Concise review: Adipose-derived stromal vascular fraction cells and stem cells: Let's not get lost in translation

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Abstract

Subcutaneous fat has emerged as an alternative tissue source for stromal/stem cells in regenerative medicine. Over the past decade, international research efforts have established a wealth of basic science and preclinical evidence regarding the differentiation potential and regenerative properties of both freshly processed, heterogeneous stromal vascular fraction cells and culture expanded, relatively homogeneous adipose-derived stromal/stem cells. the stage has been set for clinicians to translate adipose-derived cells from the bench to the bedside; however, this process will involve "development" steps that fall outside of traditional "hypothesis-driven, mechanism-based'' paradigm. This concise review examines the next stages of the development process for therapeutic applications of adipose-derived cells and highlights the current state of the art regarding clinical trials. It is recommended that the experiments addressing these issues be reported comprehensively in the peer-review literature. This transparency will accelerate the standardization and reproducibility of adipose-derived cell therapies with respect to their efficacy and safety. © AlphaMed Press.

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Gimble, J. M., Bunnell, B. A., Chiu, E. S., & Guilak, F. (2011). Concise review: Adipose-derived stromal vascular fraction cells and stem cells: Let’s not get lost in translation. Stem Cells, 29(5), 749–754. https://doi.org/10.1002/stem.629

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