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Heart valves grown from womb fluid
cells
By LINDSEY TANNER
Chicago -
Scientists for the first time have grown human heart valves
using stem cells from the fluid that cushions babies in the womb —
offering a revolutionary approach that may be used to repair defective
hearts in the future.
The idea is to create these new
valves in the lab while the pregnancy progresses and have them ready
to implant in a baby with heart defects after it is born.
The Swiss experiment follows recent
successes at growing bladders and blood vessels and suggests that
people may one day be able to grow their own replacement heart parts —
in some cases, even before they're even born.
It's one of several sci-fi tissue
engineering advances that could lead to homegrown heart valves for
infants and adults that are more durable and effective than artificial
or cadaver valves.
"This may open a whole new therapy
concept to the treatment of congenital heart defects," said Dr. Simon
Hoerstrup, a University of Zurich scientist who led the work, which
was presented Wednesday at an American Heart Association conference.
Also at the meeting, Japanese
researchers said they had grown new heart valves in rabbits using
cells from the animals' own tissue. It's the first time replacement
heart valves have been created in this manner, said lead author Dr.
Kyoko Hayashida.
"It's very promising," University of
Chicago cardiologist Dr. Ziyad Hijazi said of the two studies. "I
don't doubt" that it will be applied one day in humans, he said.
One percent of all newborns, or more
than 1 million babies born worldwide each year, have heart problems.
These kill more babies in the United States in the first year of life
than any other birth defects, according to the National Institutes of
Health.
Heart valve defects can be detected
during pregnancy with ultrasound tests at about 20 weeks of pregnancy.
At least one-third of afflicted infants have problems that could be
treated with replacement valves, Hoerstrup said.
"It could be quite important if it
turns out to work," said Dr. Robert Bonow, a Northwestern University
heart valve specialist.
Conventional procedures to fix faulty
heart valves all have drawbacks. Artificial valves are prone to blood
clots and patients must take anti-clotting drugs for life. Valves from
human cadavers or animals can deteriorate, requiring repeated
open-heart surgeries to replace them, Hijazi said. That's especially
true in children, because these valves don't grow along with the body.
Valves made from the patient's own
cells are living tissue and might be able to grow with the patient,
said Hayashida, a scientist at the National Cardiovascular Center
Research Institute in Osaka.
The Swiss procedure has another
advantage: using cells the fetus sheds in amniotic fluid avoids
controversy because it doesn't involve destroying embryos to get stem
cells.
"This is an ethical advantage,"
Hoerstrup said at the meeting.
Here's how the experiment worked:
Amniotic fluid was obtained through a
needle inserted into the womb during amniocentesis, a prenatal test
for birth defects that is often offered to pregnant women aged 35 and
older.
Fetal stem cells were isolated from
the fluid, cultured in a lab dish, then placed on a mold shaped like a
small ink pen and made of biodegradable plastic. It took only four to
six weeks to grow each of the 12 valves created in the experiment.
The researchers said lab tests showed
they appeared to function normally.
The next step is to see if they work
in sheep, a two-year experiment that Hoerstrup said is under way.
He and co-researcher Dorthe Schmidt
called their method "a promising, low-risk approach enabling the
prenatal fabrication of heart valves ready to use at birth."
Hoerstrup
said amniotic stem cells also can be frozen for years and could
potentially be used to create replacement parts for aging or diseased
valves in adults, too.
The research is preliminary and
experts say implanting tissue-engineered human valves in human hearts
is likely years away. But it's not as far-fetched as it sounds.
Earlier this year, U.S. scientists
reported re-engineering seven diseased bladders with tissue grown from
the patients' own cells.
And last year, researchers reported
that two kidney dialysis patients from Argentina had received the
world's first tissue-engineered blood vessels, fashioned from their
own skin and vein tissue.
Dr. John E. Mayer Jr., a Children's
Hospital Boston heart surgeon and tissue engineering pioneer, said
scientists are optimistic that this area of research will
revolutionize how people with valve disease will be cared for in the
future.
About 250,000 patients worldwide have
surgery to replace heart parts each year, according to Mayer.
In one of Mayer's experiments, heart
valves fashioned from stem cells harvested from sheep bone marrow
appeared to function normally when implanted in sheep. A similar
experiment used cells harvested from sheep arteries.
Hoerstrup
said amniotic fluid is potentially a richer source of stem cells than
other sources.
Mayer said the big question is
whether stem cells from amniotic fluid can create valves superior to
those made from other cell types.
"I'm pretty sure the ball will
continue to be advanced down the field," Mayer said. "We'll get there
one way or the other." -- The
Associated Press
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