by ALEXEY
BERSENEV on JUNE 6, 2012 · in CLINICAL
LAB,HEMATOPOIETIC The quality of stem cells after long-term cryogenic storage
is an important question in the era of personalized cell banking and cell
therapy. To date, we have some data for cord blood storage. Hal Broxmeyer’s
group is carefully checking the quality of cord blood samples stored in liquid
nitrogen since 1992. They publish reports every 3 years or so. The most recent
report was from the last year: We now
report efficient recovery of functional HPCs up to 21-23.5 years, with more in
depth studies on CB HSC engraftment in immune deficient mice, recovery of
responsive T cells, generation of induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells and
detection of endothelial colony forming cells (ECFCs). The quality of bone marrow-derived
mesenchymal stromal cells after 25 years of cryopreservation was recently
reported. Despite regular reports on
long-term storage of cord blood, we don’t have any data about quality of
hematopoietic cells in stored bone marrow or mobilized blood cell products. A
new study, published online 2 days ago, provides us valuable information about
recovery of bone marrow- and mobilized blood-derived haematopoietic stem cell
products after long-term storage. … 31 separate bags of stem cell product (SCP) stored for 11–19 years
(median 15 years) were assessed for total nucleated cell (TNC) count, colony
forming unit-granulocyte/macrophage (CFU-GM), CD34+ cell count and cell
viability.
Few important points from the methodology of this study: good number of samples analyzed (18 – bone
marrow, 13 – mobilized blood); the same method of cryopreservation was used
during last 20 years in this center; post-freeze/thaw test samples were used as
controls. Results are quite interesting:
Recovery of TNC, CD34+ cell count and cell viability decreased with time
(P=<0.01) but CFU-GM did not. This study shows that SCPs harvested from PB
and BM do deteriorate with long-term storage.
I was wondering why viability would drop? The
median recovery of viability was 58% and linear regression analysis
demonstrated a significant decrease (P=0.01) in viability recovery with longer
storage time of the product (Figure 2). The linear regression slope decreased
at a rate of 0.282 per month, giving an estimated time to 50% recovery of
viability of 195 months. PS:
Interestingly, this study was submitted for publication in 2010.
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