Frontiers in Surgery (Feb 2022)

Stem Cell Injection for Complex Refractory Perianal Fistulas in Crohn's Disease: A Single Center Initial Experience

  • Francesco Colombo,
  • Francesco Cammarata,
  • Caterina Baldi,
  • Francesco Rizzetto,
  • Andrea Bondurri,
  • Stefania Carmagnola,
  • Daniele Gridavilla,
  • Giovanni Maconi,
  • Giovanni Maconi,
  • Sandro Ardizzone,
  • Sandro Ardizzone,
  • Piergiorgio Danelli,
  • Piergiorgio Danelli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fsurg.2022.834870
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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From 30 to 70% of patients with Crohn's disease (CD) may develop perianal fistulas during their lifetime. The medical and surgical management of this complication is challenging, and its treatment still gives unsatisfactory results. However, recent studies on adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells have proven their anti-inflammatory and immuno-modulatory potential, representing a new promising tool in the treatment of such stubborn disease. We report our initial experience with three patients who had recurrent perianal CD treated with local infiltration of stem cell darvadstrocel (Alofisel). All the patients had a long history of perianal disease refractory to multiple medical and surgical treatments. The preoperative workup included transperineal ultrasound (TP-US), pelvic MRI, and colonoscopy that ruled out active proctitis in all the patients. The post-treatment follow-up included clinical assessment at 1, 3, and 6 months with repeated MRI and TP-US at 6 months. At 6 months, 2 patients had a clinical response despite radiological persistence of fistula tracts, while one patient presented perianal fistula recurrence complicated by perianal abscess. Although our experience is limited to 3 patients and a short follow-up, our results confirm that darvadstrocel injection is a safe procedure, with a good clinical response in most of the patients, but that it apparently had no effect on the anatomical modification of the fistula tracts. Long-term results, with a rigorous assessment of anatomical lesions, are still needed to support the promising data of the literature.

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