Abstract
This article discusses the study by Xiao et al, which investigated the therapeutic efficacy of serum-free cultured human umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells (N-hUCMSCs) in a mouse model of knee osteoarthritis. The results showed that N-hUCMSCs alleviated osteoarthritis-related cartilage damage and inflammation comparably to both serum-cultured hUCMSCs and hyaluronic acid. While these findings broaden the potential clinical utility of N-hUCMSCs by circumventing certain drawbacks of serum-based cultures, the equivalence in efficacy raises important questions. First, how do N-hUCMSCs differ phenotypically from serum-cultured hUCMSCs, particularly in terms of proliferation rate, replicative capacity, and senescence profile? Second, what advantages might N-hUCMSCs offer over hyaluronic acid - a well-established therapy - beyond avoiding xenogeneic components and ethical concerns? Future research should focus on long-term phenotypic stability, sustained functional benefits, safety profiles, and mechanistic insights to ascertain whether N-hUCMSCs can surpass current standards of care.