| Literature DB >> 31576501 |
E Donnely1, M Griffin2,3, P E Butler2,3.
Abstract
Current techniques for breast reconstruction include an autologous-tissue flap or an implant-based procedure, although both can impose further morbidity. This systematic review aims to explore the existing literature on breast reconstruction using a tissue engineering approach; conducted with the databases Medline and Embase. A total of 28 articles were included, mainly comprising of level-5 evidence with in vitro and animal studies focusing on utilizing scaffolds to support the migration and growth of new tissue; scaffolds can be either biological or synthetic. Biological scaffolds were composed of collagen or a decellularized tissue matrix scaffold. Synthetic scaffolds were primarily composed of polymers with customisable designs, adjusting the internal morphology and pore size. Implanting cells, including adipose-derived stem cells, with combined use of basic fibroblast growth factor has been studied in an attempt to enhance tissue regeneration. Lately, a level-4 evidence human case series was reported; successfully regenerating 210 mL of tissue using an arterio-venous pedicled fat flap within a tissue engineering chamber implanted on the chest wall. Further research is required to evaluate whether the use of cells and other growth factors could adjust the composition of regenerated tissue and improve vascularity; the latter a major limiting factor for creating larger volumes of tissue.Entities:
Keywords: Adipose-derived stem cells; Breast reconstruction; Cellular therapy; Regenerative medicine; Scaffold; Stem cells; Tissue engineering
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31576501 PMCID: PMC6928092 DOI: 10.1007/s10439-019-02373-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Biomed Eng ISSN: 0090-6964 Impact factor: 3.934
Figure 1A flow chart illustrating the database search and exclusion criteria to identify the articles included.
Biological scaffolds: systematic review data extraction
| Authors | Title | Year | Journal | Study aim | Study model | Scaffold | Scaffold—biological/synthetic, bio/non-biodegradable | Volume/size of scaffold | Cell therapy | Cell niche ± growth factor |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Huss and Kratz | Mammary epithelial cell and adipocyte co-culture in a 3-D matrix: the first step towards tissue-engineered human breast tissue | 2001 | To culture human mammary epithelial cells with adipocytes on a 3-D biological matrix | Collagen gel | Biological Biodegradable | Unknown—gel | Human mammary epithelial cells with adipose tissue | Dulbecco’s modified Eagles medium (DMEM) with 10% fetal calf serum (FCS) and antibiotics DMEM/Hams F12 with insulin, transferrin, triiodothyronine, hydrocortisone, cholera toxin, epithelial growth factor, 7%FCS, 1.5% adenine and antibiotics. | ||
| Tada and Fujisato | Adipose tissue engineering for a breast reconstruction (Conference abstract) | 2012 | To engineer adipose tissue using decellularized matrix obtained from rat lungs | Athymic mice | Decellularized rat lungs. | Biological Biodegradable | Unknown | Adipose cell line 3T3-L1 | A circulatory culture system | |
| Tsuji | Simple and longstanding adipose tissue engineering in rabbits | 2012 | To engineer longstanding adipose tissue without FGF2 | New Yealand white rabbits | Polypropylene column cage with pore size 200um Suspended type 1 collagen sponge | Synthetic and Biological Biodegradable | 20 mm diameter 10 mm thickness 3.14 mL collagen suspension. | – | – | |
| Debels | Sustainable fat grafting. Optimizing fat grafting in an | 2013 | To improve long term outcome of fat grafting by adding a novel adipose derived matrix | Rat model. | Adipose derived acellular matric (ADM) | Biological Biodegradable | 2 mL | Minced autologous fat | Adipose dervied acellular matrix | |
| Wang | Combining decellularized human adipose tissue extracellular matrix and adipose-derived stem cells for adipose tissue engineering | 2013 | To combine hDAM and ADSCs for adipose tissue engineering for soft tissue defect repair | Nude rat model. | Decellularized human adipose tissue ECM (hDAM) | Biological Biodegradable | 0.5 cm × 1 cm | Human adipose-derived stem cells | hDAM | |
| Omidi | Characterization and assessment of hyperelastic and elastic properties of decellularized human adipose tissues | 2014 | To biomechanically characterise DAT scaffolds derived from various adipose depots in the body | Decellularized adipose tissue (DAT) | Biological Biodegradable | Unknown | – | – | ||
| Debels | Advances in Tissue Engineering; a Novel Technology Making Use of an | 2015 | To engineer tissue using Adipogel and an arteriovenous loop within a TEC | Rat model. | Adipose derived acellular matrix (ADM) (Adipogel) within a polycarbonate perforated hemispheric chamber. | Biological Biodegradable | 2 mL | – | Adipose dervied acellular matrix | |
| Giatsidis | Breast tissue engineering: Decellularized scaffolds derived from porcine mammary glands (Conference abstract) | 2015 | To investigate the effectiveness of decellularizing porcine mammary glands | Decellularized porcine mammary glands | Biological Biodegradable | 20 cm × 40 cm × 3 cm | – | – |
Synthetic scaffolds: systematic review data extraction
| Authors | Title | Year | Journal | Study aim | Study model |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cho | Engineering of volume-stable adipose tissues | 2004 | To engineer adipose tissue using mechanical support structures | Athymic mice. | |
| Cho | Engineered adipose tissue formation enhanced by basic fibroblast growth factor and a mechanically stable environment | 2007 | To enhance adipose tissue regeneration by combining a mechanical support with bFGF | Athymic mice. | |
| Findlay | Tissue-engineered breast reconstruction: bridging the gap toward large-volume tissue engineering in humans | 2011 | To engineer tissue together with a supportive vasculature in a large animal model | Porcine. | |
| Hettiarachichi | The effects of biophysical and biochemical environment on preadipocyte differentiation (Conference abstract) | 2012 | To investigate the effect of scaffold stiffness on adipocyte differentiation | ||
| Shpaisman | One-step synthesis of biodegradable curcumin-derived hydrogels as potential soft tissue fillers after breast cancer surgery | 2012 | To develop a curcumin-derived hydrogel for use as a soft tissue filler and drug delivery system | ||
| Chhaya | Sustained regeneration of high-volume adipose tissue for breast reconstruction using computer aided design and biomanufacturing | 2015 | To investigate PDLLA scaffolds for potential to engineer high volume adipose tissue | Athymic nude rats. | |
| Chhaya | Transformation of Breast Reconstruction | 2016 | To assess pre-vascularization and adipose tissue growth with a PCL scaffold | Immunocompetent minipigs. | |
| Morrison | Creation of a Large Adipose Tissue Construct in Humans Using a Tissue-engineering Chamber: A Step Forward in the Clinical Application of Soft Tissue Engineering | 2016 | To engineer large clinically relevant volumes of adipose tissue in female patients with a TEC and fat flap | Women with previous masectomies. | |
| Wu | Self-Assembling RADA16-I Peptide Hydrogel Scaffold Loaded with Tamoxifen for Breast Reconstruction | 2017 | To combine tamoxifen and a peptide scaffold for use as a soft tissue filler and drug delivery system | Athymic mice. | |
| Xu | Self-assembling RADA16-I peptide hydrog elscaffold loaded with tamoxifen for breast reconstruction following lumpectomy (Conference abstract) | 2017 | To combine tamoxifen and a peptide scaffold for use as a soft tissue filler and drug delivery system | Athymic mice. | |
| Xiao | Pre-shaped large-volume engineered vascularized pedicled adipose flaps in a rabbit model: A two stage tissue engineering chamber-based procedure (Full Text not available) | 2017 | To engineer adipose tissue using a TEC and adipose flaps | Rabbits. | |
| Rossi | Decoration of RGD-mimetic porous scaffolds with engineered and devitalized extracellular matrix for adipose tissue regeneration | 2018 | To create a hybrid scaffold formed of a synthetic polymer and decellularized tissue | Athymic mice. | |
| O’Halloran | Evaluating a novel adipose tissue engineering strategy for breast reconstruction post-mastectomy. (Conference Abstract) | 2018 | To assess the oncological safety of ADSCs harvested from patients following chemotherapy | ||
| Gerges | Exploring the potential of polyurethane-based soft foam as cell-free scaffold for soft tissue regeneration | 2018 | To assess the biomechanical and physiochemical properties of a polyurethane-based scaffold and adipose tissue generation | CD1 female mice | |
| Leong | ReFilx-synthetic biodegradable soft tissue fillers for breast conserving surgery in breast cancer (Conference abstract) | 2018 | To evaluate ReFilx as a soft tissue filler for breast conserving surgery defects | Yucatan minipigs. | |
| Kaufman | Interim report of a clinical registry: 669 patients implanted with a 3-d bioabsorbable marker (Conference abstract) | 2018 | Interim report to summarize data collected in an IRB-approved Registry |
Nipple areolar complex scaffolds: systematic review data extraction
| Authors | Title | Year | Journal | Study aim | Study model | Scaffold | Scaffold—biological/synthetic, bio/non-biodegradable | Cell therapy | Cell niche ± growth factor |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cao | Tissue-engineered nipple reconstruction | 1998 | To tissue engineer autologous cartilage in the shape of a human nipple | Porcine. | Pluronic F-127 hydrogel (polyethylene oxide and polypropylene oxide copolymer). | Synthetic Non-biodegradable (Scaffold dissolves over time). | Autologous chrondrocytes. | – | |
| Tierney | Biologic collagen cylinder with skate flap technique for nipple reconstruction | 2014 | To reconstruct the nipple using a biologic collagen cylinder with skate flap | Rolled cylinder of ECM collagen derived from porcine small intestinal submucosa | Biological Biodegradable | – | – | ||
| Pashos | A tissue engineered nipple and areola complex (Conference abstract) | 2015 | To design a scaffold formed of a decellularized whole NAC for tissue engineering | Rhesus Macaque Non-human primates. | Decellularized NAC | Biological Biodegradable | Rhesus bone marrow-derived stem cells | – | |
| Pashos | Characterization of an acellular scaffold for a tissue engineering approach to the nipple–areolar complex reconstruction | 2017 | To create a nonimmunogenic scaffold from a decellularized NAC for use as an onlay graft that is patient specific | Rhesus Macaque Non-human primates. | Decellularized NAC | Biological Biodegradable | Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BMSCs) from rhesus macaques | a-modified Eagles medium (fetal bovine serum, |
Figure 2H&E stained cross sections demonstrating tissue scaffold. (a, b) At 6 weeks. avl = arteriovenous loop. The arrows demonstrate areas of tissue growth within the nubbins of the TEC and the diamond areas of un-remodeled Adipogel. (b) the brown staining demonstrating viable fat cells. (c, d) exhibit scaffold at 12 weeks with substantially more viable adipose tissue.
Source Debels11
Figure 3“Overall concept of the prevascularization and delayed fat injection concept.” An empty scaffold is implanted onto the chest wall, and after a period of prevascularization, lipoaspirate is injected into the construct.
Source: Chhaya et al.7
Figure 4(a) The decellularization protocol. (b–e) The scanning electron microscope (SEM) analysis of the constructs (scale bars: 100 µm for (b and c) 10 µm for (d and e)). (f) Successful decellularization with a reduction in DNA content. (g, p) The adipocyte infiltration at 2 weeks and 4 weeks post implantation respectively. The hybrid ECM-OPAAF construct shows superior adipoinductive capacity.
Source Rossi et al.35
Figure 5(a) demonstrates the 210 cm3 TEC. (b–d) The TAP fat flap design, the surgical procedure and the final result prior to closing.
Source Morrison et al.29
Figure 6At 12 months, the tissue generated exhibits adipose tissue covered by a fibrous capsule.
Source Morrison et al.29