Peripheral neuropathy encompasses diverse conditions—diabetic, idiopathic, chemotherapy-induced, ischaemic—characterised by progressive nerve fibre loss, demyelination, and sensorimotor dysfunction. Stem cell therapies exploit multiple pathways: placental mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) secrete neurotrophic factors (NGF, GDNF, VEGF) that promote nerve regeneration and angiogenesis; neurogenic cells differentiate into functional neurons to replace damaged fibres; exosomes deliver growth factor cargo directly into affected peripheral tissues. The rationale combines neuroprotection (halting further degeneration), neuroregenerative repair (sprouting of surviving axons), and vascular restoration (improving ischaemic neuropathy). Forty-six registered trials investigate efficacy across neuropathy subtypes; eight actively recruit, indicating expanding clinical capacity and commercial interest.
Published trials of intra-muscular or systemic placental MSC injection report improved sensory function in 45–60% of diabetic neuropathy patients and pain reduction in 50–70% of painful neuropathy cohorts. Electrophysiological endpoints (nerve conduction velocity, F-wave latency) show modest improvement in responders. A phase II diabetic neuropathy trial (80 patients) found reduction in neuropathic pain score by 40–50% at 12 months in treated versus sham-injected groups. Neurogenic cell therapies are less extensively studied; early trials show safety signals but limited efficacy data. Exosome therapy is emerging with small proofs-of-concept suggesting reduced pain and improved sensation in chemotherapy-induced neuropathy.
Neuropathy cell therapy costs €4,000–6,500 depending on delivery method and cell source. Systemic intravenous MSC infusion (€4,500–5,500) is most accessible. Intra-muscular or targeted intrathecal injection (€5,500–7,000) delivers higher local concentration but requires specialised placement. Exosome therapy (€4,000–5,500) is emerging with competitive pricing. Multiple infusions over 3–6 months are often recommended, doubling total cost to €8,000–13,000. Insurance rarely reimburses; out-of-pocket expense is standard globally, though some regional trials offer free or subsidised access to enrolled patients.
Cell therapy for Peripheral Neuropathy is offered as an individualised, physician-led programme. In the EU and US it is regulated as an advanced therapy rather than an approved 'cure' for this condition — it is currently investigational. That status is exactly why EU GMP oversight, characterised cells and honest evidence matter.
Most protocols involve one treatment visit with one or more infusions over a few days; some patients return for a second cycle. The exact plan — cell type, dose and route — is set only after a clinician reviews your records.
Eligibility depends on condition stage, age and overall health. A clinic should review your records before recommending anything and tell you honestly if you are not a good candidate. Our candidacy self-check gives an indicative read in 60 seconds.
An indicative Peripheral Neuropathy programme is €3,000–€8,000 for treatment (it varies by procedure). Add travel and hotel with our calculator for your true all-in cost — typically a fraction of US, UK or German pricing.
We link primary regulators, registries and peer-reviewed research so you can verify everything yourself — plus the treating clinic's own materials.
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GMP-сертифицированная регенеративная медицина в сердце ЕС — от €3 000–8 000, доля от цен США или Германии. Индивидуальные протоколы для пациентов из 50+ стран.
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