Published online Jan 26, 2015. doi: 10.4252/wjsc.v7.i1.160
Peer-review started: July 29, 2014
First decision: August 14, 2014
Revised: September 26, 2014
Accepted: October 14, 2014
Article in press: December 16, 2014
Published online: January 26, 2015
In this review, we discuss about current knowledge about stem cell (SC) therapy in the treatment of retinal degeneration. Both human embryonic stem cell and induced pluripotent stem cell has been growth in culture for a long time, and started to be explored in the treatment of blinding conditions. The Food and Drug Administration, recently, has granted clinical trials using SC retinal therapy to treat complex disorders, as Stargardt’s dystrophy, and patients with geographic atrophy, providing good outcomes. This study’s intent is to overview the critical regeneration of the subretinal anatomy through retinal pigment epithelium transplantation, with the goal of reestablish important pathways from the retina to the occipital cortex of the brain, as well as the differentiation from pluripotent quiescent SC to adult retina, and its relationship with a primary retinal injury, different techniques of transplantation, management of immune rejection and tumorigenicity, its potential application in improving patients’ vision, and, finally, approaching future directions and challenges for the treatment of several conditions.
Core tip: The stem cell (SC) retinal therapy has turned into an potentially useful way of treating blinding disorders, such as, Stargadt’s dystrophy, and geographic atrophy. The Food and Drug Administration’s approval for clinical trials using SC retinal therapy, and its good results, may appoint to future promising outcomes, providing an anatomical restoration of the retina, and a functional improval of visual function of several patients.