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. 2018 Oct 8;1(4):e1036. doi: 10.1002/jsp2.1036

Table 1.

Key recommendations for successful clinical translation of injectable cell‐based disc therapies

Safety Efficacy Commercial viability Engaging clinicians
  • Demonstrate long term retention in the disc space under physiological loading

  • Select experimental outcomes relevant to the overall goal of long term alleviation of symptoms through stabilization/ restoration of disc structure and biomechanical function

  • Identify the size of the prospective target patient population

  • Engage clinicians early and continuously during development

  • Evaluate acute and chronic, local and systemic toxicity in vitro and in vivo, and include effects of degradation products

  • Apply model systems iteratively, balancing experimental control, cost and throughput in the early stages with biological complexity and clinical relevance at more advanced stages

  • Protect intellectual property early by submitting an invention disclosure to the relevant university office

  • Anticipate resistance to switching away from current therapeutic approaches

  • Minimally invasive delivery carries less risk than an open surgical approach

  • Design model systems to appropriately mimic aspects of the in vivo chemical, physical and mechanical microenvironments of the disc

  • Minimize cost and complexity with respect to production, preparation and administration

  • Clinicians can provide primary human sourced material for in vitro testing, and develop and refine techniques for in vivo modeling and therapeutic administration

  • Aim for a single administration vs multiple administrations

  • Consider the confounding effects of species, age and sex on efficacy in vitro and in animal models

  • Minimize the number of potential regulatory hurdles

  • Clinicians can advise and lead design and implementation of clinical trials, including patient recruitment

  • Maximize genetic stability of stem cell therapies by minimizing in vitro manipulation

  • Incorporate human‐sourced cells and tissues into experiments

  • Undertake a comprehensive survey of the competitive landscape

  • Clinicians can advocate new therapeutic approaches to patients and health systems, accelerating their early and widespread adoption

  • Autologous cell therapies pose less of a risk than allogeneic

  • Where outcomes such as pain or mechanical properties cannot be measured directly, carefully justified, clinically relevant surrogates should be used

  • Clinicians can facilitate dissemination and promotion of new therapeutic approaches to colleagues at clinical scientific meetings

  • Clearly define success benchmarks for all experimental outcomes