Cell therapy of burns

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Abstract

Severe burns remain a life-threatening local and general inflammatory condition often with serious sequelae, despite remarkable progress in their treatment over the past three decades. Cultured epidermal autografts, the first and still most up-to-date cell therapy for burns, plays a key role in that progress, but drawbacks to this need to be reduced by using cultured dermal-epidermal substitutes. This review focuses on what could be, in our view, the next major breakthrough in cell therapy of burns - use of mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs). After summarizing current knowledge, including our own clinical experience with MSCs in the pioneering field of cell therapy of radiation-induced burns, we discuss the strong rationale supporting potential interest in MSCs in treatment of thermal burns, including limited but promising pre-clinical and clinical data in wound healing and acute inflammatory conditions other than burns. Practical options for future therapeutic applications of MSCs for burns treatment, are finally considered. © 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Leclerc, T., Thepenier, C., Jault, P., Bey, E., Peltzer, J., Trouillas, M., … Jean-Jacques, L. (2011). Cell therapy of burns. Cell Proliferation, 44(SUPPL. 1), 48–54. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2184.2010.00727.x

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