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Immunomodulatory effects of mesenchymal stem cell therapy in chronic kidney disease: a literature review

Jipeng Li, Mengting Wu, Lijie He

2025BMC Nephrology11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) has been a growing public medical concern in recent years which calls for effective interventions. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have garnered increased interest in past decades due to their potential to repair and regenerate damaged tissues. Many clinical trials have highlighted the safety and effectiveness of kidney disease with this novel cell therapy. MSC infusion can improve renal function indices such as glomerular filtration rate, urine protein, serum creatinine, and blood urea nitrogen, while inhibiting immune response by increasing regulatory T cells. The therapeutic mechanisms may be primarily attributed to a function combined with immunomodulation, anti-inflammation, anti-fibrosis, promoting angiogenesis, anti-oxidation, anti-apoptosis, or tissue healing produced by cell secretsome. However, CKD is a broad concept due to many pathological etiologies including diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, immunological damage, a family history of renal failure, and so on. Furthermore, the therapeutic efficacy of MSCs may be influenced by different cell sources, injection methods, medication dosage, or homing proportion. As a result, it is timely and essential to access recent advancements in the MSC application on CKD.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineNephrologyMesenchymal stem cellKidney diseaseStem-cell therapyInternal medicineStem cellDiseaseOncologyIntensive care medicinePathologyBiologyGeneticsMesenchymal stem cell researchBiomedical Ethics and RegulationTissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine
Immunomodulatory effects of mesenchymal stem cell therapy in chronic kidney disease: a literature review | Litcius