Abstract

Nearly two decades of experimental and clinical research with bone marrow cells have paved the way for Phase III pivotal trials in larger groups of heart patients. Despite immense advancements, a multitude of factors are hampering the acceptance of bone marrow cell-based therapy for routine clinical use. These include uncertainties regarding purification and characterization of the cell preparation, delivery protocols, mechanistic understanding and study end points and their methods of assessment. Clinical data show mediocre outcomes in terms of sustained cardiac pump function. This review reasons that the modest outcomes observed in trials thus far are based on quality of the cell preparation with a focus on the chronological aging of cells when autologous cells are used for transplantation in elderly patients.

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