Background & Aim: Umbilical cord blood (CB) and mesenchymal stromal cells (MSC) have shown safety in children with cerebral palsy (CP). While early phase clinical trials suggest potential functional benefit, small sample sizes, heterogeneous populations, and variable cell doses have impaired accurate assessment of motor gains following treatment. Aim: Describe change in gross motor function in young children with CP after treatment with high-dose allogeneic unrelated donor CB or allogeneic, third party human cord tissue-derived MSC (hCT-MSC) 12 months post treatment. Methods, Results & Conclusion: We conducted a phase 2 randomized trial of 90 children ages 2-4 years with hypertonic CP due to hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy, periventricular leukomalacia, or in utero stroke/bleed. Randomization, stratified by etiology and severity (Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS) level), was to: (a) 10×107 total nucleated cells (TNC)/kg allogeneic CB at baseline, (b) three doses of 2×106 cells/kg hCT-MSC given at baseline, 3, and 6 months, or (c) Natural History in which 10×107 TNC/kg allogeneic CB was given at one year. Infusions were intravenous and premedicated with diphenhydramine and methylprednisolone without immunosuppression. Primary outcome was change in motor function one-year post enrollment, measured by the Gross Motor Function Measure-66 (GMFM-66). Ninety children (median 3.5 years) were randomized and completed baseline and 6-month evaluations. Due to the COVID pandemic, only 68 completed 12-month assessments. The only adverse events (AEs) related to the cell products were 8 transient infusion reactions (3 CB, 5 hCT-MSC). An additional 95 non-severe AEs and 33 severe AEs were unrelated to the products. At 6 months, there was no statistical difference in change in GMFM-66 scores between Natural History (n=31) and either treatment group (CB n=31, hCTMSC n=28). At 12 months, after adjustment for baseline GMFCS level, GMFM-66 score, and etiology of CP, the mean GMFM-66 score of the hCT- MSC group (n=23) was 1.4 points higher than Natural History (n=25;95% CI: -1.1, 4.0;p=0.27) and the CB group (n=20) was 3.3 points higher than Natural History (95% CI: 0.59, 5.93;p=0.02). High dose allogeneic CB, but not hCT-MSC, infusion is associated with gross motor improvement in young children with CP, consistent with the dose effect in a prior study of autologous CB. A phase 3 randomized placebo-controlled study should be performed to confirm the CB observation.
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