Clinical remission of a critically ill COVID-19 patient treated by human umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells: A case report.
Liang. Bing B; Chen. Junhui J; Li. Tao T; Wu. Haiying H; Yang. Wenjie W; Li. Yanjiao Y; Li. Jianchun J; Yu. Congtao C; Nie. Fangang F; Ma. Zhaoxia Z; Yang. Mingxi M; Xiao. Mingying M; Nie. Panrong P; Gao. Yanfeng Y; Qian. Chuanyun C; Hu. Min M
Key Findings
- Combined hUCMSC infusions and thymosinâalphaâ1 were wellâtolerated in a critically ill COVIDâ19 patient
- Inflammatory labs and CT scans showed marked improvement after treatment
- The patient tested virusânegative and was discharged from ICU within a week
Practical Outcomes
- This single case suggests the combo might help severe COVIDâ19, but evidence is too limited for a standard protocol. Biohackers could view it as a very experimental option, noting the stemâcell dose (5Ă10â¶ cells per infusion) and daily thymosinâalphaâ1, and should await larger studies before routine use.
Summary
A 65âyearâold woman with severe COVIDâ19 got better after receiving three infusions of umbilicalâcord stem cells plus daily thymosinâalphaâ1 shots, antibiotics, and standard care. Her inflammation markers and lung scans improved, she left the ICU, and her virus test turned negative after four days.
Abstract
The COVID-19 cases increased very fast in January and February 2020. The mortality among critically ill patients, especially the elder ones, is relatively high. Considering many patients died of severe inflammation response, it is urgent to develop effective therapeutic strategies for these patients. The human umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells (hUCMSCs) have shown good capabilities to modulate the immune response and repair the injured tissue. Therefore, investigating the potential of hUCMSCs to the treatment of COVID-19 critically ill patients is necessary. A 65-year-old woman felt fatigued and had a fever with body temperature of 38.2C, coughed up white foaming sputum. After 1 day, she had chest tightness with SPO2 of 81%, and blood pressure of 160/91 mm Hg. According to the guideline for the diagnosis and treatment of 2019 novel coronavirus infected pneumonia (Trial 4th Edition), COVID-19 was diagnosed, based on the real-time RT-PCR test of SARS-CoV-2. After regular treatment for 12 days, the inflammation symptom of the patient was still very severe and the potential side effects of corticosteroid were observed. Then, allogenic hUCMSCs were given 3 times (5 × 10 cells each time) with a 3-day interval, together with thymosin α1 and antibiotics daily injection. After these treatments, most of the laboratory indexes and CT images showed remission of the inflammation symptom. The patient was subsequently transferred out of ICU, and the throat swabs test reported negative 4 days later. These results indicated the clinical outcome and good tolerance of allogenic hUCMSCs transfer.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-07-31T00:00:00.000Z
10.1097/md.0000000000021429