Title

Human Fetal Liver Cell Transplantation in Chronic Liver Failure
Human Fetal Liver Cell Transplantation for Treatment of Chronic Liver Failure
  • Phase

    Phase 1/Phase 2
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Study Participants

    25
The herein study consists in the transplantation of liver progenitor cells isolated from human fetal liver tissue with the aim of improving conventional liver therapy and broadening therapeutical options other than liver transplantation.
One of the major clinical problems in transplantation medicine is the discrepancy between the growing number of liver chronic disease patients and the lack of organs. Research and development of new liver failure treatments thus have a high clinical significance. Regenerative medicine and results recently achieved in the field of stem cell biology may provide a remedy to this emerging problem.

Our project aims at developing new generation cell transplantation methodologies through an interdisciplinary research project created from a collaboration between ISMETT, Palermo and the University of Pittsburgh (UPMC-USA).

Adult hepatocyte transplantation has been in use for several years already and has proved to be safe for patients and able, especially in pediatric patients, to improve liver function indices and delay the need for liver transplantation. Studies have been limited until now by the use of already differentiated hepatocytes and therefore unable to proliferate and develop a suitable liver mass to support a decompensated liver.

The hypothesis of our project, supported by in vitro studies and studies on experimental animal models, is based on the possibility to generate an ectopic liver system in the spleen through the experimental use of hepatic cell progenitors obtained from human fetal liver tissues. Human fetal liver cell transplantation will be performed in the spleen through arterial injection.

The final endpoint of the project is to develop an innovative and safe treatment for patients with end-stage chronic liver failure
Study Started
Feb 28
2007
Primary Completion
Apr 30
2011
Study Completion
Jul 31
2011
Results Posted
Nov 03
2015
Estimate
Last Update
Nov 03
2015
Estimate

Other Human Fetal Liver Cell Transplantation

Human Fetal Liver Cell Transplantation. Cell source: Non-purified and non-selected fetal liver cells from fetuses aborted between the 16th and 26th week of gestation. Infusion technique: Isolation and incannulation of the femoral artery.Splenic artery infusion under radiological guidance. Cell infusion: between 5 and 10x10^8 cells. Number of sessions: up to 2.

Treated patients Experimental

Cirrhotic patients treated with Human Fetal Liver Cell Transplantation.

Control patients No Intervention

Cirrhotic patients on Standard therapy.

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Clinical diagnosis (evidence of chronic liver disease, presence of ascites and/or esophageal varices upon superior digestive endoscopy and/or ultrasound evidence of portal hypertension) or histological diagnosis of liver cirrhosis with any etiology.
Serious liver failure documented by a score ≥ B8 based on the Child-Pugh-Turcotte classification and/or MELD score ≥ 14.
Informed consent to the study signed by the patient.

Exclusion Criteria:

MELD score ≥ 25
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)
Portal vein thrombosis
Serious cardiovascular or respiratory disease, or other medical condition which may threaten patient's life in the subsequent three months
Admission to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU)
Hemodynamic instability (MAP < 55 mmHg)
Use of vasoactive drugs (Epinephrine, Norepinephrine, Vasopressin, Dopamine, Terlipressine
Type-1 (acute) hepatorenal syndrome
Levels of serum creatinine >2 mg/dl and/or creatinine clearance <30-40 ml/min
Sepsis, active infection or spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
Active gastrointestinal bleeding or recent gastrointestinal bleeding episode (in the previous 4 weeks)
Active alcohol abuse
Severe alcoholic hepatitis
Pulmonary hypertension (PAP > 35 mmHg)
History of neoplasia
Pregnancy
Non Sicilian residency
HBV DNA positive
HIV infection
Drug addiction
Age < 18 years
Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) placed in the previous month
Contraindications to the procedure (e.g., related to the splenic artery: aneurysm, kinking, thrombosis, splenic-renal shunt; related to the spleen: large angioma).

Summary

Treated Patients

Control Group

All Events

Event Type Organ System Event Term

Patient Survival

Assessment of treated and control patients survival at 1 year follow-up

Treated Patients

Death/Transplant

4.0
participants

Patient survival

5.0
participants

Control Patients

Death/Transplant

10.0
participants

Patient survival

6.0
participants

Analysis of Child-Pugh Score From Baseline to 1 Year Follow-up

Assessment of the efficacy of human fetal liver progenitor cell transplantation on Child-Pugh score. The Child-Pugh (CP) classification is a scoring system used for the classification of the severity of cirrhosis. It includes three continuous variables (bilirubin, albumin and INR) and two discrete variables (ascites and encephalopathy). Each variable is scored 1-3 with 3 indicating most severe derangement. The determination of CP score may range from 5 to 15 and the final score allows to categorize patients in Child-Pugh A (5-6 points), B (7-9 points) and C (10-15 points). The highest is the score the sickest is the patient.

Treated Patients

Baseline Child-Pugh score

10.11
units on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 1.54

Follow-up Child-Pugh score

9.11
units on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 1.45

Control Group

Baseline Child-Pugh score

10.0
units on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 1.26

Follow-up Child-Pugh score

11.13
units on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 1.63

Analysis of Meld Score From Baseline to 1 Year Follow-up

Assessment of the efficacy of human fetal liver progenitor cell transplantation on Meld score. The Model for End-stage Liver Disease (MELD) scoring system aims at stratifying recipients by their disease severity according to a score estimating the 3-month probability of death on the waiting list. The calculation of an individual's MELD score is based on three objective lab parameters (bilirubin, serum creatinine and prothrombin time expressed as international normalized ratio, INR) and it includes logarithmic transformations and multiplication by several factors. It ranges between 6 and 40. The highest is the score the lower is the patient's survival.

Treated Patients

Baseline Meld score

16.0
units on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 2.96

Follow-up Meld score

15.67
units on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 3.84

Control Patients

Baseline Meld score

15.31
units on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 2.50

Follow-up Meld score

19.06
units on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 5.70

Total

25
Participants

Age, Categorical

Region of Enrollment

Sex: Female, Male

Overall Study

Treated Patients

Control Group