53rd National Congress
of the Italian Society of Neurosurgery, Milan, November
21-24, 2004
AUTOLOGOUS MACROPHAGE THERAPY FOR PATIENTS WITH COMPLETE
SCI: RESULTS OF PHASE I TRIAL AND PREVIEW ON THE PHASE II
TRIAL
Claudio Bernucci, Nachshon Knoller1,Jacques
Brotchi2, David Snyder3
Dipartimento di Neurochirurgia, H San Raffaele, Milano
1Chaim Sheba Medical Center, Tel Hashomer, Israel
2 Erasme Hospital, Brussels,
Belgium
3Proneuron
Biotechnologies, Ness-Ziona, Israel
Complete spinal cord injury (SCI) leads to irreversible
motor and sensory functional loss. Up to now no surgical or
medical therapy is available for these patients. The last
clinical trial designated for SCI has been NASCIS I and II,
and its results are still matter of debate.
An international randomized clinical trial with ProCord
therapy is underway in Israel and USA.
ProCord consists of autologous macrophages that have been
incubated with skin. Macrophages and other immune cells
participate in normal wound healing in most tissues, but
their activity in the damaged central nervous system is
repressed by “immune privilege”. Injection of the skin-coincubated
macrophages into the damaged spinal cord is designed to
overcome the hostile tissue environment, thereby promoting
neuronal survival and regrowth. Experiments showing CNS
regeneration and partial functional recovery in rats (Rapalino
et al, Nature Medicine 4:814-821, 1998) served as proof of
principle. Safety and efficacy have been demonstrated in
extensive preclinical experiments that continue to produce
promising results.
A Phase I open label, non-randomized clinical trial was
undertaken at Sheba Medical Center, Israel and Erasmus
Hospital, Brussels, Belgium. Fourteen SCI patients (C5-T11)
diagnosed as ASIA A (American Spinal Injury Association) at
baseline were treated with ProCord 9 to 15 days after
injury. Three patients recovered motor and sensory
neurological function improving from ASIA A to ASIA C, one
with recovered voluntary bladder control. An additional
patient recovered sensory function with no motor recovery
(ASIA B). Three other patients showed improvements in
neurological sensory scores but remained ASIA A. The
greatest gains occurred during the first year.
Despite the small study size (14 patients), recovery of
clinically significant neurological function has been
observed in several subjects after Procord treatment,
whereas untreated patients with complete SCI rarely recover
significant function. Thus, ProCord appears to be a
potentially valuable therapy in the acute stage for
improving outcomes after SCI.
The Phase II trial will enroll 61 ASIA A patients, 39 in
the treatment group and 22 in the control group. Improvement
in the ASIA classification of at least one grade by 12
months is the primary efficacy endpoint, while the secondary
efficacy endpoints are recovery of ASIA sensory and motor
scores, recovery of at least two motor levels (in cervical
patients), and recovery of bladder and bowel function.
Since the
administration of the activated macrophages must be
performed within two hours from its release the production
facility needs to be adjacent to the treating medical center,
Therefore, only few centers have been established for the
Phase II trial and every patient has to be referred to
them.Our Institution will collaborate with Proneuron
collecting and screening potential candidates for the trial
and will review the patient at follow-up as an independent
investigator.