Abstract

Background:
Our phase I/IIa clinical trial revealed that intramuscular transplantation of autologous, GCSF-mobilized CD34+ cells was safe, feasible and potentially effective at week 4 and 12 post cellular therapy in 17 patients with chronic critical limb ischemia (CLI) (5 patients with atherosclerotic peripheral arterial disease (PAD) and 12 with Buerger’s disease). However, long-term outcome of the cell therapy has yet to be reported.

Methods and results:
Incidence of major clinical events and physiological parameters of limb ischemia were evaluated at week 52, 104, 156 and 208 post CD34+ cell therapy. No patients died by week 104, whereas 3 patients with PAD died by week 156 and 1 patient with Buerger’s disease died by week 208 due to cardiac complications. No patients underwent major amputation, whereas 1 patient with Buerger’s disease underwent unplanned minor amputation by week 104. CLI-free ratio was 88.2% at week 52 and 104, 92.3% at week 156 and 84.6% at week 208 in all patients. Significant improvement of toe brachial pressure index versus baseline was sustained up to week 208 and that of transcutaneous partial oxygen pressure was kept up to week 156. The Wong-Baker FACES pain rating scale, ulcer size and exercise tolerance significantly improved at week 52, the final evaluation time point, compared with baseline. Subgroup analysis revealed the similar outcome in patients with Buerger’s disease.

Conclusions:
Favorable clinical outcomes as well as physiological evidences strongly indicate the long-term benefit of GCSF-mobilized CD34+ cell transplantation for retrieval from CLI, especially in patients with Buerger’s disease.

Highlights:

  • The first clinical report of long-term outcome of CD34+ cell therapy in CLI.
  • High CLI-free ratio was sustained for 4 years post CD34+ cell therapy.
  • Significant improvement of TBPI and TcPO2 was sustained for 3–4 years.
  • Favorable outcomes indicate long-term benefit of the cell therapy for CLI patients.