| Literature DB >> 24575327 |
Deborah A Buffington1, Christopher J Pino1, Lijun Chen1, Angela J Westover1, Gretchen Hageman1, H David Humes2.
Abstract
Renal cell therapy has shown clinical efficacy in the treatment of acute renal failure (ARF) and promise for treatment of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) by supplementing conventional small solute clearance (hemodialysis or hemofiltration) with endocrine and metabolic function provided by cells maintained in an extracorporeal circuit. A major obstacle in the widespread adoption of this therapeutic approach is the lack of a cryopreservable system to enable distribution, storage, and therapeutic use at point of care facilities. This report details the design, fabrication, and assessment of a Bioartificial Renal Epithelial Cell System (BRECS), the first all-in-one culture vessel, cryostorage device, and cell therapy delivery system. The BRECS was loaded with up to 20 cell-seeded porous disks, which were maintained by perfusion culture. Once cells reached over 5 × 106 cells/disk for a total therapeutic dose of approximately 108 cells, the BRECS was cryopreserved for storage at -80°C or -140°C. The BRECS was rapidly thawed, and perfusion culture was resumed. Near precryopreservation values of cell viability, metabolic activity, and differentiated phenotype of functional renal cells were confirmed post-reconstitution. This technology could be extended to administer other cell-based therapies where metabolic, regulatory, or secretion functions can be leveraged in an immunoisolated extracorporeal circuit.Entities:
Keywords: Acute renal failure; Bioreactor; Cryopreservation; End-stage renal disease; Extracorporeal cell therapy; Progenitor
Year: 2012 PMID: 24575327 PMCID: PMC3933030 DOI: 10.3727/215517912X653328
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Med ISSN: 2155-1790