| Literature DB >> 34078470 |
Pietro Gentile1,2, Aris Sterodimas3, Claudio Calabrese4, Simone Garcovich5.
Abstract
Fat tissue (FT) has been used for many years in regenerative surgery as a bioactive material through the lipofilling/fat graft (F-GRF)-nano-fat technique, as a bioactive scaffold when it was enriched with adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells (AD-MSCs) contained in the stromal vascular fraction (SVF), and as a direct source of AD-MSCs used in wound healing (WH) and scar treatment (ST). This systematic review aims to describe the advances in FT engineering applied to regenerative surgery (from bench to clinic), through the use of AD-MSCs, SVF contained in F-GRF in WH and ST. The work has been performed by assessing in the selected studies autologous graft of AD-MSCs, SVF, and F-GRF compared to any control for ST and WH. The protocol was developed following the Preferred Reporting for Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses-Protocols (PRISMA-P) guidelines. A multistep search of the PubMed, MEDLINE, Embase, PreMEDLINE, Ebase, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Clinicaltrials.gov , Scopus database, and Cochrane databases has been performed to identify papers on AD-MSCs, SVF, and F-GRF use in WH and ST in which FT was used as bioactive material-scaffold and source of AD-MSCs. Of the 714 articles initially identified, 453 articles focusing on regenerative strategies in WH and ST were selected and, consequently, only 84 articles that apparently related to AD-MSC, SVF, and F-GRF were analyzed. Of these, 61 articles identified as pre-clinical, experimental, and in vitro, and 5 articles identified as a comment and systematic review were excluded. Only 18 original articles which strictly and exclusively focused on autologous AD-MSCs, SVF, and F-GRF in ST and WH were analyzed. The included studies had to match predetermined criteria according to the PICOS (patients, intervention, comparator, outcomes, and study design) approach. The identified studies described microscopic and clinical outcomes in patients treated with AD-MSCs, SVF, and F-GRF. Collected data confirmed the safety and efficacy of FT both as bioactive material-scaffold and source of AD-MSCs in WH and ST without major side effects.Entities:
Keywords: Adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells (AD-MSCs); Fat grafting; Plastic surgery; Regenerative plastic surgery; Scar treatment; Stromal vascular fraction (SVF); Wound healing
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34078470 PMCID: PMC8173738 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-021-02397-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1Papers initially found on autologous AD-MSCs, SVF, and F-GRF applications in scar treatment and wound healing
Study assessment based on inclusion and exclusion criteria according to the PICOS (patients, intervention, comparator, outcomes, and study design) approach (https://ro.ecu.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=https://www.google.it/&httpsredir=1&article=1010&context=ecupres)
| Age 18–80 years, patients with soft tissue defects, chronic wound, scars, outcomes of scars, acne scars, post-traumatic scars, burns, outcomes of burns | |
| Local injection of autologous AD-MSCs, SVF, and F-GRF | |
| Any type of control, internal, external, and different product | |
| Healing time, soft tissue volume maintenance, skin quality, scar reduction | |
| Clinical trial, randomized clinical trial, case-series, case report, case-controlled studies | |
| Other types of defects and pathologies, patients with platelet disorders, thrombocytopenia, anti-aggregating therapy, use of pharmacological therapeutics targeting WH as advanced dressing, hyaluronic acid, mononuclear cell therapy—platelet-rich plasma was tested as control in PRP studies, bone marrow aplasia, uncompensated diabetes, sepsis, cancer | |
| Allogeneic use of AD-MSCs, SVF, and F-GRF, dermal substitute, advanced dressing, hyaluronic acid, steroid injections, surgical procedures | |
| Not applied | |
| Not applied | |
| Expert opinion, comments, letter to the editor, preclinical model (animal studies), in vitro studies, articles identified as bias—not correct match with the keywords used and with the treatment, shorter follow-up than 3 months, review, and systematic review. No limitations were applied on ethnicity or method of fat processing |
Fig. 2PRISMA flow (Preferred reporting items for systematic review and meta-analysis)
Detailed methodology of selected studies
| Authors | Harvest’ procedures | SVF/AD-MSC isolation procedures | SVF yield | Administered solution | Administration route to the recipient site | Cannula/needle | Age of patients | Age of scar(s) | Follow-up period |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wu et al. [ | 1. Lipoaspirate washed three times with saline 2. Gravitational decanting—aqueous phase removed 3. 1000 RCF, 3 min 4. Decantation of oil and aqueous phase 5. Spectroscopy (EP2346989 A1) to isolate SVF-rich fat | N/A | 100 + 60 ml SVF. Subsequently 0.5ml autologous serum + 1ml hyaluronic acid (HA) filler; 0.1 PZ-U/ml NB6 collagenase | Subdermal, 100 ml, reverse injections, 3–5 ml per pass layering thin ribbons of graft to reach 20% overcorrection: serum + HA—cross-hatched manner—ring around and underneath the scar sub-dermally; collagenase intradermally | SVF: blunt spatulated tip HA + serum: 22G spinal needle Collagenase: 25G needle | N/A | 2 YO | Days 1–5 and 1, 2, 4, 8, and 12 weeks (Ws) | |
| Gentile et al. [ | N/A | A) SVF-enriched fat 1. Commercial Celution System use 2. Additional wash and centrifugation cycles 3. 5 ml of the enriched fat extracted 4. Added to harvested fat graft B) Coleman’s fat mixed with 0.5 ml of PRP. Fat subjected to centrifugation at 3000 RPM; AFT:PRP = 1ml:0.5ml C) Coleman’s fat | 50,000–250,000 nucleated cells per milliliter of fat (automated count–manual count) | Group A: SVF-enriched fat grafts (up to 10ml, of which 5ml of SVF) Group B: 1ml of Coleman’s fat + 0.5 ml PRP Control group: Coleman’s fat | A) Sub-dermally B) Sub-dermally, small tunnels were previously created, cannulas with 1.5-mm diameter | N/A | 21–69 YO | N/A | 1 y (quantitative data report); mean 60 months (MO) |
| Carstens et al. [ | 1. Washed three times with saline 2. 125 ml of lactated Ringer’s + collagenase enzyme 200CDU/ml 3. Incubation—40 min, 38 °C, 150 RPM 4. Centrifugation for 10 min at 800 5. Removal of SVF from the bottom of the device | >4 × 107 mononuclear cells (5 × 105/g of dry fat) | 1) 2ml of SVF containing a total of 6 × 106 SVF-derived cells 2) 20ml of SVF enriched with a total of 2.7 × 106 SVF-derived cells | 1) Divided and injected into 4 MCP joints 2) Into subcutaneous space of the dorsum of the hand | N/A | 58 YO | 4 YO | 6 Ws; 6, 12, and 24 MO | |
| Elkahky et al. [ | 1. Washed 4–6 times with PBS 2. Digestion with 0.2% collagenase at 37 °C for 60 min with agitation 3. DMEM addition to inactivating collagenase 4. Centrifugation at 1500 RPM for 5 min 5. Cellular pellet resuspension in fetal bovine serum and passing through the 100-μm filter to remove debris 6. SVF collection 7. SVF was photoactivated using the AdiLight1 System (Adistem Pty) for 15 min | 7 to 86 × 106 cells/sample | SVF resuspended in 10% fetal bovine serum | Intradermal injections | N/A | AT-ASC, 20 to 43 years (mean 26.3 ± 7 years) PRP group, 20 to 44 years (mean 28.7 ± 5 years) | N/A | 1 and 3 MO | |
| Zhou et al. [ | Details N/A, lipo-aspiration from 2 subjects (allogenic) | 1. Lipoaspirate digested with 0.75% collagenase type II under gentle agitation for 45 min at 37°C 2. Centrifugation at 300 3. Pellet filtered with a 70-μm nylon mesh filter 4. Resuspension in PBS 5. Centrifugation at 840 6. Supernatant discarded 7. Cell fraction cultured overnight at 37 °C/5% CO2 in culture medium 8. Cell population maintenance for 3–5 days until confluence 9. Medium changed to PBS-free DMEM 10. Exposition to hypoxia (2% O2/5% CO2 and balanced N2) for 72 h 11. Centrifugation at 300 12. Filtered using a 0.22-mm syringe filter | N/A | 3 ml of ADSC-CM | Topically applied onto fractional laser-treated sites | N/A | 24 to 50 years (mean age 36.4) | N/A | 1 MO after the last treatment session |
| Gentile et al. [ | A) Classic mechanical emulsification—30 passes B) 160 ml—divided into 1st and 2nd part a. 1st part: i. Automatic filtration (120-μm filter) ii. Centrifugation at 1300 RPM for 10 min iii. SVF pellet collection and SVF suspension filtered (120-μm filter) to final 20 ml b. 2nd part was classically emulsified (30 passes) c. Mixing 1st:2nd 0.2:1 C) Lipoaspirate was centrifuged at 1300 RPM for 10 min, SVF pellet was discarded, and the remaining fat layer was emulsified (30 passes) D) Lipoaspirate slow centrifugation at 80 | Mean of 5 samples: A. Classic nano-fat 20,000 ± 3000 B. Supercharged nano-fat 200,000 ± 15,000 C. Centrifuged modified nano-fat 53,334 ± 8000 D. Evo-modified nano-fat 125,000 ± 12,000 | A. Classic nano-fat B. Supercharged nano-fat C. Centrifuged modified nano-fat D. Evo-modified nano-fat | Intradermal injections | 27G | 20–73 YO | N/A | 3, 4, 6, and 12 MO | |
| Tenna et al. [ | 1. Lipoaspirate centrifuged at 3000 rpm for 3 min 2. Oil removed, and fluid decanted 3. Mechanically emulsified after rinsing, 30 passes through usual connector | N/A | 10 ml of nano-fat (7 ml) plus PRP (3 ml) | Sub-cutaneous under deformities | 19G cannulas | 18 to 52 YO | N/A | 1, 3, and 6 MO | |
| Ghareeb et al. [ | Lipoaspirate centrifuged at 3000 RPM for 3 min The purified fat underwent mechanical emulsification (30 passes, through the usual connector) | N/A | Classic nano-fat | Intradermal and subdermal injection of nano-fat | 27G sharp needles | 8 to 48 YO | N/A | 5 days, 2 Ws, 1, 3, and 6 MO | |
| Carstens et al. [ | 1. Lipoaspirate washed three times with sterile Lactated Ringer’s Solution 2. Collagenase added—200 CDU/ml of total volume, 40 min incubation at 38 °C and 150 rpm 3. Human serum albumin was added (2.5% solution v/v) 4. Centrifuged, 10 min at 800 5. Pellet resuspended in 15 ml Hartmann solution | 2.37–9.83 × 107 viable cells/g of fat | SVF | Subcutaneous injection | 19G needle | 26 ± 6.22 YO | 6.7 ± 4.3 YO | 6 MO | |
| Bhooshan et al. [ | Lipoaspirate mechanically emulsified by 30–35 passes through triport connector | N/A | Classic nano-fat | Intralesional | 27G needle | 32.2 ± 12 YO | 3 to 204 MO (17 years); 79.4%—scars <5 years, 20.6%—scars > 5 years | 3 months | |
| Gu et al. [ | 1. Saline rinsing and filtering 2. Centrifuged at 3000 rpm for 3 min 3. The oil layer was decanted, and the aqueous component drained. 4. For mechanical emulsification, through connected to the Tulip transfer connector with three 1.4-mm holes 30 passes 5. Centrifuged again at 3000 rpm for 3 min | N/A | Condensed nano-fat | Intradermally, after 18G needle is introduced to break underlying adhesions of the scar. Volume restored sub-dermally with fat graft combined with condensed nano-fat through a blunt 1.2-mm cannula | 29G needle/1.2 mm blunt cannula | 21–62 YO, mean 38.25 YO | 3 to 26 years (mean formation time, 7.45 years) | 6 months | |
| Lee et al. [ | 1. Centrifugation at 3500 RPM for 4 min 2. Discarding the lower layer (20ml left) 3. Adding collagenase type II and incubation for 30 min in 37 °C (MaxSTEM kit) 4. Centrifugation at 3500 RPM for 3 min 5. Wash in Hartmann solution with 5% dextrose saline and gentamicin 6. Steps 5 and 6 repeated 3 times | 5.9 × 107 cells per ml | 2 ml of SVF | Subcutaneous and intradermal, no more than 5 ml/case | N/A | Study 1, 14–64 YO (37.47 ± 13.2) Study 2, 19–65 (35.8 ± 14) | Study 1, 3–240 MO (22.3 ± 51.8) Study 2, 0–18 MO (6.53 ± 4.47) | 6 MO | |
| Uyulmaz et al. [ | 1. Wash with isotonic saline solution 2. Mechanically emulsification 30 passes (2.4-mm Tulip connector) 3. Filtration through a nylon cloth with 0.5-mm pore size | N/A | Classic nano-fat 1 to 25 ml (mean, 4.6 ml) | Injected intralesionally or intra-dermally | 24, 25, or 27G sharp needles | 15 to 64 years (mean, 42 years) | 15 to 40 years (mean, 5.8 years) | 155 ± 49 days (range, 87–312 days) | |
| Abou Eitta et al. [ | 1. Lipoaspirate washed with PBS and antibiotics/antimycotic 2. Gravitational decanting and discarding of infranatant 3. Steps 2 and 3 repeated 6 times 4. Collagenase type IA and incubation for 37 °C for 1 h 5. Infranatant with SVF aspirated and DMEM with 10% FBS added to inactivate the collagenase 6. Centrifugation at 300 7. SVF pellets collected with PBS, filtration with a 100-μm cell strainer 8. Centrifugation at 300 9. Optional RBC lysis buffer at room temperature for 5 min; then centrifuged again for 5 min 10. Pellet washed twice with PBS 11. Resuspended in 1ml PBS, ready for injection | Average, 6 × 106 cells | SVF suspended in 1 ml PBS | Reported as injected intradermally (but underneath atrophic scars) | N/A | 20 to 45 YO (mean 33.20 ± 6.51) | N/A | 1, 2, and 3 MO | |
| Malik et al. [ | 1. Gravitational decanting, oil, and aqueous phase discarded 2. 0.075% collagenase added, incubated for 30 min at 37 °C with agitation 3. Centrifugation at 1200 RPM for 5 min 4. Collection of SVF from the pellet | N/A | SVF, 10 ml? | Under scar—subcutaneous | Blunt infiltration cannula | 22–45 YO, mean 32.1 | N/A | 1 and 6 MO | |
| Jan et. Al [ | 1. Lipoaspirate rinsed with 0.9% saline 2. Emulsification by 30 syringe-syringe passes (unknown connector) | N/A | Classic nano-fat | Selective intradermal or subdermal pre-tunneling. Fanwise pattern with a 1-ml syringe until the skin blanched or yellowish | 18G | 22.25 ± 5.79 y | >1YO | 6 MO | |
| Shalaby et al. [ | 1) Lipoaspirate washed with Lactated Ringer, incubated 3 min 2) Centrifuged at 3000 RPM 3 min 3) Middle layer preserved 4) Mechanically emulsified by shiftings by 30 passes through 2.4-mm tulip connector 5) Another 30 passes with using (1.4-mm tulip connector) 6) 600-μm nanofat filtration | N/A | Nano-fat or nano-fat + PRP | Superficial intradermal nano-fat and additional subdermal injection | 28G needle and 22–23G cannula | 32.8 ± 11.2 YO (nano-fat + PRP); 26.5 ± 9.1 YO (nano-fat) | 6.8 ± 7.6 YO (nano-fat + PRP); 3.3 ± 2.7 (nano-fat) | 3 MO | |
| Pallua et al. [ | 1. Lipoaspirate is centrifuged at 1200 2. The oily and watery layers removed 3. Manual emulsification by 30 passes, usual connector 4. Centrifugation at 1200 5. Middle layer preserved | N/A | Condensed nano-fat, in 1 case supplemented with PRP | Various author’s preparation of recipient site before injections. Sub-cutaneous and/or intradermal | 27G cannula | 41.33 ± 10.53 | N/A | 6–12 MO |