November
15, 2006
STEM CELLS SUCCESSFULLY TREAT MD IN DOGS
TUCSON, Ariz., Nov. 15, 2006 –
Researchers have successfully used stem
cells to treat dogs with a form of muscular
dystrophy similar to the Duchenne (DMD)
type in humans, the Muscular Dystrophy
Association (MDA) announced today.
The investigators, including Maurilio
Sampaolesi and MDA-funded Guilio Cossu
of the San Raffeale Scientific Institute
in Milan, Italy, used a special kind
of stem cell called a “mesoangioblasts”
that can be isolated from muscle biopsies
of living donors.
Thirteen dogs, divided into three groups,
received either cells from healthy donors,
their own cells that had been corrected
to have the protein missing in DMD or
no cells at all. The dogs that received
cells from healthy donors responded
the best, with one of that group walking
well at 13 months (most dogs with the
disease have difficulty walking by eight
months of age and die at about one year).
“Many therapeutic approaches
have been successful in mice with muscular
dystrophy, but this is the first example
of functional improvement in a large-animal
model of the disease, and a major step
toward testing these cells in the clinic,”
said Sharon Hesterlee, MDA vice president
of translational research.
The dogs in this project were injected
from three to five times with 50 million
cells at one-month intervals. The cells
were injected into the arterial system
of a limb. Some of the animals were
also treated with drugs to suppress
the immune system.
Results were documented biologically
and through at least two measures of
muscle function. There was no evidence
of immune response in any of the dogs.
“It’s not clear how long
it will take to move this promising
work to the clinic, but we’re
cautiously optimistic,” said Valerie
Cwik, MDA medical director and vice
president of research. “The fact
that the protein was effectively delivered
to several muscles, rather than just
one muscle at a time, is very significant.”
MDA is currently funding Cossu to isolate
mesoangioblasts from human biopsy
tissue in anticipation of future studies.
MDA is a voluntary health agency that
provides services,
research,
and professional and public health education.
The Association’s programs are
funded almost entirely by individual
private donors.
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