Department of Neurology, Multiple Sclerosis Center and Laboratory of Neuroimmunology, The Agnes-Ginges Center for Neurogenetics, Hadassah University Hospital, Jerusalem, Ein-Kerem, Israel.
Expert Rev Neurother. 2013 May;13(5):567-78. doi: 10.1586/ern.13.36.
It is widely accepted that the main common pathogenetic pathway in multiple sclerosis (MS) involves an immune-mediated cascade initiated in the peripheral immune system and targeting CNS myelin. Logically, therefore, therapeutic approaches to the disease include modalities aiming at downregulation of the various immune elements that are involved in this immunological cascade. Since the introduction of interferons in 1993, more specific immunoactive drugs have been introduced, but still most of them can, at best, effectively modulate only the early relapsing phases of MS. The more progressed phases of the disease are not efficiently amendable by the existing immunomodulatory drugs. Moreover, localized and compartmentized inflammation in the CNS, which seems to be mostly responsible for the chronic axonal damage and resulting progression of disability, is less affected by the current drugs. A more radical approach to suppress all the inflammation in MS, including that into the CNS, could theoretically be achieved with high-dose immunosuppression using strong cytotoxic medications and resetting of the immune system by hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). HSCT, both allogeneic and autologous, has been tried as a novel therapeutic approach in various autoimmune diseases. During the last 15 years several (mostly open) clinical studies evaluated the effect of HSTC on MS patients; the published papers showed that a high proportion of the HSCT-treated MS patients were stabilized, or even improved after the transplantation and have generally indicated a beneficial effect on disease progression. In this review, the rationale of HSCT and the summary of the results of the existing clinical trials are presented. Despite the fact that it is difficult to collectively summarize the results of all the trials, due to lack of uniformity in the conditioning and treatment protocols and of completed controlled studies, these clinical studies have provided a strong 'proof of concept' for HSCT in MS and have significantly contributed to our understanding of the advantages and disadvantages of each approach and HSCT protocol.
人们普遍认为,多发性硬化症(MS)的主要共同发病途径涉及在外周免疫系统中启动并针对中枢神经系统髓鞘的免疫介导级联反应。因此,从逻辑上讲,针对这种疾病的治疗方法包括旨在下调参与这种免疫级联反应的各种免疫成分的方法。自 1993 年引入干扰素以来,已经引入了更具特异性的免疫活性药物,但它们中的大多数仍只能有效地调节 MS 的早期复发阶段。现有的免疫调节药物并不能有效地改善疾病的更进展阶段。此外,中枢神经系统中局部和隔室性炎症似乎主要负责慢性轴突损伤和由此导致的残疾进展,而当前的药物对其影响较小。通过使用强细胞毒性药物进行高剂量免疫抑制并通过造血干细胞移植(HSCT)重置免疫系统,可以从理论上实现对 MS 中所有炎症(包括中枢神经系统中的炎症)的更激进抑制。HSCT,无论是同种异体还是自体,已被尝试作为各种自身免疫性疾病的新型治疗方法。在过去的 15 年中,有几项(主要是开放的)临床试验评估了 HSCT 对 MS 患者的影响;已发表的论文表明,相当一部分接受 HSCT 治疗的 MS 患者在移植后稳定甚至改善,并且通常表明对疾病进展有有益的影响。在这篇综述中,介绍了 HSCT 的原理和现有临床试验结果的总结。尽管由于调理和治疗方案缺乏一致性以及完成的对照研究缺乏,难以对所有试验的结果进行总体总结,但这些临床研究为 MS 中的 HSCT 提供了强有力的“概念验证”,并极大地促进了我们对每种方法和 HSCT 方案的优缺点的理解。