Skeletal muscle-derived cell implantation for the treatment of sphincter-related faecal incontinence

32Citations
Citations of this article
62Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Background: In an earlier pilot study with 10 women, we investigated a new approach for therapy of faecal incontinence (FI) due to obstetric trauma, involving ultrasound-guided injection of autologous skeletal muscle-derived cells (SMDC) into the external anal sphincter (EAS), and observed significant improvement. In the current study, we tested this therapeutic approach in an extended patient group: male and female patients suffering from FI due to EAS damage and/or atrophy. Furthermore, feasibility of lower cell counts and cryo-preserved SMDC was assessed. Methods: In this single-centre, explorative, baseline-controlled clinical trial, each patient (n = 39; mean age 60.6 ± 13.81 years) received 79.4 ± 22.5 × 10 6 cryo-preserved autologous SMDC. Changes in FI parameters, Fecal Incontinence Quality of Life (FIQL), anorectal manometry and safety from baseline to 1, 6 and 12 months post implantation were evaluated. Results: SMDC used in this trial contained a high percentage of myogenic-expressing (CD56 + ) and muscle stem cell marker-expressing (Pax7 + , Myf5 + ) cells. Intervention was well tolerated without any serious adverse events. After 12 months, the number of weekly incontinence episodes (WIE, primary variable), FIQL and patient condition had improved significantly. In 80.6% of males and 78.4% of females, the WIE frequency decreased by at least 50%; Wexner scores and severity of FI complaints decreased significantly, independent of gender and cause of FI. Conclusions: Injection of SMDCs into the EAS effectively improved sphincter-related FI due to EAS damage and/or atrophy in males and females. When confirmed in a larger, placebo-controlled trial, this minimal invasive procedure has the potential to become first-line therapy for FI. Trial registration: EU Clinical Trials Register, EudraCT 2010-023826-19 (Date of registration: 08.11.2010).

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Frudinger, A., Marksteiner, R., Pfeifer, J., Margreiter, E., Paede, J., & Thurner, M. (2018). Skeletal muscle-derived cell implantation for the treatment of sphincter-related faecal incontinence. Stem Cell Research and Therapy, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13287-018-0978-y

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free