Industrial Development of Standardized Fetal Progenitor Cell Therapy for Tendon Regenerative Medicine: Preliminary Safety in Xenogeneic Transplantation.

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State: Public
Version: Final published version
License: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_E2509CEBF7D3
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Industrial Development of Standardized Fetal Progenitor Cell Therapy for Tendon Regenerative Medicine: Preliminary Safety in Xenogeneic Transplantation.
Journal
Biomedicines
Author(s)
Laurent A. (co-first), Abdel-Sayed P. (co-first), Grognuz A., Scaletta C., Hirt-Burri N., Michetti M., de Buys Roessingh A.S., Raffoul W., Kronen P., Nuss K., von Rechenberg B., Applegate L.A., Darwiche S.E.
ISSN
2227-9059 (Print)
ISSN-L
2227-9059
Publication state
Published
Issued date
03/04/2021
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
9
Number
4
Pages
380
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: epublish
Abstract
Tendon defects require multimodal therapeutic management over extensive periods and incur high collateral burden with frequent functional losses. Specific cell therapies have recently been developed in parallel to surgical techniques for managing acute and degenerative tendon tissue affections, to optimally stimulate resurgence of structure and function. Cultured primary human fetal progenitor tenocytes (hFPT) have been preliminarily considered for allogeneic homologous cell therapies, and have been characterized as stable, consistent, and sustainable cell sources in vitro. Herein, optimized therapeutic cell sourcing from a single organ donation, industrial transposition of multi-tiered progenitor cell banking, and preliminary preclinical safety of an established hFPT cell source (i.e., FE002-Ten cell type) were investigated. Results underlined high robustness of FE002-Ten hFPTs and suitability for sustainable manufacturing upscaling within optimized biobanking workflows. Absence of toxicity or tumorigenicity of hFPTs was demonstrated in ovo and in vitro, respectively. Furthermore, a 6-week pilot good laboratory practice (GLP) safety study using a rabbit patellar tendon partial-thickness defect model preliminarily confirmed preclinical safety of hFPT-based standardized transplants, wherein no immune reactions, product rejection, or tumour formation were observed. Such results strengthen the rationale of the multimodal Swiss fetal progenitor cell transplantation program and prompt further investigation around such cell sources in preclinical and clinical settings for musculoskeletal regenerative medicine.
Keywords
cell banking, chorioallantoic membrane model, fetal progenitor cell therapy, pilot safety study, preclinical animal model, regenerative medicine, tendinopathies, tendon cell therapy, toxicity evaluation, transplantation program
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Funding(s)
European Commission / H2020 / 833594
Create date
28/04/2021 10:50
Last modification date
21/11/2022 9:17
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