Towards a clinical use of human embryonic stem cell-derived cardiac progenitors: a translational experience

P Menasche, V Vanneaux… - European Heart …, 2015 - academic.oup.com
P Menasche, V Vanneaux, JR Fabreguettes, A Bel, L Tosca, S Garcia, V Bellamy, Y Farouz
European Heart Journal, 2015academic.oup.com
Aim There is now compelling evidence that cells committed to a cardiac lineage are most
effective for improving the function of infarcted hearts. This has been confirmed by our pre-
clinical studies entailing transplantation of human embryonic stem cell (hESC)-derived
cardiac progenitors in rat and non-human primate models of myocardial infarction. These
data have paved the way for a translational programme aimed at a phase I clinical trial.
Methods and results The main steps of this programme have included (i) the expansion of a …
Aim
There is now compelling evidence that cells committed to a cardiac lineage are most effective for improving the function of infarcted hearts. This has been confirmed by our pre-clinical studies entailing transplantation of human embryonic stem cell (hESC)-derived cardiac progenitors in rat and non-human primate models of myocardial infarction. These data have paved the way for a translational programme aimed at a phase I clinical trial.
Methods and results
The main steps of this programme have included (i) the expansion of a clone of pluripotent hESC to generate a master cell bank under good manufacturing practice conditions (GMP); (ii) a growth factor-induced cardiac specification; (iii) the purification of committed cells by immunomagnetic sorting to yield a stage-specific embryonic antigen (SSEA)-1-positive cell population strongly expressing the early cardiac transcription factor Isl-1; (iv) the incorporation of these cells into a fibrin scaffold; (v) a safety assessment focused on the loss of teratoma-forming cells by in vitro (transcriptomics) and in vivo (cell injections in immunodeficient mice) measurements; (vi) an extensive cytogenetic and viral testing; and (vii) the characterization of the final cell product and its release criteria. The data collected throughout this process have led to approval by the French regulatory authorities for a first-in-man clinical trial of transplantation of these SSEA-1+ progenitors in patients with severely impaired cardiac function.
Conclusion
Although several facets of this manufacturing process still need to be improved, these data may yet provide a useful platform for the production of hESC-derived cardiac progenitor cells under safe and cost-effective GMP conditions.
Oxford University Press