New York: A new type of cell therapy shows promise as the first treatment for advanced liver disease, following results from a clinical trial.
Patients with the condition who were treated with the cell therapy had a significantly lower risk of death or need for a liver transplant after four years compared with those who received standard medical care, said the study published in the journal Cell Stem Cell.
Experts say the treatment offers a potential alternative to liver transplants for those in end-stage liver disease, which is currently the only curative treatment option but limited by donor availability, cost, and suitability for only a small subset of patients.
The liver has the unique ability to regenerate itself after damage. However, in patients with advanced liver disease, severe scarring – known as cirrhosis – can leave it damaged beyond repair, leading to liver failure.
More than three-quarters of people are diagnosed with cirrhosis when it is too late for effective treatment, contributing to more than 11,000 deaths per year in the UK.
Scientists at the University of Edinburgh have developed a pioneering cell therapy designed to tackle the scarred tissue and restore liver function.
The treatment involves taking immune cells from the patients’ blood and turning them into mature macrophages – a type of white blood cell that ‘eats’ infected or damaged cells – which are then re-injected back into the patient.
The macrophages travel to the liver, where they break down scar tissue, reduce harmful inflammation, and encourage the growth of healthy liver cells.
The treatment was tested in the MATCH clinical trial, with 26 patients receiving the macrophage therapy, while 24 received standard care.
After four years, 70 percent of patients who received the macrophage therapy were living without the need for a liver transplant, compared with just 40 per cent of patients who did not receive the treatment.
There were eight deaths and no liver transplants among the patients treated with macrophages, compared with nine deaths and five liver transplants among those who received standard care. No serious side-effects were reported in patients treated with the cell therapy.
The four-year follow-up period provides important insights into the long-term benefits and safety of the treatment, according to the research team.
The findings suggest the use of macrophage therapy is a promising therapeutic option for end-stage liver disease and represents a significant step forward in regenerative medicine, experts say.
Professor Stuart Forbes, from the University of Edinburgh’s Institute for Regeneration and Repair, said: “Liver disease is a major cause of death of people in their working age. Although we can use liver transplantation as a rescue treatment for a proportion of people who have advanced liver disease, this is restricted by a lack of suitable donor organs”.