Injected skeletal muscle progenitor cells incorporated into the injured sphincter complex resulted in long-term structural and functional restoration of the injured sphincter complex in this nonhuman primate model.
These structural and urodynamic changes are consistent with those in patients with stress urinary incontinence. They support the usefulness of nonhuman primates as translatable surrogates for pathophysiological studies of urinary sphincter deficiency and testing novel therapies for that condition.
These results raise questions about cell therapy for chronic intrinsic urinary sphincter deficiency and identify a chemokine treatment (CXCL12) as a potential alternative treatment of chronic intrinsic urinary sphincter deficiency.
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