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Stem cell therapy applied for digestive anastomosis: Current state and future perspectives

BACKGROUND: Digestive tract resections are usually followed by an anastomosis. Anastomotic leakage, normally due to failed healing, is the most feared complication in digestive surgery because it is associated with high morbidity and mortality. Despite technical and technological advances and focuse...

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Autores principales: Trébol, Jacobo, Georgiev-Hristov, Tihomir, Pascual-Miguelañez, Isabel, Guadalajara, Hector, García-Arranz, Mariano, García-Olmo, Damian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Baishideng Publishing Group Inc 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8788180/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35126832
http://dx.doi.org/10.4252/wjsc.v14.i1.117
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author Trébol, Jacobo
Georgiev-Hristov, Tihomir
Pascual-Miguelañez, Isabel
Guadalajara, Hector
García-Arranz, Mariano
García-Olmo, Damian
author_facet Trébol, Jacobo
Georgiev-Hristov, Tihomir
Pascual-Miguelañez, Isabel
Guadalajara, Hector
García-Arranz, Mariano
García-Olmo, Damian
author_sort Trébol, Jacobo
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Digestive tract resections are usually followed by an anastomosis. Anastomotic leakage, normally due to failed healing, is the most feared complication in digestive surgery because it is associated with high morbidity and mortality. Despite technical and technological advances and focused research, its rates have remained almost unchanged the last decades. In the last two decades, stem cells (SCs) have been shown to enhance healing in animal and human studies; hence, SCs have emerged since 2008 as an alternative to improve anastomoses outcomes. AIM: To summarise the published knowledge of SC utilisation as a preventative tool for hollow digestive viscera anastomotic or suture leaks. METHODS: PubMed, Science Direct, Scopus and Cochrane searches were performed using the key words “anastomosis”, “colorectal/colonic anastomoses”, “anastomotic leak”, “stem cells”, “progenitor cells”, “cellular therapy” and “cell therapy” in order to identify relevant articles published in English and Spanish during the years of 2000 to 2021. Studies employing SCs, performing digestive anastomoses in hollow viscera or digestive perforation sutures and monitoring healing were finally included. Reference lists from the selected articles were reviewed to identify additional pertinent articles. Given the great variability in the study designs, anastomotic models, interventions (SCs, doses and vehicles) and outcome measures, performing a reliable meta-analysis was considered impossible, so we present the studies, their results and limitations. RESULTS: Eighteen preclinical studies and three review papers were identified; no clinical studies have been published and there are no registered clinical trials. Experimental studies, mainly in rat and porcine models and occasionally in very adverse conditions such as ischaemia or colitis, have been demonstrated SCs as safe and have shown some encouraging morphological, functional and even clinical results. Mesenchymal SCs are mostly employed, and delivery routes are mainly local injections and cell sheets followed by biosutures (sutures coated by SCs) or purely topical. As potential weaknesses, animal models need to be improved to make them more comparable and equivalent to clinical practice, and the SC isolation processes need to be standardised. There is notable heterogeneity in the studies, making them difficult to compare. Further investigations are needed to establish the indications, the administration system, potential adjuvants, the final efficacy and to confirm safety and exclude definitively oncological concerns. CONCLUSION: The future role of SC therapy to induce healing processes in digestive anastomoses/sutures still needs to be determined and seems to be currently far from clinical use.
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spelling pubmed-87881802022-02-03 Stem cell therapy applied for digestive anastomosis: Current state and future perspectives Trébol, Jacobo Georgiev-Hristov, Tihomir Pascual-Miguelañez, Isabel Guadalajara, Hector García-Arranz, Mariano García-Olmo, Damian World J Stem Cells Systematic Reviews BACKGROUND: Digestive tract resections are usually followed by an anastomosis. Anastomotic leakage, normally due to failed healing, is the most feared complication in digestive surgery because it is associated with high morbidity and mortality. Despite technical and technological advances and focused research, its rates have remained almost unchanged the last decades. In the last two decades, stem cells (SCs) have been shown to enhance healing in animal and human studies; hence, SCs have emerged since 2008 as an alternative to improve anastomoses outcomes. AIM: To summarise the published knowledge of SC utilisation as a preventative tool for hollow digestive viscera anastomotic or suture leaks. METHODS: PubMed, Science Direct, Scopus and Cochrane searches were performed using the key words “anastomosis”, “colorectal/colonic anastomoses”, “anastomotic leak”, “stem cells”, “progenitor cells”, “cellular therapy” and “cell therapy” in order to identify relevant articles published in English and Spanish during the years of 2000 to 2021. Studies employing SCs, performing digestive anastomoses in hollow viscera or digestive perforation sutures and monitoring healing were finally included. Reference lists from the selected articles were reviewed to identify additional pertinent articles. Given the great variability in the study designs, anastomotic models, interventions (SCs, doses and vehicles) and outcome measures, performing a reliable meta-analysis was considered impossible, so we present the studies, their results and limitations. RESULTS: Eighteen preclinical studies and three review papers were identified; no clinical studies have been published and there are no registered clinical trials. Experimental studies, mainly in rat and porcine models and occasionally in very adverse conditions such as ischaemia or colitis, have been demonstrated SCs as safe and have shown some encouraging morphological, functional and even clinical results. Mesenchymal SCs are mostly employed, and delivery routes are mainly local injections and cell sheets followed by biosutures (sutures coated by SCs) or purely topical. As potential weaknesses, animal models need to be improved to make them more comparable and equivalent to clinical practice, and the SC isolation processes need to be standardised. There is notable heterogeneity in the studies, making them difficult to compare. Further investigations are needed to establish the indications, the administration system, potential adjuvants, the final efficacy and to confirm safety and exclude definitively oncological concerns. CONCLUSION: The future role of SC therapy to induce healing processes in digestive anastomoses/sutures still needs to be determined and seems to be currently far from clinical use. Baishideng Publishing Group Inc 2022-01-26 2022-01-26 /pmc/articles/PMC8788180/ /pubmed/35126832 http://dx.doi.org/10.4252/wjsc.v14.i1.117 Text en ©The Author(s) 2022. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This article is an open-access article that was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/Licenses/by-nc/4.0/
spellingShingle Systematic Reviews
Trébol, Jacobo
Georgiev-Hristov, Tihomir
Pascual-Miguelañez, Isabel
Guadalajara, Hector
García-Arranz, Mariano
García-Olmo, Damian
Stem cell therapy applied for digestive anastomosis: Current state and future perspectives
title Stem cell therapy applied for digestive anastomosis: Current state and future perspectives
title_full Stem cell therapy applied for digestive anastomosis: Current state and future perspectives
title_fullStr Stem cell therapy applied for digestive anastomosis: Current state and future perspectives
title_full_unstemmed Stem cell therapy applied for digestive anastomosis: Current state and future perspectives
title_short Stem cell therapy applied for digestive anastomosis: Current state and future perspectives
title_sort stem cell therapy applied for digestive anastomosis: current state and future perspectives
topic Systematic Reviews
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8788180/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35126832
http://dx.doi.org/10.4252/wjsc.v14.i1.117
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