Cargando…

Creation of Tissue-Engineered Urethras for Large Urethral Defect Repair in a Rabbit Experimental Model

Introduction: Tissue engineering is a potential source of urethral substitutes to treat severe urethral defects. Our aim was to create tissue-engineered urethras by harvesting autologous cells obtained by bladder washes and then using these cells to create a neourethra in a chronic large urethral de...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Amesty, Maria Virginia, Chamorro, Clara Ibel, López-Pereira, Pedro, Martínez-Urrutia, María José, Sanz, Beatriz, Rivas, Susana, Lobato, Roberto, Fossum, Magdalena
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8258112/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34239850
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2021.691131
_version_ 1783718440275542016
author Amesty, Maria Virginia
Chamorro, Clara Ibel
López-Pereira, Pedro
Martínez-Urrutia, María José
Sanz, Beatriz
Rivas, Susana
Lobato, Roberto
Fossum, Magdalena
author_facet Amesty, Maria Virginia
Chamorro, Clara Ibel
López-Pereira, Pedro
Martínez-Urrutia, María José
Sanz, Beatriz
Rivas, Susana
Lobato, Roberto
Fossum, Magdalena
author_sort Amesty, Maria Virginia
collection PubMed
description Introduction: Tissue engineering is a potential source of urethral substitutes to treat severe urethral defects. Our aim was to create tissue-engineered urethras by harvesting autologous cells obtained by bladder washes and then using these cells to create a neourethra in a chronic large urethral defect in a rabbit model. Methods: A large urethral defect was first created in male New Zealand rabbits by resecting an elliptic defect (70 mm(2)) in the ventral penile urethra and then letting it settle down as a chronic defect for 5–6 weeks. Urothelial cells were harvested noninvasively by washing the bladder with saline and isolating urothelial cells. Neourethras were created by seeding urothelial cells on a commercially available decellularized intestinal submucosa matrix (Biodesign® Cook-Biotech®). Twenty-two rabbits were divided into three groups. Group-A (n = 2) is a control group (urethral defect unrepaired). Group-B (n = 10) and group-C (n = 10) underwent on-lay urethroplasty, with unseeded matrix (group-B) and urothelial cell-seeded matrix (group-C). Macroscopic appearance, radiology, and histology were assessed. Results: The chronic large urethral defect model was successfully created. Stratified urothelial cultures attached to the matrix were obtained. All group-A rabbits kept the urethral defect size unchanged (70 ± 2.5 mm(2)). All group-B rabbits presented urethroplasty dehiscence, with a median defect of 61 mm(2) (range 34–70). In group-C, five presented complete correction and five almost total correction with fistula, with a median defect of 0.3 mm(2) (range 0–12.5), demonstrating a significant better result (p = 7.85 × 10(−5)). Urethrography showed more fistulas in group-B (10/10, versus 5/10 in group-C) (p = 0.04). No strictures were found in any of the groups. Group-B histology identified the absence of ventral urethra in unrepaired areas, with squamous cell metaplasia in the edges toward the defect. In group-C repaired areas, ventral multilayer urothelium was identified with cells staining for urothelial cell marker cytokeratin-7. Conclusions: The importance of this study is that we used a chronic large urethral defect animal model and clearly found that cell-seeded transplants were superior to nonseeded. In addition, bladder washing was a feasible method for harvesting viable autologous cells in a noninvasive way. There is a place for considering tissue-engineered transplants in the surgical armamentarium for treating complex urethral defects and hypospadias cases.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8258112
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-82581122021-07-07 Creation of Tissue-Engineered Urethras for Large Urethral Defect Repair in a Rabbit Experimental Model Amesty, Maria Virginia Chamorro, Clara Ibel López-Pereira, Pedro Martínez-Urrutia, María José Sanz, Beatriz Rivas, Susana Lobato, Roberto Fossum, Magdalena Front Pediatr Pediatrics Introduction: Tissue engineering is a potential source of urethral substitutes to treat severe urethral defects. Our aim was to create tissue-engineered urethras by harvesting autologous cells obtained by bladder washes and then using these cells to create a neourethra in a chronic large urethral defect in a rabbit model. Methods: A large urethral defect was first created in male New Zealand rabbits by resecting an elliptic defect (70 mm(2)) in the ventral penile urethra and then letting it settle down as a chronic defect for 5–6 weeks. Urothelial cells were harvested noninvasively by washing the bladder with saline and isolating urothelial cells. Neourethras were created by seeding urothelial cells on a commercially available decellularized intestinal submucosa matrix (Biodesign® Cook-Biotech®). Twenty-two rabbits were divided into three groups. Group-A (n = 2) is a control group (urethral defect unrepaired). Group-B (n = 10) and group-C (n = 10) underwent on-lay urethroplasty, with unseeded matrix (group-B) and urothelial cell-seeded matrix (group-C). Macroscopic appearance, radiology, and histology were assessed. Results: The chronic large urethral defect model was successfully created. Stratified urothelial cultures attached to the matrix were obtained. All group-A rabbits kept the urethral defect size unchanged (70 ± 2.5 mm(2)). All group-B rabbits presented urethroplasty dehiscence, with a median defect of 61 mm(2) (range 34–70). In group-C, five presented complete correction and five almost total correction with fistula, with a median defect of 0.3 mm(2) (range 0–12.5), demonstrating a significant better result (p = 7.85 × 10(−5)). Urethrography showed more fistulas in group-B (10/10, versus 5/10 in group-C) (p = 0.04). No strictures were found in any of the groups. Group-B histology identified the absence of ventral urethra in unrepaired areas, with squamous cell metaplasia in the edges toward the defect. In group-C repaired areas, ventral multilayer urothelium was identified with cells staining for urothelial cell marker cytokeratin-7. Conclusions: The importance of this study is that we used a chronic large urethral defect animal model and clearly found that cell-seeded transplants were superior to nonseeded. In addition, bladder washing was a feasible method for harvesting viable autologous cells in a noninvasive way. There is a place for considering tissue-engineered transplants in the surgical armamentarium for treating complex urethral defects and hypospadias cases. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-06-22 /pmc/articles/PMC8258112/ /pubmed/34239850 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2021.691131 Text en Copyright © 2021 Amesty, Chamorro, López-Pereira, Martínez-Urrutia, Sanz, Rivas, Lobato and Fossum. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Pediatrics
Amesty, Maria Virginia
Chamorro, Clara Ibel
López-Pereira, Pedro
Martínez-Urrutia, María José
Sanz, Beatriz
Rivas, Susana
Lobato, Roberto
Fossum, Magdalena
Creation of Tissue-Engineered Urethras for Large Urethral Defect Repair in a Rabbit Experimental Model
title Creation of Tissue-Engineered Urethras for Large Urethral Defect Repair in a Rabbit Experimental Model
title_full Creation of Tissue-Engineered Urethras for Large Urethral Defect Repair in a Rabbit Experimental Model
title_fullStr Creation of Tissue-Engineered Urethras for Large Urethral Defect Repair in a Rabbit Experimental Model
title_full_unstemmed Creation of Tissue-Engineered Urethras for Large Urethral Defect Repair in a Rabbit Experimental Model
title_short Creation of Tissue-Engineered Urethras for Large Urethral Defect Repair in a Rabbit Experimental Model
title_sort creation of tissue-engineered urethras for large urethral defect repair in a rabbit experimental model
topic Pediatrics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8258112/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34239850
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2021.691131
work_keys_str_mv AT amestymariavirginia creationoftissueengineeredurethrasforlargeurethraldefectrepairinarabbitexperimentalmodel
AT chamorroclaraibel creationoftissueengineeredurethrasforlargeurethraldefectrepairinarabbitexperimentalmodel
AT lopezpereirapedro creationoftissueengineeredurethrasforlargeurethraldefectrepairinarabbitexperimentalmodel
AT martinezurrutiamariajose creationoftissueengineeredurethrasforlargeurethraldefectrepairinarabbitexperimentalmodel
AT sanzbeatriz creationoftissueengineeredurethrasforlargeurethraldefectrepairinarabbitexperimentalmodel
AT rivassusana creationoftissueengineeredurethrasforlargeurethraldefectrepairinarabbitexperimentalmodel
AT lobatoroberto creationoftissueengineeredurethrasforlargeurethraldefectrepairinarabbitexperimentalmodel
AT fossummagdalena creationoftissueengineeredurethrasforlargeurethraldefectrepairinarabbitexperimentalmodel