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RETRACTED: Effect of stem cell treatment on burn wounds: A systemic review and a meta‐analysis

Yating Qiao, Qingrong Zhang, Ying Peng, Xianming Qiao, Jun Yan, Bolin Wang, Zhi‐Han Zhu, Zihan Li, Yi Zhang

2022International Wound Journal10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A meta-analysis was performed to evaluate the effect of stem cells treatment in managing burn wounds. A systematic literature search up to March 2022 incorporated 24 studies reported between 2013 and 2021 including 400 animals with burn wounds at the beginning of the study; 211 were using stem cells treatment, and 189 controlled. Statistical tools like the contentious method were used within a random or fixed-influence model to establish the mean difference (MD) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) to evaluate the influence of stem cells treatment in managing burn wounds. Stem cells treatment had a significantly higher burn wound healing rate (MD, 15.18; 95% CI, 11.29-19.07, P < .001), higher blood vessel number (MD, 12.28; 95% CI, 10.06-14.51, P < .001), higher vascular endothelial growth factor (MD, 10.24; 95% CI, 7.19-13.29, P < .001), lower interleukin-1 level (MD, -98.48; 95% CI, -155.33 to -41.63, P < .001), and lower tumour necrosis factor α level (MD, -28.71; 95% CI, -46.65 to -10.76, P < .002) compared with control in animals' models with burn wounds. Stem cells treatment had a significantly higher burn wound healing rate, higher blood vessel number, higher vascular endothelial growth factor, lower interleukin-1 level, and lower tumour necrosis factor α level compared with control in animals' models with burn wounds. Further studies are required to validate these findings.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineStem cellMeta-analysisVascular endothelial growth factorConfidence intervalWound healingTumor necrosis factor alphaSurgeryInternal medicineGastroenterologyVEGF receptorsBiologyGeneticsWound Healing and TreatmentsBurn Injury Management and OutcomesMesenchymal stem cell research