Examining the effect of intermittent cycling throughout a 3-h period on peripheral blood concentrations of haemopoietic stem and progenitor cells and cytolytic natural killer cells
Phoebe A. Cox, Fendi Pradana, Ella Noble, Samuel J. E. Lucas, Guy Pratt, Mark T. Drayson, Kevin Amin, Francesca A. M. Kinsella, Alex J. Wadley

TL;DR
This study examines how intermittent cycling during a 3-hour period affects the levels of blood stem and immune cells, finding that moderate-intensity cycling boosts certain immune cells but not stem cells.
Contribution
The study evaluates feasible cycling protocols during stem cell collection to enhance immune cell mobilization.
Findings
Moderate-intensity interval exercise (MIIE) increased CD56dim NK cell concentrations more than rest.
High-intensity interval exercise (HIIE) showed a significantly greater area under the curve for CD56dim NK cells compared to rest.
Neither MIIE nor HIIE reliably increased haemopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) levels compared to rest.
Abstract
Peripheral blood stem cell (PBSC) donation is the primary procedure used to collect haemopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) for haemopoietic stem cell transplants (HSCT), however there is a clinical need to reduce collection times and achieve sufficient HSPC doses for successful engraftment. Short bouts of interval cycling transiently enrich peripheral blood with HSPCs and cytolytic natural killer (CD56dim NK) cells, which predict engraftment success and prevent post-transplant complications respectively. Despite this, feasible protocols for use during PBSC collections (≈ 3 h) have yet to be evaluated. In a randomised crossover design, 18 adults (9 young: 22.7 ± 3.2 years, 9 older: 65.2 ± 12.9 years) completed 3 × 3-h trials: high-intensity interval exercise (HIIE, 9 × 2-min cycling at 80–85% heart rate (HR)max/9 × 18 min rest), moderate-intensity interval exercise (MIIE, 9 ×…
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Taxonomy
TopicsImmune Cell Function and Interaction · Exercise and Physiological Responses · Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
