Evaluating mesenchymal stem cell therapy for sepsis with preclinical meta-analyses prior to initiating a first-in-human trial

Manoj M Lalu, Katrina J Sullivan, Shirley Hj Mei, David Moher, Alexander Straus, Dean A Fergusson, Duncan J Stewart, Mazen Jazi, Malcolm MacLeod, Brent Winston, John Marshall, Brian Hutton, Keith R Walley, Lauralyn McIntyre

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract / Description of output

Evaluation of preclinical evidence prior to initiating early-phase clinical studies has typically been performed by selecting individual studies in a non-systematic process that may introduce bias. Thus, in preparation for a first-in-human trial of mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) for septic shock, we applied systematic review methodology to evaluate all published preclinical evidence. We identified 20 controlled comparison experiments (980 animals from 18 publications) of in vivo sepsis models. Meta-analysis demonstrated that MSC treatment of preclinical sepsis significantly reduced mortality over a range of experimental conditions (odds ratio 0.27, 95% confidence interval 0.18-0.40, latest timepoint reported for each study). Risk of bias was unclear as few studies described elements such as randomization and no studies included an appropriately calculated sample size. Moreover, the presence of publication bias resulted in a ~30% overestimate of effect and threats to validity limit the strength of our conclusions. This novel prospective application of systematic review methodology serves as a template to evaluate preclinical evidence prior to initiating first-in-human clinical studies.

Original languageEnglish
JournaleLIFE
Volume5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 17 Nov 2016

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