Prevention for moderate or severe BPD with intravenous infusion of autologous cord blood mononuclear cells in very preterm infants-a prospective non-randomized placebo-controlled trial and two-year follow up outcomes
Ren Zhuxiao, Fang Xu, Wei Wei, Shumei Yang, Jianlan Wang, Qiuping Li, Pei Jingjun, Nie Chuan, Yongsheng Li, Zhichun Feng, Jie Yang
Abstract
Background: Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is the primary severe complication of preterm birth. Severe BPD was associated with higher risks of mortality, more postnatal growth failure, long term respiratory and neurological developmental retardation. Inflammation plays a central role in alveolar simplification and dysregulated vascularization of BPD. There is no effective treatment to improve BPD severity in clinical practice. Our previous clinical study showed autologous cord blood mononuclear cells (ACBMNCs) infusion could reduce the respiratory support duration safely and potential improved BPD severity. Abundant preclinical studies have reported the immunomodulation effect as an important mechanism underlying the beneficial results of stem cell therapies in preventing and treating BPD. However, clinical studies assessing the immunomodulatory effect after stem cells therapy were rare. This study was to investigate the effect of ACBMNCs infusion soon after birth on prevention for severe BPD and long term outcomes in very preterm neonates. The immune cells and inflammatory biomarkers were detected to investigate the underlying immunomodulatory mechanisms. Methods: cells/kg ACBMNC or normal saline intravenously within 24 h after enrollment. Incidence of moderate or severe BPD in survivors were investigated as the primary short term outcome. Growth, respiratory and neurological development were assessed as long term outcomes at corrected age of 18-24 month-old. Immune cells and inflammatory biomarkers were detected for potential mechanism investigation. The trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02999373). Findings: T cells in lymphocytes (p = 0.03), and CD4+ CD25+ forkhead box protein 3 (FoxP3)+ regulatory T cells in CD4+ T cells increased significantly after ACBMNCs intervention (p < 0.001). Anti-inflammatory factor IL-10 was higher (p = 0.03), while pro-inflammatory factor such as TNF-a (p = 0.03) and C reactive protein (p < 0.001) level was lower in intervention group than in control group after intervention. Interpretation: ACBMNCs could prevent moderate or severe BPD in surviving very premature neonates and might improve neurodevelopmental outcomes in long term. An immunomodulatory effect of MNCs contributed to the improvement of BPD severity. Funding: This work was supported by National Key R&D Program of China (2021YFC2701700), National Natural Science Foundation of China (82101817, 82171714, 8187060625), Guangzhou science and technology program (202102080104).