Adult Stem Cells Help in Liver Cancer

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Liver cancer:  Stem cells speed growth of healthy liver tissue

If you had liver cancer that had taken over a large portion of your liver, surgeons might not dare remove that large a part of your liver.  Their treatment up to now would have been simply to re-route the blood supply to the liver, trying to starve the cancer and feed the good part of the liver, hoping you would grow more good liver so that they could then operate.

In exciting news, adult stem cells have now added another aid to that �good liver� growth.

Stem cells speed growth of healthy liver tissue

OAK BROOK, Ill.� For the first time, researchers have used adult bone marrow stem cells to regenerate healthy human liver tissue, according to a study published in the April issue of the journal Radiology.

When large, fast-growing cancers invade the liver, some patients are unable to undergo surgery, because removing the cancerous tissue would leave too little liver to support the body.

Researchers at Heinrich-Heine-University in D�sseldorf, Germany, used adult bone marrow stem cells to help quickly regenerate healthy liver tissue, enabling patients to eventually undergo a surgical resection.

�Our study suggests that liver stem cells harvested from the patient�s own bone marrow can further augment and accelerate the liver�s natural capacity to regenerate itself,� said G�nther F�rst, M.D., co-author and professor of radiology.

In the study, researchers compared the results of portal vein embolization (PVE), a technique currently used to help regenerate liver tissue, to a combination of PVE and an injection of bone marrow stem cells into the liver.

PVE blocks blood flow to the diseased portion of the liver and diverts blood to the organ�s healthy tissue, promoting liver growth. Bone marrow stem cells extracted from the patient�s hip bone and injected into the liver also help the liver regenerate.

The study included 13 patients with large central liver malignancies who were unable to undergo surgery because resection would leave less than 25 percent of their total liver volume.

Six of the patients underwent both PVE and injection of bone marrow stem cells. Seven patients underwent only PVE. Computed tomography (CT) scans were performed before and up to five weeks after PVE to determine the degree of liver growth.

Patients who received the combination of PVE and stem cell injection had double the liver growth rate and gain in liver volume, compared with those who underwent PVE alone. As a result, the patients who received the combined treatment were able to undergo surgery an average of 18 days sooner than patients who received PVE only.

�Our research demonstrates that stem cells are a powerful adjunct to PVE for patients undergoing surgical resection,� said Jan Schulte am Esch, M.D., co-author and surgery staff member. �Based on our results, we also believe that adult stem cell administration may be a promising therapy for regenerating livers damaged by other chronic and acute diseases.�

The researchers are currently embarking on a randomized controlled trial of the therapy.

 

 �Embolization and CD133+ Bone Marrow Stem Cells for Liver Regeneration.� Collaborating with Prof. F�rst and Dr. Schulte am Esch on this paper were L. Benjamin Fritz, M.D., Ludger W. Poll, M.D., Stefan B. Hosch, M.D., Michael Klein, M.D., Erhard Godehardt, M.D., Andreas Krieg, M.D., Britta Wecker, Volker Stoldt, M.D., Marcus Stockschl�der, Claus F. Eisenberger, M.D., Ulrich M�dder, M.D., and Wolfram R. Knoefel, M.D.
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2007-03/rson-scs032107.php

 Updated on RARTL April, 2007


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