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Safety and feasibility of percutaneous autologous skeletal myoblast transplantation in the coil-infarcted swine myocardium
Authors:Dib Nabil  Campbell Ann  Jacoby Douglas B  Zawadzka Agatha  Ratliff Judson  Miedzybrocki Brigitte M  Gahremanpour Amir  Diethrich Edward B  Opie Shaun R
Affiliation:Arizona Heart Institute, Phoenix, USA. ndib@azheart.com
Abstract:
INTRODUCTION: Autologous skeletal myoblast transplantation (ASMT) for myocardial regeneration is a promising new treatment for patients with congestive heart failure secondary to myocardial infarction (MI). However, non-surgical delivery could broaden the utility of this approach. The present study was designed to evaluate the safety and feasibility of transplanting autologous skeletal myoblast (ASM) via endovascular delivery into the infarcted swine myocardium. METHODS: Seven female Yorkshire swine successfully underwent induced left ventricular MI. ASM biopsies were obtained from the hind limb of each animal and myoblasts were expanded in vitro. In a pilot experiment, ASM were labeled with iridium and short-term retention and biodistribution was determined 2 h after ASM delivery via the MyoStar needle-injection catheter inserted through the femoral artery. At 30 days post-infarction, the remaining animals were divided into three groups containing 2 animals each for percutaneous catheter delivery into the infarcted zone: group 1 control animals were injected with media only, group 2 and 3 animals were injected with approximately 300 x 10(6) and 600 x 10(6) ASM, respectively. Sixty days post-transplantation, the swine hearts were harvested. RESULTS: During the 60-day period between transplantation and harvest, no adverse events were recorded, and continuous rhythm monitoring revealed no arrhythmias. In the small sampling size, myocardial function assessments revealed a trend toward improvement in the treatment groups with respect to ejection fraction, viability, and cardiac index. However, histology of treated swine hearts identified no skeletal muscle cells. DISCUSSION: Percutaneous ASMT into an infarcted swine myocardium is feasible and safe, and may contribute to overall improved heart function.
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