Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Not yet recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
Ischemic Stroke
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: N/AIntervention Model: Single Group AssignmentIntervention Model Description: monocentric, non-randomized, open-label with single-arm designMasking: None (Open Label)Primary Purpose: Treatment

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 75 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Using neural grafts to restore function after lesions of the central nervous system is a challenging strategy. Most of the transplantation experience acquired the last decades was focused on fetal neuronal grafts. However, despite the great enthusiasm generated by this approach, ethical controversie...

Using neural grafts to restore function after lesions of the central nervous system is a challenging strategy. Most of the transplantation experience acquired the last decades was focused on fetal neuronal grafts. However, despite the great enthusiasm generated by this approach, ethical controversies, immune rejection, and lack of fetal donors remain a major problem. Therefore, autotransplantation of adult brain cells represents an attractive restoration alternative to bypass the caveats of fetal grafting. The optimization of the procedure to obtain ANCE, a cortical autograft obtained from cortical biopsy, was first successfully demonstrated in producing long-term primary culture of adult human brain cells from temporal lobe tissues obtained from epilepsy and trauma neurosurgical patients. ANCE has been characterized as an ecosystem of autologous neural cells in suspension, composed of several cell types: astrocytes, proliferative progenitors and quiescent progenitors. The production of ANCE has been implemented to prepare long-term primary culture from primate cortical biopsies. This allowed assessing the feasibility of autotransplantation from brain biopsy to reimplantation of cultured brain cells in a non-human primate model of motor cortex lesion. On the same model of cerebral cortex lesion in nonhuman primates, further study demonstrated, by quantitative behavioral evidence, the beneficial outcome of cell therapy following injury of the cerebral cortex. Based on the encouraging results from past experiences on non-human primate model of motor cortex lesion, this monocentric pilot study aims at evaluating the feasibility and safety of ANCE (Autologous Neural Cell Ecosystems), which is cortical autograft intended to be used on stroke patients, for the replacement of motor neurons destroyed during an ischemic stroke.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04488965
Collaborators
Not Provided
Investigators
Not Provided