Randomized placebo-controlled trial of CL2020, an allogenic muse cell–based product, in subacute ischemic stroke
Kuniyasu Niizuma, Shin-ichiro Osawa, Hidenori Endo, Shin‐Ichi Izumi, Kota Ataka, Akihiro Hirakawa, Masao Iwano, Teiji Tominaga
Abstract
Effective treatments for stroke after the acute phase remain elusive. Muse cells are endogenous, pluripotent, immune-privileged stem cells capable of selectively homing to damaged tissue after intravenous injection and replacing damaged/lost cells via differentiation. This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial enrolled ischemic stroke patients with modified Rankin Scale (mRS) ≥3. Randomized patients received a single intravenous injection of an allogenic Muse cell-based product, CL2020 (n = 25), or placebo (n = 10), without immunosuppressant, 14-28 days after stroke onset. Safety (primary endpoint: week 12) and efficacy (mRS, other stroke-specific measures) were assessed up to 52 weeks. Key efficacy endpoint was response rate (percentage of patients with mRS ≤2 at week 12). To week 12, 96% of patients in the CL2020 group experienced adverse events and 28% experienced adverse reactions (including one Grade 4 status epilepticus), compared with 100% and 10%, respectively, in the placebo group. Response rate was 40.0% (95% CI, 21.1-61.3) in the CL2020 group and 10.0% (0.3-44.5) in the placebo group; the lower CI in the CL2020 group exceeded the preset efficacy threshold (8.7% from registry data). This randomized placebo-controlled trial demonstrated CL2020 is a possible effective treatment for subacute ischemic stroke.Registry information: JAPIC Clinical Trials Information site (JapicCTI-184103, URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.jp/cti-user/trial/ShowDirect.jsp?japicId=JapicCTI-184103).