By the time Bob the cat came to the UC Davis veterinary hospital, he had used up most of his nine lives. Afflicted with a painful oral inflammatory disorder, Bob had already lost all of his teeth in an effort to treat the disease known as feline chronic gingivostomatitis, orย FCGS. In a last-ditch effort, Bobโs owner enrolled him in a clinical trial to receive a novel stem cell therapy treatment.
Luckily for Bob and many other cats in the trial, the approach worked andย Bob went on to live aย normal, pain-free life. (He died several months ago of causes unrelated to FCGS.)ย Results from the clinical trialย recently appeared in the journalย Stem Cells Translational Medicine.
โThis is the first study to demonstrate the safety and efficacy of using this type of stem cell therapy for a naturally occurring, chronic inflammatory disease in cats,โ said the studyโs lead author, Boaz Arzi, a veterinary dental surgeon at the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine.
Arzi first became interested in starting the clinical trial after seeing cats who had all or nearly all of their teeth removed to treat FCGS, but who still experienced the pain and suffering of the disease even after several courses of corticosteroids and antibiotics following teeth removal.
โFCGS is a challenging disease to treat, and we were frustrated that some cats wouldnโt respond to traditional treatment,โ Arzi said. โWe were banging our heads against the wall and this stem cell therapy was a last resort.โ
The technique involves taking a catโs own fat-derived stem cells, processing and characterizing them, and then giving them back intravenously to reduce inflammation and promote tissue regeneration. The study also identified a potentially useful biomarker that could determine if cats will respond to stem cell treatment.
โWeโre the first researchers to come up with this patent-pending technique for any mammals, including humans,โ Arzi said.
Hope for humans too
As a naturally occurring animal disease, FCGS also has the potential to serve as a useful model for the treatment of human chronic oral inflammatory disease โ an approach increasingly known as โOne Health.โ
Nasim Fazel, a board-certified dermatologist and dentist at the UC Davis Health System and co-author on the paper, has been working collaboratively with the veterinary medicine team to perform comparative studies between histopathologic characteristics and blood inflammatory biomarkers of FCGS and various chronic oral inflammatory conditions in humans such as oral lichen planus, aphthous stomatitis and vesiculobullous diseases.
Oral lichen planus, like FCGS, is a T-cell-mediated chronic inflammatory mucosal disorder. It bears similarities in disease presentation, clinical course and difficulty of treatment.
โI was really excited to hear about their work because the cat disease behaved very similarly to what I saw in my human patients with oral lichen planus,โ Fazel said.
Based on the success of this research, she recently submitted a grant to establish a human clinical trial to use mesenchymal stem cell therapy to treat oral lichen planus.
โWeโre in desperate need of novel therapies to treat chronic inflammatory mucosal disorders such as OLP, which are challenging to treat and of major impact to patientsโ quality of life,โ Fazel said. โHaving this opportunity to translate what weโre learning in veterinary medicine to human medicine and working together to bring therapies discovered in the cat model to chronic oral inflammatory diseases in humans is exciting and has great potential.โ
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