cerebral Palsy: Results from an Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis Finch-Edmondson, Megan Paton, Madison Webb, Annabel Ashrafi, Mahmoud Blatch-Williams, Remy Cox, Jr., Charles Crompton, Kylie Griffin, Alexandra Kim, MinYoung Kosmach, Steven Kurtzberg, Joanne Nouri, Masoumeh Sun, Jessica Zarrabi, Morteza Novak, Iona Stem Cells Transl Med Clinical Trials – Regenerative Medicine INTRODUCTION: Umbilical cord blood (UCB) is a novel treatment for cerebral palsy (CP) with clinical trials indicating UCB is safe and can improve gross motor function. However, heterogeneity across research design, participant selection and treatment protocols has limited the ability to interpret overall treatment effect, identify best responders and dosing thresholds. OBJECTIVES: We sought to conduct a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis (IPDMA) to 1) determine the effect of UCB treatment measured by Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM) in individuals with CP, and 2) determine the effect of UCB cell dose on clinical improvement. METHODS: CENTRAL, Embase and Medline were systematically searched for clinical studies administering UCB to individuals with CP with or without a control group/comparator, collecting GMFM scores at baseline and 1, 3, 6 and/or 12 months. Individual de-identified participant data were obtained before being cleaned and coded. A one-stage IPDMA was conducted in R to obtain the pooled effect of UCB and the pooled cell dose effect via linear mixed models, including random effects terms to investigate between-study heterogeneity. RESULTS: Individual participant data from nine published and two unpublished studies (seven RCTs and four single-arm studies) were obtained, comprising 285 UCB (+/- erythropoietin, EPO)- treated participants and 171 controls for analysis. Median baseline age was 43 months (range 8-227). Most UCB infusions were allogeneic (80%), and 10/11 studies applied UCB intravenously. The median pre-thaw dose of intravenous-infused UCB was 46.7x10^6 total nucleated cells/kg (range 7.7-210.3). The pooled effect at 6 months post-intravenous UCB was an average change from baseline GMFM-66 of 0.93 (95% CI: 0.12, 1.75; p=0.027) points greater among UCB-treated participants (+/- EPO) compared to controls. There was also a statistically significant positive pooled cell dose effect at 6 months post-intervention (p=0.005), indicating that higher cell doses were associated with greater GMFM-66 increases. There was negligible between-study heterogeneity in both the treatment effect and the cell dose effect at 6 months. DISCUSSION: UCB improves gross motor function, and higher dose is beneficial. Future exploration of additional timepoints in addition to co-variates including age at infusion, severity, and etiology is underway and may elucidate responder subgroups and reveal increased efficacy. Oxford University Press 2023-09-04 /pmc/articles/PMC10476953/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/stcltm/szad047.006 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Clinical Trials – Regenerative Medicine
Finch-Edmondson, Megan
Paton, Madison
Webb, Annabel
Ashrafi, Mahmoud
Blatch-Williams, Remy
Cox, Jr., Charles
Crompton, Kylie
Griffin, Alexandra
Kim, MinYoung
Kosmach, Steven
Kurtzberg, Joanne
Nouri, Masoumeh
Sun, Jessica
Zarrabi, Morteza
Novak, Iona
Abstract 5 Umbilical Cord Blood Treatment to Improve Gross Motor Function in Individuals with Cerebral Palsy: Results from an Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis
title Abstract 5 Umbilical Cord Blood Treatment to Improve Gross Motor Function in Individuals with Cerebral Palsy: Results from an Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis
title_full Abstract 5 Umbilical Cord Blood Treatment to Improve Gross Motor Function in Individuals with Cerebral Palsy: Results from an Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis
title_fullStr Abstract 5 Umbilical Cord Blood Treatment to Improve Gross Motor Function in Individuals with Cerebral Palsy: Results from an Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Abstract 5 Umbilical Cord Blood Treatment to Improve Gross Motor Function in Individuals with Cerebral Palsy: Results from an Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis
title_short Abstract 5 Umbilical Cord Blood Treatment to Improve Gross Motor Function in Individuals with Cerebral Palsy: Results from an Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis
title_sort abstract 5 umbilical cord blood treatment to improve gross motor function in individuals with cerebral palsy: results from an individual participant data meta-analysis
topic Clinical Trials – Regenerative Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10476953/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/stcltm/szad047.006
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