| Literature DB >> 26822227 |
Zita M Jessop1,2, Muhammad Javed3,4, Iris A Otto5,6, Emman J Combellack7,8, Siân Morgan9,10, Corstiaan C Breugem11, Charles W Archer12, Ilyas M Khan13, William C Lineaweaver14, Moshe Kon15, Jos Malda16,17, Iain S Whitaker18,19.
Abstract
Recent advances in regenerative medicine place us in a unique position to improve the quality of engineered tissue. We use auricular cartilage as an exemplar to illustrate how the use of tissue-specific adult stem cells, assembly through additive manufacturing and improved understanding of postnatal tissue maturation will allow us to more accurately replicate native tissue anisotropy. This review highlights the limitations of autologous auricular reconstruction, including donor site morbidity, technical considerations and long-term complications. Current tissue-engineered auricular constructs implanted into immune-competent animal models have been observed to undergo inflammation, fibrosis, foreign body reaction, calcification and degradation. Combining biomimetic regenerative medicine strategies will allow us to improve tissue-engineered auricular cartilage with respect to biochemical composition and functionality, as well as microstructural organization and overall shape. Creating functional and durable tissue has the potential to shift the paradigm in reconstructive surgery by obviating the need for donor sites.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26822227 PMCID: PMC4730656 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-015-0273-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Summary of total autologous auricular reconstructive techniques
| Surgeon | Technique | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tanzer [ | Four stages: | – First stepwise total auricular reconstruction | – Multiple operations |
| Brent [ | Four stages: | – Good contour | – Multiple operations |
| Nagata [ | Two stages: | – Less operations | – More cartilage needed |
Donor site morbidity associated with total autologous auricular reconstruction
| Donor site morbidity | Incidence | Reference | Total number of patients per study | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Early | Pneumothorax | 3 (1 %) | [ | 270 |
| 19 (22 %) | 88 | |||
| Atelectasis | 4 (22 %) | [ | 18 | |
| 7 (8 %) | 88 | |||
| Pleural effusion | – | [ | – | |
| Delayed | Persistent pain | 6 (14 %) | [ | 42 |
| Thoracic scoliosis | 4 (25 %) | [ | 16 | |
| Seroma | 9 (8 %) | [ | 108, rhinoplasty group | |
| Clicking | 3 (7 %) | [ | 42 | |
| Abnormal scarring | 0 (0 %) | [ | 42 | |
| 3 (2.7 %) | 110 | |||
| 12 (14 %) | 88 | |||
| 14 (5.3 %) | 264 | |||
| 21 (6.5 %) | 322 | |||
| Contour deformity | 3 (7 %) | [ | 42 | |
| 16 (50 %) | 32 | |||
| 22 (25 %) | 88 |
Long-term limitations of autologous auricular reconstruction
| Long-term limitations | Reasons | |
|---|---|---|
| Stiffness |
| 1. Different biomechanical properties of fibrocartilage donor [ |
| Extrusion |
| 1. Skin flap necrosis [ |
| Projection loss |
| 1. Effacement of postauricular sulcus due to contraction of skin grafts [ |
| Distortion |
| 1. Constriction of skin and soft tissue overlying the construct due to scarring or ischaemia [ |
Fig. 1Limitations of current tissue-engineered auricular cartilage constructs
Potential future benefits and challenges of combining regenerative medicine with additive manufacturing
| Feature | Benefits | Challenges | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bioprinting | Control over macrostructure and microstructure of tissue produced | Replicate anatomical form | Biomechanical properties of bioinks |
| Patient-specific macrostructure from image acquisition (CT/MRI) | Reduce variability in surgical outcomes | Macrostructure may alter during bioreactor maturation | |
| Manufacture ex vivo | Avoid donor site morbidity | Potential for contamination | |
| Regenerative medicine | Tissue-specific stem cells to improve quality and functionality of engineered tissue | True ‘like for like’ replacement | Genetic stability and differentiation capacity of cells after prolonged expansion in culture |
| Tissue maturation utilizing growth factors | Reduce degradation and constriction | Optimal growth factor combinations and temporal effects |
CT computed tomography, MRI magnetic resonance imaging
Fig. 2Histology of bovine auricular cartilage (haematoxylin and eosin staining). a Immature bovine auricular cartilage demonstrating homogeneous cell organization and high cell density. b Mature bovine auricular cartilage showing depth-dependent cell density and organization
Fig. 3Three-dimensional-printed complex anatomical structures based on polycaprolactone (PCL) with polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) support. a–c Vascular tree. d–f Right ear. g–i DNA helix. a, d, g Computer-aided designs showing permanent (red) and sacrificial (grey) components. b, e, h Printed structures showing PCL (bright white) and PVA (off-white). d, f, i PCL scaffold after sacrificing PVA support. Reproduced with permission from Visser et al. [131] and Institute of Physics Publishing