Surgery and Stem Cells Might Cure Spina Bifida

Surgery and Stem Cells Might Cure Spina Bifida
5/9/2015
Updated:
5/9/2015

Combining a unique stem cell therapy with prenatal surgery may be a way to successfully treat the lower-limb paralysis associated with spina bifida, a congenital birth defect that occurs when the spinal cord does not close properly.

“Prenatal surgery revolutionized spina bifida treatment by improving brain development, but it didn’t benefit motor function as much as we hoped,” said Diana Farmer, chair of the surgery department at the University of California, Davis, and senior author of the new study published in Stem Cells Translational Medicine.

“We now think that when it’s augmented with stem cells, fetal surgery could actually be a cure,” said Aijun Wang, co-director of the UC Davis Surgical Bioengineering Laboratory.

Stem cell therapy may help treat the lower-limb (AFP/Getty Images/MAURICIO LIMA)

Permanent Shunts

Farmer and Wang are the first to combine fetal surgery with a placental stem cell treatment to reduce the effects of spina bifida, which in children can range from barely noticeable to severe.

The most common and disabling form of the disorder, called myelomeningocele, causes the spinal cord to emerge through the back, often pulling brain tissue into the spinal column and causing cerebrospinal fluid to fill the interior of the brain. Permanent shunts are required to drain the extra fluid.

Farmer was senior author of the Management of Myelomeningocele Study (MOMS), which showed that prenatal surgery could improve cognitive outcomes for the 1,500 children born each year in the United States with the condition. A majority of treated children in the study, however, were unable to walk independently at 30 months of age.

 

Walking Without Disability

For the current research, lambs with myelomeningocele received fetal surgery to return exposed tissue to the spinal canal. Human placenta-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (PMSCs)—known for their neuroprotective qualities—were preserved in hydrogel and applied to the site of the lesion. A scaffold was placed on top to hold the hydrogel in place, followed by surgical closures to complete the repair.

Six animals that received the stem cell treatment were able to walk without noticeable disability within a few hours following birth, while six control animals that received just the hydrogel and scaffold were unable to stand.

“We have taken a very important step in expanding what MOMS started,” Wang says. “Next we need to confirm the safety of the approach and determine optimal dosing.”

The researchers will continue their efforts with funding from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine. With additional evaluation and FDA approval, the new therapy could be tested in human clinical trials.

“Fetal surgery provided hope that most children with spina bifida would be able to live without shunts,” Farmer says. “Now, we need to complete that process and find out if they can also live without wheelchairs.”

Other researchers from UC Davis and from the University of California, San Francisco, are co-authors of the study.

This article was originally published by the University of California–Davis. Republished via Futurity.org under Creative Commons License 4.0.

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