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NEW THERAPY FOR HEART FAILURE? CWRU RESEARCHERS TRY STEM CELLS FROM AN UMBILICAL CORD
09 February 2007 - Case Western Reserve University
| The National Institutes of Health awarded $450,000 to investigators at The Research Institute of University Hospitals of Cleveland and Case Western Reserve University to explore the use of umbilical cord stem cells to heal damaged heart muscles. |
The project brings together experts in the fields of cardiology and hematology/oncology in a unique application for umbilical cord blood that is normally discarded after a baby's birth. The study will determine whether stem cell therapy holds promise for people with severe coronary artery disease and congestive heart failure not amenable to standard therapies, according to Vincent Pompili, director of interventional cardiology at UHC and the study's principal investigator. Pompili, who is also associate professor of medicine at Case Western Reserve University, said if the approach proves successful in mice, clinical trials in human subjects could begin within 18 months. An estimated 5 million Americans have congestive heart failure, a condition that disables the heart muscle and causes the heart to pump inefficiently. About half of all heart failure patients die within five years of their diagnosis, reports the Heart Failure Society of America. The stem cell treatment, called "therapeutic angiogenesis," is designed to grow new blood vessels in damaged heart muscle by infusing stem cells from the cord blood. Stem cells-immature cells that develop into mature red blood cells, platelets or white blood cells-have proved to be an effective arsenal for other fatal diseases. "For years, we have successfully treated young leukemia patients with cord blood stem cells," said Mary J. Laughlin, director of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation at UHC and co-investigator. Laughlin, assistant professor of medicine at CWRU, is the nation's leading expert in the use of cord blood to restore the blood-making ability of bone marrow damaged by high doses of chemotherapy. "Our new study is an ambitious attempt to find out whether this same treatment can benefit an entirely different group of patients," she said. Angiogenesis-the growth of new blood vessels-does not normally occur in the human heart. But heart disease researchers view angiogenesis as a potentially life-saving process in areas of the heart that lack sufficient blood flow. Studies using human growth factors (such as the gene therapy injection of a protein called VEGF) have attempted angiogenesis as an alternative to coronary bypass surgery. So far, those results have not been entirely successful. Cord blood stem cells, harvested from the placenta after a baby is born and with parental consent, are not to be confused with embryonic stem cells. The national debate over the ethical issues of harvesting stem cells from embryos does not apply to stem cells retrieved from tissue that is normally discarded. If pre-clinical trials with mice prove successful-and these stem cells grow new blood vessels in heart muscle, Pompili said, clinical trials will begin for people with heart failure. First, however, researchers will obtain the stem cells from the patient's own bone marrow, inject them into the damaged heart and look for blood vessel growth. By using the patient's own bone marrow, there is no chance of the patient's immune system rejecting the injected stem cells.
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About: Case Western Reserve University
The Case School of Engineering, which is celebrating its 125th anniversary in 2005, has distinctive and acclaimed research programs, including biomedical engineering, functional polymers, fuel cells, advanced materials, microgravity fluid flow and combustion, biologically inspired robots, sensors and microfabrication. Research awards at the school have more than doubled since 2001 to nearly $60 million. Case is among the nation's leading research institutions. Founded in 1826 and shaped by the unique merger of the Case Institute of Technology and Western Reserve University, Case is distinguished by its strengths in education, research, service, and experiential learning. Located in Cleveland, Case offers nationally recognized programs in the Arts and Sciences, Dental Medicine, Engineering, Law, Management, Medicine, Nursing, and Social Sciences. |
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