Geelong Advertiser

Placenta cells to treat stroke

- LUCIE VAN DEN BERG

STROKE victims could soon be given an infusion of placenta cells to help heal the brain after promising worldfirst Australian research.

Scientists have discovered their experiment­al therapy reduces brain injury and aids recovery — even if it is given up to three days after a stroke.

In the pioneering treatment, Melbourne researcher­s used hundreds of millions of human amniotic cells, which are usually discarded after birth, administer­ing them intravenou­sly.

The La Trobe University­led research conducted on mice found the cell therapy reduced brain injury and inflammati­on and improved shortand long-term deficits.

Human trials will start this year in Victorian patients, offering hope of a new treatment for brain attacks, which strike once every nine minutes in Australia.

Lead author Professor Chris Sobey said current treatments — clot-busting drugs and clot retrieval — were limited.

“Only about 10 per cent of patients receive clot-busting drugs because it has to be given within 4½ hours of the stroke occurring and requires the patient to have a CAT scan to show it was caused by a clot, not a bleed,” Prof Sobey said.

Results of the seven-year study, published in the journal Stroke, provide proof-of-principle evidence that the therapy is neuroprote­ctive.

Prof Sobey said a stroke causes an initial injury to the brain, which spreads because of the secondary effects of inflammati­on.

The research team also found the cell therapy could improve survival and functional long-term recovery if given one to three days after a stroke.

Human amnion cells are abundant, have special properties which prevents the body rejecting them and do not grow into tumours like many forms of cell therapy, he added.

A Monash Health team will conduct a phase 1 trial in Victorians this year to assess the therapy’s safety and feasibilit­y as an effective treatment.

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