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Cytotherapy
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    • Cover Image - Cytotherapy, Volume 25, Issue 4
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  • ISCT Committee Paper

    An ISCT Stem Cell Engineering Committee Position Statement on Immune Reconstitution: the importance of predictable and modifiable milestones of immune reconstitution to transplant outcomes

    Cytotherapy
    Vol. 24Issue 4p385–392Published in issue: April, 2022
    • Alice Bertaina
    • Allistair Abraham
    • Carmem Bonfim
    • Sandra Cohen
    • Duncan Purtill
    • Annalisa Ruggeri
    • and others
    Cited in Scopus: 2
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      Allogeneic stem cell transplantation is a potentially curative therapy for some malignant and non-malignant disease. There have been substantial advances since the approaches first introduced in the 1970s, and the development of approaches to transplant with HLA incompatible or alternative donors has improved access to transplant for those without a fully matched donor. However, success is still limited by morbidity and mortality from toxicity and imperfect disease control. Here we review our emerging understanding of how reconstitution of effective immunity after allogeneic transplant can protect from these events and improve outcomes.
    • Review

      Curative therapy for hemoglobinopathies: an International Society for Cell & Gene Therapy Stem Cell Engineering Committee review comparing outcomes, accessibility and cost of ex vivo stem cell gene therapy versus allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation

      Cytotherapy
      Vol. 24Issue 3p249–261Published online: December 6, 2021
      • Alexis Leonard
      • Alice Bertaina
      • Carmem Bonfim
      • Sandra Cohen
      • Susan Prockop
      • Duncan Purtill
      • and others
      Cited in Scopus: 5
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        Thalassemia and sickle cell disease (SCD) are the most common monogenic diseases in the world and represent a growing global health burden. Management is limited by a paucity of disease-modifying therapies; however, allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) and autologous HSCT after genetic modification offer patients a curative option. Allogeneic HSCT is limited by donor selection, morbidity and mortality from transplant conditioning, graft-versus-host disease and graft rejection, whereas significant concerns regarding long-term safety, efficacy and cost limit the broad applicability of gene therapy.
      • Immuno-Gene Therapy Mini-Series on Supporting Externally Manufactured Cell and Gene Therapies

        ISCT survey on hospital practices to support externally manufactured investigational cell-gene therapy products

        Cytotherapy
        Vol. 24Issue 1p27–31Published online: November 19, 2021
        • Alexey Bersenev
        • Michael P. Gustafson
        • Patrick J. Hanley
        Cited in Scopus: 3
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          There is considerable interest in the next generation of personalized medicine, especially cell and gene therapy products such as chimeric antigen receptor T cells (CAR-Ts). Unlike other small molecules or pharmacologic drugs, most existing cell or cell-based gene therapy products (CGTs) require apheresis collection of the patient or donor, subsequent manufacture of the product, and final shipment of the product to the clinical site for infusion. Whereas traditional pharmaceutical drugs have involved the drug sponsor and the clinical site and clinical pharmacy, this new manufacturing paradigm has evolved, in many cases, to include an apheresis center, a cell processing lab, the sponsor's manufacturing facility, and a clinical site with or without a pharmacy.
          ISCT survey on hospital practices to support externally manufactured investigational cell-gene therapy products
        • Immuno-Gene Therapy Mini-Series on Supporting Externally Manufactured Cell and Gene Therapies

          Delivering externally manufactured cell and gene therapy products to patients: perspectives from the academic center experience

          Cytotherapy
          Vol. 24Issue 1p16–18Published online: November 6, 2021
          • Patrick J. Hanley
          • Alexey Bersenev
          • Michael P. Gustafson
          Cited in Scopus: 1
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            Cellular immunotherapy is the application of immune cells that are collected, and often modified ex vivo, to improve immune responses for a patient's treatment. The Foundation for the Accreditation of Cellular Therapy (FACT) defines immune effector cells (IECs) as cells designed to modulate immune responses for therapeutic purposes and includes cells such as T cells, B cells, natural killer (NK) cells and dendritic cells [1]. Many of these types of cells may be genetically modified to further enhance their cellular function.
            Delivering externally manufactured cell and gene therapy products to patients: perspectives from the academic center experience
          • Short Report
            Open Access

            Consensus International Council for Commonality in Blood Banking Automation–International Society for Cell & Gene Therapy statement on standard nomenclature abbreviations for the tissue of origin of mesenchymal stromal cells

            Cytotherapy
            Vol. 23Issue 12p1060–1063Published online: June 9, 2021
            • Sowmya Viswanathan
            • Rachele Ciccocioppo
            • Jacques Galipeau
            • Mauro Krampera
            • Katarina Le Blanc
            • Ivan Martin
            • and others
            Cited in Scopus: 6
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              The Cellular Therapy Coding and Labeling Advisory Group of the International Council for Commonality in Blood Banking Automation and the International Society for Cell & Gene Therapy mesenchymal stromal cell (MSC) committee are providing specific recommendations on abbreviating tissue sources of culture-adapted MSCs. These recommendations include using abbreviations based on the ISBT 128 terminology model that specifies standard class names to distinguish cell types and tissue sources for culture-adapted MSCs.
            • Featured Article from the ISCT Exosomes Scientific Committee

              Critical considerations for the development of potency tests for therapeutic applications of mesenchymal stromal cell-derived small extracellular vesicles

              Cytotherapy
              Vol. 23Issue 5p373–380Published online: April 9, 2021
              • Mario Gimona
              • Maria Felice Brizzi
              • Andre Boon Hwa Choo
              • Massimo Dominici
              • Sean M. Davidson
              • Johannes Grillari
              • and others
              Cited in Scopus: 66
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                Mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (MSCs) have been widely tested against many diseases, with more than 1000 registered clinical trials worldwide. Despite many setbacks, MSCs have been approved for the treatment of graft-versus-host disease and Crohn disease. However, it is increasingly clear that MSCs exert their therapeutic functions in a paracrine manner through the secretion of small extracellular vesicles (sEVs) of 50–200 nm in diameter. Unlike living cells that can persist long-term, sEVs are non-living and non-replicative and have a transient presence in the body.
                Critical considerations for the development of potency tests for therapeutic applications of mesenchymal stromal cell-derived small extracellular vesicles
              • Featured Article from the ISCT Gastrointestinal Scientific Committee

                Bioengineering of the digestive tract: approaching the clinic

                Cytotherapy
                Vol. 23Issue 5p381–389Published online: April 8, 2021
                • Allison L. Speer
                • Xi Ren
                • Eoin P. McNeill
                • Justine M. Aziz
                • Sean M. Muir
                • Domenica I. Marino
                • and others
                Cited in Scopus: 2
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                  The field of regenerative medicine is developing technologies that, in the near future, will offer alternative approaches to either cure diseases affecting the gastrointestinal tract or slow their progression by leveraging the intrinsic ability of our tissues and organs to repair after damage. This article will succinctly illustrate the three technologies that are closer to clinical translation—namely, human intestinal organoids, sphincter bioengineering and decellularization, whereby the cellular compartment of a given segment of the digestive tract is removed to obtain a scaffold consisting of the extracellular matrix.
                  Bioengineering of the digestive tract: approaching the clinic
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