Vanderbilt Performs State's First Stem
Cell Heart Regeneration Therapy
NASHVILLE, Tenn., March 15 (AScribe Newswire)
-- Vanderbilt University Medical Center is the
first in the state to perform a novel therapy
that uses bone marrow stem cells to stimulate
regeneration of the heart muscle after a heart
attack.
Vanderbilt is one of three medical centers in
the country providing this new treatment
modality as part of a multi-center, randomized
study funded by Amorcyte, a privately funded
cell-therapy company studying stem cells for
the treatment of cardiovascular disease.
Physicians are excited about the prospects of
this therapy because of the enormous potential
to "transform the way we treat people
with cardiac disease," said Douglas
Vaughan, M.D., chief of the Division of
Cardiovascular Medicine. "This is the
first patient of many that we will enroll in
our randomized-controlled trials to study the
effects of cell therapy in treating cardiac
disease."
"It is truly gratifying that we have
reached this point."
John
Plummer, 63, underwent the stem cell
regeneration therapy on March 11, about one
week after experiencing a heart attack.
"There are no guarantees," said
Plummer. "It was the prospect of
improvement - any improvement - that made it
worth it. There are certain risks, but the
prospect of the study proving to be valuable
to others as well, all of those considerations
made it seem like something I ought to
do."
"I look at it this way. This is an
improvement you would give almost anything to
make. There is nothing more important than
your general health."
Plummer, an English professor for 36 years at
Vanderbilt University, is not the first
patient tested for eligibility into the trial.
More than 100 patients have been screened, but
did not meet the criteria for study
participation - impaired heart function after
an acute heart attack.
"If we treat a patient rapidly, some may
not have any damage at all," said David
Zhao, M.D., director of the Cardiac Cath Lab.
"But for those who, despite all efforts,
suffer damage to the heart muscle, we are
studying the effects of this treatment in
repairing the heart muscle."
"We are hoping that this is just the
beginning of the journey and eventually we
will be able to provide this unique therapy as
part of our treatment protocol to patients
with a damaged heart."
For
decades, the major barrier in treating heart
attack patients is the inability to repair the
damaged muscle. About 20 percent of patients
experience permanent muscle loss, which
ultimately leads to heart failure. Heart
disease is the leading cause of death in the
United States. Five million people suffer from
heart failure. Half of those die.
"If you look at the big picture, we don't
have a definitive way to improve people's
heart function, "said Scott Phillips,
M.D., a cardiology fellow. "Heart failure
has a huge financial impact on our medical
system. If we could improve heart function, if
this proves to be a viable therapy, there
would be tremendous benefits, not only for the
patient, but in terms of the amount of money a
health care system could save. It would be
astronomical."
Vanderbilt's participation in this Phase I,
industry-supported study highlights its role
as a key player in stem cell regeneration in
this country. For years, Europe has been the
site for much of the heart-related, stem cell
based therapies.
"Fewer than five centers in the country
are doing this kind of cell-based
therapy," said Zhao. "Coupled with
the fact that we are one of five programs
funded by the NIH for cell-based therapies
definitely brings Vanderbilt to the next
level. We are playing a leading role in cell
therapy."
Patients enrolled in the Amorcyte trial, like
Plummer, will be seen regularly for up to five
years. Within three to six months,
investigators expect to see some improvement
in heart function.
"This treatment approach looks very
promising based on preliminary results already
published," said Friedrich Schuening,
M.D., chief of the Section of Hematology and
Stem Cell Transplant. "The study would
not have been possible without the excellent
collaboration between our colleagues from the
Division of Cardiovascular Medicine and from
the Vanderbilt Stem Cell Transplant
Program."
"This is truly a historical event,"
said Phillips. "If this therapy works, it
has the potential to affect millions of
people."
Patients qualifying for enrollment will be
given a series of tests. Half the patients
will be admitted into the standard treatment
arm of the study, while the other half will
receive an intra-coronary stem cell infusion.
Bone marrow will be collected from the patient
by a team at Vanderbilt and shipped to
Amorcyte, where the stem cells will be
processed. Within 24 hours, the cells will be
returned to Vanderbilt and infused into the
patient via a catheter directly into the
coronary artery, where the cells will diffuse
into the heart muscle.
Additional studies in cardiac regeneration are
expected to begin late this summer at
Vanderbilt.
|