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Human umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stem cell therapy in patients with COVID-19: a phase 1 clinical trial

Fanping Meng, Ruonan Xu, Siyu Wang, Zhe Xu, Chao Zhang, Yuanyuan Li, Tao Yang, Lei Shi, Junliang Fu, Tianjun Jiang, Lei Huang, Peng Zhao, Xin Yuan, Xing Fan, Jiyuan Zhang

Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy · 2020 · ▲ 349 citations

Abstract

Abstract No effective drug treatments are available for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Host-directed therapies targeting the underlying aberrant immune responses leading to pulmonary tissue damage, death, or long-term functional disability in survivors require clinical evaluation. We performed a parallel assigned controlled, non-randomized, phase 1 clinical trial to evaluate the safety of human umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stem cells (UC-MSCs) infusions in the treatment of patients with moderate and severe COVID-19 pulmonary disease. The study enrolled 18 hospitalized patients with COVID-19 ( n = 9 for each group). The treatment group received three cycles of intravenous infusion of UC-MSCs (3 × 10 7 cells per infusion) on days 0, 3, and 6. Both groups received standard COVID-treatment regimens. Adverse events, duration of clinical symptoms, laboratory parameters, length of hospitalization, serial chest computed tomography (CT) images, the PaO 2 /FiO 2 ratio, dynamics of cytokines, and IgG and IgM anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibodies were analyzed. No serious UC-MSCs infusion-associated adverse events were observed. Two patients receiving UC-MSCs developed transient facial flushing and fever, and one patient developed transient hypoxia at 12 h post UC-MSCs transfusion. Mechanical ventilation was required in one patient in the treatment group compared with four in the control group. All patients recovered and were discharged. Our data show that intravenous UC-MSCs infusion in patients with moderate and severe COVID-19 is safe and well tolerated. Phase 2/3 randomized, controlled, double-blinded trials with long-term follow-up are needed to evaluate the therapeutic use of UC-MSCs to reduce deaths and improve long-term treatment outcomes in patients with serious COVID-19.

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1038/s41392-020-00286-5
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2026-06-21 MST

Cite this

APA
Meng, F., Xu, R., Wang, S., Xu, Z., Zhang, C., Li, Y., Yang, T., Shi, L., Fu, J., Jiang, T., Huang, L., Zhao, P., Yuan, X., Fan, X., Zhang, J., Song, J., Zhang, D., Jiao, Y., Liu, L., &amp; Zhou, C. (2020). Human umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stem cell therapy in patients with COVID-19: a phase 1 clinical trial. <em>Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41392-020-00286-5
Vancouver
Meng F, Xu R, Wang S, Xu Z, Zhang C, Li Y, et al. Human umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stem cell therapy in patients with COVID-19: a phase 1 clinical trial. Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy. 2020. doi:10.1038/s41392-020-00286-5.
BibTeX
@article{fanping2020Humanu, title = {Human umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stem cell therapy in patients with COVID-19: a phase 1 clinical trial}, author = {Fanping Meng and Ruonan Xu and Siyu Wang and Zhe Xu and Chao Zhang and Yuanyuan Li and Tao Yang and Lei Shi and Junliang Fu and Tianjun Jiang and Lei Huang and Peng Zhao and Xin Yuan and Xing Fan and Jiyuan Zhang and Jin‐Wen Song and Dawei Zhang and Yan‐Mei Jiao and Limin Liu and Chun‐Bao Zhou and Markus Maeurer and Alimuddin Zumla and Ming Shi and Fu‐Sheng Wang}, journal = {Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy}, year = {2020}, doi = {10.1038/s41392-020-00286-5}, }

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