PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Simple limbal epithelial transplant (SLET) is a technique for addressing limbal stem cell deficiency. Limbal tissue from a donor eye, typically the patient's fellow healthy eye, is transplanted onto an amniotic membrane attached to the surface of the diseased eye. SLET was developed to address limitations of other techniques, specifically the technical difficulty of ex-vivo expansion of cells required in some techniques and the larger amount of valuable limbal tissue harvested in techniques not relying on ex-vivo expansion. We described how the provision of this procedure adds to the armamentarium of techniques available to treat some of the many thousands of uniocular corneal blind around the world. RECENT FINDINGS: A total of 125 patients from a recent series from our centre and 68 from a multicentre study provide evidence for efficacy mainly in cases of unilateral corneal burn. Results were comparable to other stem cell techniques described in other papers. Numerous small case reports describe the use of SLET in other contexts including ocular surface squamous neoplasia and pterygium excision. SUMMARY: SLET offers a cheaper and perhaps safer alternative to other techniques. Further evaluation of clinical success against its most similar analogues of conjunctival limbal autograft and cultivated limbal autograft is required.
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Simple limbal epithelial transplant (SLET) is a technique for addressing limbal stem cell deficiency. Limbal tissue from a donor eye, typically the patient's fellow healthy eye, is transplanted onto an amniotic membrane attached to the surface of the diseased eye. SLET was developed to address limitations of other techniques, specifically the technical difficulty of ex-vivo expansion of cells required in some techniques and the larger amount of valuable limbal tissue harvested in techniques not relying on ex-vivo expansion. We described how the provision of this procedure adds to the armamentarium of techniques available to treat some of the many thousands of uniocular corneal blind around the world. RECENT FINDINGS: A total of 125 patients from a recent series from our centre and 68 from a multicentre study provide evidence for efficacy mainly in cases of unilateral corneal burn. Results were comparable to other stem cell techniques described in other papers. Numerous small case reports describe the use of SLET in other contexts including ocular surface squamous neoplasia and pterygium excision. SUMMARY: SLET offers a cheaper and perhaps safer alternative to other techniques. Further evaluation of clinical success against its most similar analogues of conjunctival limbal autograft and cultivated limbal autograft is required.
Authors: Ingrid Garzón; Jesus Chato-Astrain; Carmen González-Gallardo; Ana Ionescu; Juan de la Cruz Cardona; Miguel Mateu; Carmen Carda; María Del Mar Pérez; Miguel Ángel Martín-Piedra; Miguel Alaminos Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol Date: 2020-06-19
Authors: Jeffrey H Stern; Yangzi Tian; James Funderburgh; Graziella Pellegrini; Kang Zhang; Jeffrey L Goldberg; Robin R Ali; Michael Young; Yubing Xie; Sally Temple Journal: Cell Stem Cell Date: 2018-06-01 Impact factor: 24.633
Authors: Zhi Hou Guo; Wei Zhang; Yang Yan Sheng Jia; Qing Xiu Liu; Zhao Fa Li; Jun Sheng Lin Journal: Int J Mol Sci Date: 2018-07-06 Impact factor: 5.923