Comparison of the Efficacy of Two Routes of Administration of Human Amniotic Epithelial Cells in Cell Therapy of Acute Hepatic Insufficiency
Patrycja Wieczorek, Piotr Czekaj, Mateusz Król, Edyta Bogunia, Mateusz Hermyt, Emanuel Kolanko, Jakub Toczek, Aleksandra Skubis-Sikora, Aniela Grajoszek, Rafał Stojko

TL;DR
This study compares how two different ways of giving human amniotic cells affect their ability to treat severe liver damage in mice.
Contribution
It shows that intravenous delivery leads to more effective liver repair than intraperitoneal delivery.
Findings
Intravenously administered cells mostly accumulated in the lungs but still helped repair the liver.
Intraperitoneally administered cells mainly reached the liver but had limited regenerative effects.
Cell engraftment efficiency varied significantly between the two administration routes.
Abstract
The route of administration of implanted cells may affect the outcome of cell therapy by directing cell migration to the damaged site. However, the question of the relationship between the route of administration, the efficacy of colonisation of a given organ, and the efficacy of cell therapy has not been resolved. The aim of the study was to localise transplanted intravenously and intraperitoneally human amniotic epithelial cells (hAECs) in the tissues of mice, both healthy and injured, in an animal experimental model of acute liver failure (ALF). Mice intoxicated with D-Galactosamine (D-GalN) at a dose of 150 mg/100 g body weight received D-GalN alone or with a single dose of hAECs administered by different routes. Subsequently, at 6, 24, and 72 h after D-GaIN administration and at 3, 21, and 69 h after hAEC administration, lungs, spleen, liver, and blood were collected from recipient…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLiver physiology and pathology · Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine · Mesenchymal stem cell research
