Expert opinion on biological therapy
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Expert Opin Biol Ther · Jul 2004
ReviewBone engineering by controlled delivery of osteoinductive molecules and cells.
Bone regeneration can be enhanced or accelerated by the delivery of osteogenic signalling factors or bone forming cells. These factors have commonly provided benefit when retained at the defect site with a delivery vehicle formed from natural or synthetic materials. Growth factors can be directly delivered as recombinant proteins or expressed by genetically modified cells to induce bone formation. ⋯ Carriers utilised for the delivery of osteoinductive material allow for a prolonged presentation at the repair site and the timing of presentation can be readily adjusted to correspond to the extent necessary for bone regeneration. This review examines some of the recent developments in delivery systems used to manage the presentation of these factors at the desired site. Moreover, the authors provide suggestions for continued progress in bone regeneration.
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Expert Opin Biol Ther · Jun 2004
ReviewWhat is regenerative medicine? Emergence of applied stem cell and developmental biology.
Regenerative medicine is an emerging, but still poorly defined, field of biomedicine. The ongoing 'regenerative medicine revolution' is based on a series of new exciting breakthrough discoveries in the field of stem cell biology and developmental biology. The main problem of regenerative medicine is not so much stem cell differentiation, isolation and lineage diversity, although these are very important issues, but rather stem cell mobilisation, recruitment and integration into functional tissues. ⋯ Systematic in silico, in vitro and in vivo research is a foundation for further progress in regenerative medicine. Regenerative medicine is a rapidly advancing field that opens new and exciting opportunities for completely revolutionary therapeutic modalities and technologies. Regenerative medicine is, at its essence, an emergence of applied stem cell and developmental biology.
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One approach in the immunotherapy of cancer patients involves vaccination with peptides derived from tumour-associated antigens specifically designed to associate with T cells in the context of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I or II molecules. Several clinical trials in different tumour types have been conducted utilising this vaccination strategy. ⋯ However, this represents an evolving field and, thus, it is difficult to draw firm conclusions concerning the efficacy of peptide-based vaccines for cancer immunotherapy. Improvements to peptide vaccination, including the addition of various adjuvants, the utilisation of peptide-pulsed dendritic cells, multipeptide vaccinations, the addition of helper peptides and peptide delivery through the use of mini-genes, are encouraging and serve as important guides for future research.
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Expert Opin Biol Ther · Jun 2003
ReviewThe use of haemoglobin glutamer-250 (HBOC-201) as an oxygen bridge in patients with acute anaemia associated with surgical blood loss.
For the treatment of substantial blood loss in surgery, allogeneic blood is transfused to maintain stability and organ perfusion and function. Continued concerns about the availability, safety, efficacy and storage-related problems of allogeneic blood products have led to an intense effort to find alternatives that can serve the same physiologic functions. Haemoglobin-based oxygen carriers (HBOCs) are compounds that can match the oxygen-carrying capacity of red blood cells (RBCs), and several HBOCs have reached advanced stages of development and clinical testing. ⋯ Results from clinical trials indicate that HBOC-201 can be used as an oxygen 'bridge' for patients experiencing anaemia due to surgical blood loss, until their own red blood cells are replenished or have regenerated (haematinic effect). HBOC-201 is generally well-tolerated and is approved for use in South Africa, where it is indicated for use in adult surgical patients who are acutely anaemic, and is used to eliminate, delay or reduce the need for allogeneic RBCs. A Biologics License Application for HBOC-201 is currently under review by the US FDA.
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Sepsis leads to an overwhelming inflammatory response of the host and is usually accompanied by well-known clinical symptoms (fever, tachycardia, leukocytosis, and so on) and the accompanying systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS). Accordingly, most efforts to develop treatment strategies for sepsis have focused on those designed to counteract overactivation of the inflammatory system. ⋯ Recombinant activated protein C (APC) represents the first treatment that has led to restricted approval for use in sepsis in the USA and worldwide. This article reviews approaches to anti-inflammatory treatment in sepsis and provides an outlook into ongoing clinical trials as well as new treatments that have not yet been evaluated in the clinical setting.