Abstract

BackgroundPulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a rare disease (15 cases per million) that is characterized by widespread loss of the pulmonary microcirculation and elevated pulmonary vascular resistance leading to pathological right ventricular remodeling and ultimately right heart failure. Regenerative cell therapies (i.e., therapies involving cells with stem or progenitor-like properties) could potentially restore the effective lung microcirculation and provide a curative therapy for PAH. Preclinical evidence suggests that regenerative cell therapy using endothelial progenitor cells or mesenchymal stem cells may be beneficial in the treatment of PAH. These findings have led to the completion of a small number of human clinical trials, albeit with modest effect compared to animal studies. The objective of this systematic review is to compare the efficacy and safety of regenerative cell therapies in preclinical models of PAH as well as assess study quality to inform future clinical studies.MethodsWe will include preclinical studies of PAH in which a regenerative cell type was administered and outcomes compared to a disease control. The primary outcome will be pulmonary hemodynamics as assessed by measurement of right ventricular systolic pressure and/or mean pulmonary arterial pressure. Secondary outcomes will include mortality, survival, right ventricular remodeling, pulmonary vascular resistance, cardiac output, cardiac index, pulmonary acceleration time, tricuspid annular systolic excursion, and right ventricular wall thickness. Electronic searches of MEDLINE and EMBASE databases will be constructed and reviewed by the Peer Review of Electronic Search Strategies (PRESS) process. Search results will be screened independently in duplicate. Data from eligible studies will be extracted, pooled, and analyzed using random effects models. Risk of bias will be assessed using the SYstematic Review Centre for Laboratory animal Experimentation (SYRCLE) risk of bias tool, and individual study reporting will be assessed according to an itemized checklist based on the Animal Research: Reporting of In vivo Experiments (ARRIVE) guidelines.DiscussionThis systematic review will examine the efficacy and safety of regenerative cell therapy in preclinical models of PAH. As well, the literature will be assessed for study quality and risk of bias. The results will guide the design of future clinical trials and preclinical animal studies.Systematic review registrationCAMARADES (http://www.dcn.ed.ac.uk/camarades/SyRF/Protocols.htm).Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13643-016-0265-x) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a rare disease (15 cases per million) that is characterized by widespread loss of the pulmonary microcirculation and elevated pulmonary vascular resistance leading to pathological right ventricular remodeling and right heart failure

  • The mechanisms underlying the pathobiology of PAH are still unclear, it is thought that injury to the pulmonary endothelium leads to apoptosis which, in turn, triggers processes that reduce the effective lung vasculature, including widespread loss of functional microcirculation and obliterative remodeling of the small pulmonary arterioles due to the emergence of growth dysregulated vascular cells [3]

  • These are recognized as the most representative and most widely utilized methods of induction for modeling human PAH [12]. These models do not require invasive surgery or extensive manipulation that could be subject to technical variability and provide a predictable disease phenotype. These models share in common the characteristic pathological features of human PAH: endothelial dysfunction, SMC proliferation, inflammation, and vascular narrowing and rarefaction resulting in pulmonary hypertension and right ventricular remodeling; only the SU+chronic hypoxia (CH) model reproduces the complex obliterative vascular lesions that are typical of human PAH [13]

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Summary

Methods

We will include preclinical studies of PAH in which a regenerative cell type was administered and outcomes compared to a disease control. The primary outcome will be pulmonary hemodynamics as assessed by measurement of right ventricular systolic pressure and/or mean pulmonary arterial pressure. Secondary outcomes will include mortality, survival, right ventricular remodeling, pulmonary vascular resistance, cardiac output, cardiac index, pulmonary acceleration time, tricuspid annular systolic excursion, and right ventricular wall thickness. Data from eligible studies will be extracted, pooled, and analyzed using random effects models. Risk of bias will be assessed using the SYstematic Review Centre for Laboratory animal Experimentation (SYRCLE) risk of bias tool, and individual study reporting will be assessed according to an itemized checklist based on the Animal Research: Reporting of In vivo Experiments (ARRIVE) guidelines

Discussion
Background
Schistosomiasis
Methods/design
Selection bias 3 Selection bias
Performance bias Blinding
Detection bias
Attrition bias
Reporting bias
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