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LL-37

Cathelicidin, hCAP-18, FALL-39, CAP-18

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2010 pubmed 7 citations

Safety and tolerability of a modified filter-type device for leukocytapheresis using ACD-A as anticoagulant in patients with mild to moderately active ulcerative colitis. Results of a pilot study.

Muratov. Vladislaw V; Lundahl. Joachim J; Mandic-Havelka. Aleksandra A; Elvin. Kerstin K; Ost. Ake A; Shizume. Yasumasa Y; Furuya. Kaoru K; Löfberg. Robert R

Key Findings

  • The leukocytapheresis device was safe with no serious side effects.
  • Mayo clinical scores dropped from 8 to 3.5 after 8 weeks in responders.
  • LL‑37 levels increased within the apheresis system lines during treatment.

Practical Outcomes

  • The findings suggest the procedure is well‑tolerated and may help ulcerative colitis, but it requires a clinical setting and specialized equipment. For DIY enthusiasts, there’s no clear way to replicate or dose LL‑37 based on this study, though the peptide’s rise hints at possible immune effects worth watching in future research.

Summary

A small study tested a modified blood‑filter device (Cellsorba EX) that removes white blood cells in ulcerative colitis patients using a common anticoagulant. It was safe, lowered disease activity scores in half the participants, and showed that the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 rose inside the filter system, but it didn’t change blood counts or inflammation markers.

Abstract

Cellsorba™ is a medical device for leukocytapheresis (LCAP) treatment of ulcerative colitis (UC). Cellsorba™ EX Global type has been developed from Cellsorba E for intended use with ACD-A as anticoagulant. We evaluated safety and efficacy of the modified Cellsorba using ACD-A in a pilot trial comprising patients with active UC, despite receiving 5-ASA. A total of 10 LCAP treatments/patients were administered. Safety assessment focused on clinical signs and symptoms, hematological variables, as well as levels of bradykinin and IL-6. Efficacy was determined using the Mayo clinical/endoscopic scoring index as well histological assessment of biopsies. Additional aim was to evaluate the impact of apheresis system lines and filter on selected regulatory molecules. All six subjects completed the trial without any serious adverse events. WBC, platelet counts, and levels of bradykinin and IL-6 were not significantly affected. The median Mayo score decreased from 8.0 to 3.5 at week 8 (and to 2 at week 16 for the responders). Four patients were responders, of whom two patients went into remission. Median histological scores decreased from 3.5 to 2.0 in these four patients. Concentration of LL-37 increased within the apheresis system lines. LCAP with Cellsorba EX using ACD-A as anticoagulant was found to be a safe and well-tolerated procedure in patients with active UC. The positive impact on efficacy parameters merits further evaluation in a controlled fashion.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2010

DOI

10.1002/jca.20255

Citations

7

References

37