| Literature DB >> 24300178 |
Zheng Zhang1, Bozena B Michniak-Kohn.
Abstract
Human skin not only serves as an important barrier against the penetration of exogenous substances into the body, but also provides a potential avenue for the transport of functional active drugs/reagents/ingredients into the skin (topical delivery) and/or the body (transdermal delivery). In the past three decades, research and development in human skin equivalents have advanced in parallel with those in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. The human skin equivalents are used commercially as clinical skin substitutes and as models for permeation and toxicity screening. Several academic laboratories have developed their own human skin equivalent models and applied these models for studying skin permeation, corrosivity and irritation, compound toxicity, biochemistry, metabolism and cellular pharmacology. Various aspects of the state of the art of human skin equivalents are reviewed and discussed.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 24300178 PMCID: PMC3834903 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics4010026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Summary of commercially available human skin equivalents.
| Brand | Company | FDA Approval | Product Description |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Integra® DRT (Dermal Regeneration Template) | Integra Lifesciences | 1996 | Thin silicone film covering a porous matrix of cow collagen and glycosaminoglycan |
| Apligraf® | Organogenisis | 1998 | Fibroblasts and collagen combined in dermal matrix onto which keratinocytes are seeded to form an epidermal layer |
| Epicel® | Genzyme | 2007 | Autologous keratinocytes grown
|
| Transcyte®/Dermagraft® | Advanced Tissue Sciences/Advanced Biohealing | 1997/2001 | Cryopreserved dermal substitute: human fibroblast seeded onto polymer mesh and cultured
|
| Orcel® | FortiCell Bioscience | 2001/2008 | Human epidermal keratinocytes and dermal fibroblasts are cultured in separate layers into a Type I bovine collagen sponge |
| Alloderm®/Strattice® | LifeCell Co. | None | Acellular cadaver skin matrix |
| StrataGraft® | StrataTech | None | Full thickness skin substitute where a near-diploid human keratinocytes cell line, NIKS, was utilized. |
|
| |||
| SkinEthic Rhe (Reconstructed Human Epidermis) | SkinEthic | Human keratinocytes cultured on an inert polycarbonate filter at the air-liquid interface in chemically defined medium | |
| Episkin | SkinEthic | Human keratinocytes cultured on a collagen base which permit terminal differentiation and reconstruction of the epidermis with a functional stratum corneum | |
| Epiderm | MatTek | Neonatal human-derived epidermal keratinocytes (NHEK) cultured to form a multi-layered, highly differentiated model of the human epidermis | |
| EpidermFT | MatTek | Neonatal human-derived dermal fibroblasts (NHFB) and NHEK co-cultured to form a multi-layered, highly differentiated model of the human dermis and epidermis | |
| StrataTest | StrataTech | Full thickness skin model where a near-diploid human keratinocytes cell line, NIKS, was utilized. | |
| Epidermal Skin Test 1000 (EST1000) | CellSystems Biotechnologie GmbH | Reconstructed epidermal model made from primary human keratinocytes; it comprises a fully differentiated epidermis with viable and cornifiedcell layers | |
| Advanced Skin Test 2000 (AST2000) | CellSystems Biotechnologie GmbH | It comprises a dermal equivalent with embedded fibroblasts as a basis and epidermal layer of keratinocytes on top; it is a full thickness model. | |
Figure 1Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) stained EpiSkin® (A, 40×) and RealSkin® (B, 40×) specimens. The HSE samples were received from SkinEthic/L’Oreal (France) and fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde; after dehydration, the specimens were embedded in paraffin, and sectioned into 8 μm thickness. SB: stratum basale; G: granular cells; SC: stratum corneum; F: fibroblasts (bar = 100 μm).
Validated alternative methods where human skin equivalents (HSEs) can be applied as models in the skin corrosivity test and skin irritation test.
| Brand of HSE Models | Company | US Regulatory Acceptance/Endorsement by NICEATM-ICCVAM [ | EU Regulatory Acceptance/Endorsement by ECVAM [ |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| EpiSkinTM | SkinEthic | OECD Test Guideline 431 accepted in 2004 | Commission Regulation (EC) No 440/2008; OECD Test Guideline 431 (April 1998) |
| EpidermTM | MatTek | OECD Test Guideline 431 accepted in 2004 | Commission Regulation (EC) No 440/2008; OECD Test Guideline 431 (March 2000) |
| SkinEthicTM Rhe | SkinEthic | OECD Test Guideline 431 (meets performance standards 2006) | Commission Regulation (EC) No 440/2008; OECD Test Guideline 431 (November 2006) |
| EST1000 | CellSystems Biotechnologie GmbH | OECD Test Guideline 431 (meets performance standards 2009) | Commission Regulation (EC) No 440/2008; OECD Test Guideline 431 (June 2009) |
|
| |||
| EpiSkinTM | SkinEthic | OECD Test Guideline 439 accepted in 2010 | Commission Regulation (EC) Nr 761/2009; OECD Test Guideline 439 (April 2007) |
| EpidermTM | MatTek | OECD Test Guideline 439 accepted in 2010 | Commission Regulation (EC) Nr 761/2009; OECD Test Guideline 439 (April 2007; modified Skin Irritation Test Method validated in November 2008) |
| SkinEthicTM Rhe | SkinEthic | OECD Test Guideline 439 accepted in 2010 | Commission Regulation (EC) Nr 761/2009; OECD Test Guideline 439 (November 2008) |
NICEATM-ICCVAM: The National Toxicology Program Interagency Center for the Evaluation of Alternative Toxicological Methods (NICEATM) and the Interagency Coordinating Committee on the Validation of Alternative Methods (ICCVAM); ECVAM: European Center for the Validation of Alternative Methods; OECD: The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.