According to an Instagram story in Kylie Jenner's profile, she recently shared that she opted for stem-cell therapy to relieve long-standing chronic back pain, pain she says began or worsened during pregnancy.
In her public statement, Jenner described the pain as persistent and debilitating, prompting her to seek alternative therapy. She indicated that the stem-cell treatment brought relief, allowing her to manage pain more effectively. The details of the therapy such as where the stem cells were sourced from, how they were administered, the number of sessions, or whether concomitant treatments were used — were not disclosed in the article.
Stem-cell therapy refers to medical techniques that use undifferentiated cells with the potential to grow into multiple tissue types. In the context of back pain or spinal problems, the hope is that stem cells may help repair damaged disks, reduce inflammation, or regenerate degenerated tissue — providing a regenerative alternative to surgery or long-term pain management.
However, the use of stem-cell therapy for spinal conditions remains under investigation and debate. While some early studies and experimental treatments suggest potential benefits, robust, long-term clinical evidence is still limited. Regulatory approval, safety, standardization of protocols, and long-term outcomes remain areas of active research.
Some small-scale clinical trials and preclinical studies have explored mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) injected into intervertebral discs or around degenerated spinal structures, with tentative reports of reduced pain and improved function.
However, systematic reviews and meta-analyses have not conclusively confirmed effectiveness — results are often mixed, study sizes small, follow-up periods short, and methodologies varied.
Safety concerns remain: potential risks include infection, immune reactions, abnormal tissue growth, or failure to integrate properly. The long-term structural and functional outcomes of spinal stem-cell therapy are not yet well established.
Major regulatory agencies have not broadly approved stem-cell therapy for common back pain or disc degeneration outside controlled clinical trials.
Because of these uncertainties, many clinicians recommend such interventions only within research settings and continue to emphasize established treatments: physical rehabilitation, pain management, physical therapy, lifestyle modifications, and — when necessary — surgical interventions with well-documented safety profiles.
(Rh/TL/MSM)