Researchers found 61 centers offering stem cell therapies for heart
failure as of last year in the U.S. alone, including five that
claimed to have performed more than 100 procedures. Only nine
centers required copies of patients’ medical records and just one
facility said it had a board certified cardiologist on staff.
“We simply do not know anything about the quality of the treatment
delivered at these centers,” said senior study author Dr. Paul
Hauptman director of heart failure at Saint Louis University
Hospital.
“These centers are not regulated in any way,” Hauptman said by
email.
Almost 6 million Americans have heart failure, and it’s one of the
most common reasons older adults go to the hospital, according to
the American Heart Association.
It happens when the heart muscle is too weak to effectively pump
enough blood through the body. Symptoms can include fatigue, weight
gain from fluid retention, shortness of breath and coughing or
wheezing. Medications can help strengthen the heart and minimize
fluid buildup in the body.
While some experimental stem cell therapies for heart failure are
currently being tested in late-stage human trials, none have won
approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
In theory, after a transplant, stem cells could permanently become
part of the diseased heart and either help grow new healthy heart
tissue or tell existing cells to work better, said Paul Knoepfler, a
cell biology researcher at the University of California Davis School
of Medicine in Sacramento who wasn’t involved in the study.
It’s also possible stem cells could temporarily visit the heart and
stimulate a positive response in cells already there, he said.
Even though there’s no conclusive proof yet that any stem cell
treatments are safe and effective for heart failure, centers
contacted for the study charge an average of $7,694 for each
treatment using patient’s own stem cells and $6,038 for each
procedure with donor stem cells.
In one instance, though, a clinic staff member said, “If you have a
million dollars to spend we will set you up with weekly infusions.”
Hauptman’s team had used a standard script when contacting each
center, asking about the stem cell treatment itself, medical exams
before and afterward and pricing.
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Among the other responses they received from clinic staff were
remarks such as, “If you know anyone that can start an IV, a
neighbor that is a nurse for example, we can send you the stem cells
and that person can administer them to you” and “We hope you don't
believe your doctor when they tell you there is nothing they can do,
you were smart to call us.”
None of the sites in the study discussed what methods they used to
isolate or identify stem cells, though most claimed to use patients’
cells and 24 said they got cells from fat tissue.
Most centers claimed to deliver cells intravenously, researchers
report in JAMA Internal Medicine.
“This approach has been associated with complications such as
stroke, in which infused cells block blood vessels in the brain,”
said Douglas Sipp, a researcher at RIKEN Center for Developmental
Biology in Kobe, Japan, who wasn’t involved in the study.
“The biggest risk is that patients will waste their money, time and
hopes on an unnecessary and useless invasive procedure,” Sipp said
by email.
If any stem cell treatment did ultimately prove safe and effective
enough to win FDA approval, it would likely offer a significant
improvement over the limited treatment options currently available,
said Leigh Turner, a researcher at the University of Minnesota
Center for Bioethics who wasn’t involved in the study.
But it’s impossible to say what patients would get at unregulated
clinics offering unapproved stem cell therapies, Turner said by
email. In at least two cases unrelated to the current study,
patients died after getting stem cell procedures at a clinic in
Florida, and in another case at a different Florida clinic, a woman
went blind, Turner noted.
“Clinics marketing stem cell treatments to patients suffering from
heart failure might be administering anything from slurries of mixed
cells, some of which might be stem cells, to nothing more than
cellular debris,” Turner said. “Often one can only speculate.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2uQve40 JAMA Internal Medicine, online July
24, 2017.
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