THEME: "Frontiers in Cancer Research and Oncology"
Institute of Radiological Protection and Nuclear Safety, Fontenay-auxRoses, France
Title: From Experimental Research To Clinical Trial In The Treatment Of Complications Of Radiotherapy By Stem Cells
Alain Chapel, has been
developing gene and cell therapy using non-human primates, immune-tolerant mice
and rats to protect against the side effects of radiation for 25 years. He
collaborates with clinicians to develop strategies for treatment of patients
after radiotherapy overexposures. He has participated in the first
establishment of proof of concept of the therapeutic efficacy of Mesenchymal
stem cells (MSCs) for the treatment of hematopoietic deficit, radiodermatitis
and over dosages of radiotherapy. He has contributed to the first reported
correction of deficient hematopoiesis in patients (graft failure and aplastic
anemia) thanks to intravenous injection of MSCs restoring the bone marrow
microenvironment, mandatory to sustain hematopoiesis after total body
irradiation. He is scientific investigator of Clinical phase II trial
evaluating the efficacy of systemic MSC injections for the treatment of severe
and chronic radiotherapy-induced abdomino-pelvic complications refractory to
standard therapy (NCT02814864), Hirsch Index 29.
During
radiotherapy, the radiation beam can affect healthy tissues in the field of
irradiation, even if it specifically targets the tumor, causing sequelae in 10%
of patients that can occur up to 20 years after treatment. In the
abdominal-pelvic area, this results in severe pain and extremely disabling
functional disorders of the bladder and bowel. Current treatments are mainly
symptomatic, and some patients do not respond.
For several
years, Institut de Radioprotection et Sureté Nucléaire has been conducting
research on cell therapy strategies using Mesenchymal Stromal Cells to repair
radiation-damaged tissue. This experimental research, which is currently being
carried out on different animal models, indicates that in the abdominal-pelvic
area, Mesenchymal Stromal Cells stimulate the repair process after irradiation.
They have thus made it possible to offer this treatment in a compassionate
setting to human victims of the radiotherapy accident that occurred at the Jean
Monnet Hospital in Epinal (Vosges, France). Four patients suffering from severe
pelvic side effects due to excessive radiation dose after conformal
radiotherapy for prostate adenocarcinoma received intravenous injections of
allogeneic mesenchymal stromal cells.
For treated
patients, mesenchymal Stromal Cell therapy was effective on pain, diarrhea,
hemorrhage, inflammation, fibrosis and limited fistulization. No toxicity was
observed. We are now starting inclusion in a clinical research protocol of
phase 2, for patients with post-radiation abdominal and pelvic complications
who have not seen their symptoms improve after conventional treatments (NCT
02814864, PRISME). Patients included in this trial will receive injections of
allogeneic Mesenchymal Stromal Cell (from intra-family donors) and will be
followed for 12 months at Hospital St-Antoine (Paris, France).
At the end of
this period, if the efficacy of the treatment is proven, a phase III trial
including a larger number of patients over a longer period will be used to
confirm the therapeutic properties of this treatment.