dc.identifier.citation |
VERDES, Irina, CAPCELEA, Svetlana. Novel treatment strategies for autism spectrum disorder based on cellular therapy and genomics. In: Cells and Tissues Transplantation. Actualities and Perspectives: the materials of the national scientific conf. with internat. participation, Chișinău: CEP Medicina. 2023, p.43. ISBN 978-9975-82-313-5. |
en_US |
dc.description.abstract |
Background. Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a highly heterogeneous neurodevelopmental and
behavioral disorder, that still does not have a known treatment for core behavioral disorders.
However, there is an increasing amount of ongoing clinical trials, set out to discover novel
psychopharmacological mechanisms, cell transplantation methods, epigenetic regulation, and agents
affecting the immune system that show promise in the treatment of ASD.
Methods. The current publication is based on narrative review, synthesizing the insight of clinical
trials in determining the efficacy of novel ASD treatments from the fields of genomics, cellular
therapy, and systems biology. The studies were selected from Science Direct, Springer Link,
Oxford Academic, the National Library of Medicine, Nature, MDPI, PubMed, and Genome
Medicine. In the study were included only publications with approved clinical trial design
methodology, published in the years 2015-2022.
Results. Cell-based therapies have been found efficacious and recommended for ASD to address
the neurobiological changes and core behavioral disorders stemming from such changes. The most
promising one is stem cell transplantation from autologous umbilical cord blood (AUCB), being
proven to be safe and effective in developing social and communication abilities by increasing
white matter connectivity in the brains structure, the mechanism is presumed to decrease neural
inflammation through the paracrine effect of the stem cells. Another effective novel molecular
treatment is the transcriptional regulation targeting agent tideglusib which has the potential to
alleviate core symptoms. Furthermore, numerous agents targeting synaptic networks, and immune
system cells (astrocytes and microglia) have been trialed for ASD and correlated with improvement
of symptomatology in clinical trials.
Conclusions. The current research of cellular therapy in ASD treatment shows promising positive
outcomes, but there is an ongoing necessity for placebo-controlled double-blind trials to achieve
definitive results, likewise, it requires collaboration and access to progressive genetic testing in
genomics and measurement methods to further progress toward identifying the genetic pathogenesis
and novel therapeutics in ASD. |
en_US |