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Research Explained

Stem Cells and the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada

The Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada believes that there is evidence of important benefits to people with MS through stem cell research.

At the moment, funds raised by the MS Society of Canada and related MS Scientific Research Foundation are supporting two projects in which scientists are currently investigating the following possible advances:

Turning the body’s own stem cells into myelin producing cells

Project title:
Remyelination in Multiple Sclerosis - Enhancing Intrinsic Repair

Funding:
$2.25 million over three years from the Multiple Sclerosis Scientific Foundation – Approved April 2005

Principal Investigators:
Jack Antel, MD, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University
Samuel Weiss, PhD, Hotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary
Moses Rodriguez, MD, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.

Phase II of this large, collaborative research project is seeking ways to find out if there are cells in the body’s own central nervous system that can be transformed into a cellular repair team to mend damage to myelin caused by multiple sclerosis. The cells the researchers are targeting are called stem cell progenitor cells. They are cells within the body that have yet to become fully specialized, so the goal with this project is to stimulate them to become oligodendrocytes, the cells that make myelin.

Drs. Antel, Weiss and Rodriguez have chosen to use the body’s own stem cell progenitors from the adult central nervous system. This avoids invasive surgical procedures and should overcome the limitations in the numbers of cells available for transplantation and the problem of directing the cells to the sites of injury. This multi-disciplinary team of neurologists and basic scientists believe the approach of using the body’s own cells to repair myelin damage is particularly applicable in a disease in
which injury can occur in any part of the central nervous system. The research is targeting stem cell progenitors that have already been located within the body and uses various proteins and hormones to entice them to the damaged parts of the brain and spinal cord that need remyelination.

The researchers have also pioneered new ways of using magnetic resonance imaging to non-invasively measure the production of new myelin and the rate of recovery from MS attacks. The ability to generate myelin and measure whether the new myelin is wrapping effectively around nerve fibres is key to reducing disability caused by MS. Essentially, the research teams at the three centres are looking for an “on” switch that can kick-start the remyelination process. If successful, they hope to identify specific strategies for myelin repair and turn their findings into clinical trials to determine whether remyelination will lead to an actual decrease in disability in people with MS.

For more information, please see the original medical update memo:
www.mssociety.ca/en/research/meddmmo-myelin-repair-may05.htm


Re-growing the immune system from spinal cord stem cells

Project Title:
Targeting Multiple Sclerosis as an Autoimmune Disease with Intensive Immunoablative Therapy and Immunological Reconstitution – A Potential Curative Therapy for Patients with Predicted Poor Prognosis MS

Funding:
$4 million over six years from the Multiple Sclerosis Scientific Research Foundation –
Approved August 2000

Principal Investigators
Harold Atkins, MD, Bone Marrow Transplantation Program, Ottawa Hospital – General Campus
Mark Freedman, MD, MS Research Clinic, Ottawa Hospital – General Campus

The Multiple Sclerosis Scientific Research Foundation is funding a multi-centre project to determine whether transplanting bone marrow stem cells in people with MS can stop the disease. Led by Dr. Mark Freedman (MS neurologist) and Dr. Harold Atkins (bone marrow transplant physician), both at the University of Ottawa, the study will involve 36 people with rapidly progressing multiple sclerosis who are likely to become severely disabled. Twenty-four of the participants will receive bone marrow transplantation while12 other people with the same kind of MS but who do not wish to have the procedure will be the control group. Recruitment began in October 2000. Treatment centres for the study are located in Ottawa, Toronto and Montreal.

Bone marrow transplantation is used frequently to treat leukemia. In a very small number of people who have both MS and leukemia, MS symptoms improved following the bone marrow stem cell transplant. This project should allow investigators to determine if bone marrow transplantation is an effective treatment in a group of closely matched people with multiple sclerosis. Equally important, should the procedure not fully stop the disease process, is gaining information about what triggers are present and what changes to the immune system occur at the beginning of disease activity. The researchers are monitoring closely for signs of disease activity in the participants at all stages of the procedure from enrolment to the end of the study. Monitoring will include complex immune system tests and tracking of certain immune-related genetic changes in the hope of unveiling particular genes that might contribute to genetic susceptibility.

For more information, please see the most recent medical update memo:
www.mssociety.ca/en/research/meddmmo-bonemarrowstudy-feb05.htm

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