Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is a chronic lung disease in preterm infants who have been treated with supplemental oxygen and mechanical ventilation. Despite major advances in perinatal and neonatal medicine, limited progress has been made in reducing BPD rates. The use of mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) is a promising and innovative therapy for several diseases because they are easy to extract and they have low immunogenicity, anti-inflammatory properties, and regenerative ability. According to several pre-clinical studies that have used BPD animal models, one mechanism of action for MSC in BPD is mainly due to the paracrine effects of MSC-derived humoral factors, such as interleukin (IL)-6, IL-8, vascular endothelial growth factor, collagen, and elastin, rather than the multilineage and regenerative capacities of MSC. Cell-free preparations derived from MSC, including conditioned media and exosomes, remain a pre-clinical technology despite their great clinical potential. A first-in-human clinical trial of MSC treatment for BPD was performed as a phase I dose-escalation trial using umbilical cord blood-derived MSC. That trial demonstrated the short- and long-term safety and feasibility of MSC, given that significantly reduced inflammatory marker expression was observed in tracheal aspirates. As of recently, several clinical trials of MSC use for BPD are ongoing or are planned in some countries to investigate the efficacy of MSC in the prevention or treatment of BPD in premature infants. Many clinicians are currently awaiting the results from these trials so that MSC can be used clinically for human BPD.
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