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Clinical experience on umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell treatment in 210 severe and critical COVID-19 cases in Turkey

OBJECTIVE: Treatment for COVID-19 is still urgent need for the critically ill and severe cases. UC-MSC administration has a therapeutic benefit for severe COVID-19 patients even in the recovery period. In this paper, we aimed to present our clinical experience with UC-MSC treatment in severe and cri...

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Autores principales: O. Ercelen, Nesrin, Pekkoc-Uyanik, Kubra Cigdem, Alpaydin, Nagihan, Gulay, Gokay Rasit, Simsek, Murat
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer US 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8317476/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34319510
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12015-021-10214-x
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author O. Ercelen, Nesrin
Pekkoc-Uyanik, Kubra Cigdem
Alpaydin, Nagihan
Gulay, Gokay Rasit
Simsek, Murat
author_facet O. Ercelen, Nesrin
Pekkoc-Uyanik, Kubra Cigdem
Alpaydin, Nagihan
Gulay, Gokay Rasit
Simsek, Murat
author_sort O. Ercelen, Nesrin
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Treatment for COVID-19 is still urgent need for the critically ill and severe cases. UC-MSC administration has a therapeutic benefit for severe COVID-19 patients even in the recovery period. In this paper, we aimed to present our clinical experience with UC-MSC treatment in severe and critical severe COVID-19 patients. METHODS: In this study we evaluated the clinical outcome of severe/critically severe 210 COVID-19 patients treated with UC-MSCs, 1–2 × 10(6) per kilogram to 210 patients from 15/10/2020 until 25/04/2021. RESULTS: Out of 99 critically severe intubated patients we have observed good clinical progress/discharged from ICU in 52 (52.5%) patients. Where as 86 (77.5%) of 111 severe unintubated patients discharged from ICU. Intubated 47 (47.5%) patients and unintubated 25 (22.5%) patients pass away. Significantly higher survival was observed in patients who underwent UC-MSCs before intubation (OR = 1.475, 95% CI = 1.193–1.824 p < 0.001). It was observed that the SaO(2) parameter tended to improve after UC-MSC therapy compared to all groups. But SaO(2) parameter between intubated and unintubated groups was not statistically significant (p > 0.05), while in discharged cases SaO(2) parameter was statistically significant (p = 0.01). Besides, there was a statistically significant relation with intubation status, age (OR = 3.868, 95% CI = 0.574–7.152 p = 0.02) and weigh (OR = 6.768, 95% CI = 3.423–10.112 p < 0.001) thus presented an elevated risk for COVID-19. The linear regression analysis confirmed that the high weight was associated with the risk of intubation in COVID-19 (p = 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: According to our results and from recent studies, UC-MSC treatment is safe with high potential to be used as an added therapeutic treatment for severe COVID-19 patients. Our experience showed that UC-MSC therapy may restore oxygenation and downregulate cytokine storm in patients hospitalized with severe COVID-19. We advice wider randomised studies to discover the detailed therapeutic pathophysiology of the MSCs on COVID-19 patients. GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT: MSCs transplantation improves the damaging effects of the cytokine storm through immunomodulation and improving tissue and organ repair. Severe patients who were unintubated were in the Phase I, while critical patients who were intubated were in the Phase II. The figure is created via biorender application, (BioRender.com). [Image: see text]
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spelling pubmed-83174762021-07-28 Clinical experience on umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell treatment in 210 severe and critical COVID-19 cases in Turkey O. Ercelen, Nesrin Pekkoc-Uyanik, Kubra Cigdem Alpaydin, Nagihan Gulay, Gokay Rasit Simsek, Murat Stem Cell Rev Rep Article OBJECTIVE: Treatment for COVID-19 is still urgent need for the critically ill and severe cases. UC-MSC administration has a therapeutic benefit for severe COVID-19 patients even in the recovery period. In this paper, we aimed to present our clinical experience with UC-MSC treatment in severe and critical severe COVID-19 patients. METHODS: In this study we evaluated the clinical outcome of severe/critically severe 210 COVID-19 patients treated with UC-MSCs, 1–2 × 10(6) per kilogram to 210 patients from 15/10/2020 until 25/04/2021. RESULTS: Out of 99 critically severe intubated patients we have observed good clinical progress/discharged from ICU in 52 (52.5%) patients. Where as 86 (77.5%) of 111 severe unintubated patients discharged from ICU. Intubated 47 (47.5%) patients and unintubated 25 (22.5%) patients pass away. Significantly higher survival was observed in patients who underwent UC-MSCs before intubation (OR = 1.475, 95% CI = 1.193–1.824 p < 0.001). It was observed that the SaO(2) parameter tended to improve after UC-MSC therapy compared to all groups. But SaO(2) parameter between intubated and unintubated groups was not statistically significant (p > 0.05), while in discharged cases SaO(2) parameter was statistically significant (p = 0.01). Besides, there was a statistically significant relation with intubation status, age (OR = 3.868, 95% CI = 0.574–7.152 p = 0.02) and weigh (OR = 6.768, 95% CI = 3.423–10.112 p < 0.001) thus presented an elevated risk for COVID-19. The linear regression analysis confirmed that the high weight was associated with the risk of intubation in COVID-19 (p = 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: According to our results and from recent studies, UC-MSC treatment is safe with high potential to be used as an added therapeutic treatment for severe COVID-19 patients. Our experience showed that UC-MSC therapy may restore oxygenation and downregulate cytokine storm in patients hospitalized with severe COVID-19. We advice wider randomised studies to discover the detailed therapeutic pathophysiology of the MSCs on COVID-19 patients. GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT: MSCs transplantation improves the damaging effects of the cytokine storm through immunomodulation and improving tissue and organ repair. Severe patients who were unintubated were in the Phase I, while critical patients who were intubated were in the Phase II. The figure is created via biorender application, (BioRender.com). [Image: see text] Springer US 2021-07-28 2021 /pmc/articles/PMC8317476/ /pubmed/34319510 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12015-021-10214-x Text en © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2021 This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.
spellingShingle Article
O. Ercelen, Nesrin
Pekkoc-Uyanik, Kubra Cigdem
Alpaydin, Nagihan
Gulay, Gokay Rasit
Simsek, Murat
Clinical experience on umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell treatment in 210 severe and critical COVID-19 cases in Turkey
title Clinical experience on umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell treatment in 210 severe and critical COVID-19 cases in Turkey
title_full Clinical experience on umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell treatment in 210 severe and critical COVID-19 cases in Turkey
title_fullStr Clinical experience on umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell treatment in 210 severe and critical COVID-19 cases in Turkey
title_full_unstemmed Clinical experience on umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell treatment in 210 severe and critical COVID-19 cases in Turkey
title_short Clinical experience on umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell treatment in 210 severe and critical COVID-19 cases in Turkey
title_sort clinical experience on umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell treatment in 210 severe and critical covid-19 cases in turkey
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8317476/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34319510
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12015-021-10214-x
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