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A bio-inductive collagen scaffold that supports human primary tendon-derived cell growth for rotator cuff repair

BACKGROUND: Rotator Cuff (RC) tendon tearing is a common clinical problem and there is a high incidence of revision surgery due to re-tearing. In an effort to improve patient outcome and reduce surgical revision, scaffolds have been widely used for augmentation of RC repairs. However, little is know...

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Autores principales: Chen, Peilin, Wang, Allan, Haynes, William, Landao-Bassonga, Euphemie, Lee, Clair, Ruan, Rui, Breidahl, William, Shiroud Heidari, Behzad, Mitchell, Christopher A., Zheng, Minghao
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Chinese Speaking Orthopaedic Society 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8671806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34976729
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jot.2021.10.006
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author Chen, Peilin
Wang, Allan
Haynes, William
Landao-Bassonga, Euphemie
Lee, Clair
Ruan, Rui
Breidahl, William
Shiroud Heidari, Behzad
Mitchell, Christopher A.
Zheng, Minghao
author_facet Chen, Peilin
Wang, Allan
Haynes, William
Landao-Bassonga, Euphemie
Lee, Clair
Ruan, Rui
Breidahl, William
Shiroud Heidari, Behzad
Mitchell, Christopher A.
Zheng, Minghao
author_sort Chen, Peilin
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Rotator Cuff (RC) tendon tearing is a common clinical problem and there is a high incidence of revision surgery due to re-tearing. In an effort to improve patient outcome and reduce surgical revision, scaffolds have been widely used for augmentation of RC repairs. However, little is known about how scaffolds support tendon stem cell growth or facilitate tendon regeneration. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the structural and biological properties of a bioactive collagen scaffold (BCS) with the potential to promote tendon repair. Additionally, we conducted a pilot clinical study to assess the safety and feasibility of using the BCS for repair of RC tears. METHODS: A series of physical, ultrastructural, molecular and in vitro tests determined the biocompatibility and teno-inductive properties of this BCS. In addition, a prospective case study of 18 patients with RC tendon tears (>20 ​mm in diameter) was performed in an open-label, single-arm study, involving either mini-open or arthroscopic surgical RC repair with the BCS. Clinical assessment of RC repair status was undertaken by MRI-imaging at baseline, 6 and 12 months and patient evaluated questionnaires were taken at baseline as well as 3, 6 & 12 months. RESULTS: The BCS consists of highly purified type-I collagen, in bundles of varying diameter, arranged in a higher order tri-laminar structure. BCS have minimal immunogenicity, being cell and essentially DNA-free as well as uniformly negative for the porcine α-Gal protein. BCS seeded with human primary tendon-derived cells and exposed to 6% uniaxial loading conditions in vitro, supported increased levels of growth and proliferation as well as up-regulating expression of tenocyte differentiation marker genes including TNMD, Ten-C, Mohawk and Collagen-1α1. To test the safety and feasibility of using the BCS for augmentation of RC repairs, we followed the IDEAL framework and conducted a first, open-label single arm prospective case series study of 18 patients. One patient was withdrawn from the study at 3 months due to wound infection unrelated to the BCS. The remaining 17 cases showed that the BCS is safe to be implanted. The patients reported encouraging improvements in functional outcomes (ASES, OSS and Constant-Murley scores), as well as quality of life assessments (AQoL) and a reduction in VAS pain scores. MRI assessment at 12 months revealed complete healing in 64.8% patients (11/17), 3 partial thickness re-tears (17.6%) and 3 full thickness re-tears (17.6%). CONCLUSION: The BCS is composed of type-I collagen that is free of immunogenic proteins and supports tendon-derived cell growth under mechanical loading in vitro. This pilot study shows that it is safe and feasible to use BCS for RC argumentation and further controlled prospective studies are required to demonstrate its efficacy. THE TRANSLATIONAL POTENTIAL OF THIS ARTICLE: The results of this study indicate that this bioactive collagen scaffold has unique properties for supporting tendon growth and that it is non-immunogenic. The clinical study further confirms that the scaffold is a promising biological device for augment of human rotator cuff repairs.
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spelling pubmed-86718062021-12-30 A bio-inductive collagen scaffold that supports human primary tendon-derived cell growth for rotator cuff repair Chen, Peilin Wang, Allan Haynes, William Landao-Bassonga, Euphemie Lee, Clair Ruan, Rui Breidahl, William Shiroud Heidari, Behzad Mitchell, Christopher A. Zheng, Minghao J Orthop Translat Original Article BACKGROUND: Rotator Cuff (RC) tendon tearing is a common clinical problem and there is a high incidence of revision surgery due to re-tearing. In an effort to improve patient outcome and reduce surgical revision, scaffolds have been widely used for augmentation of RC repairs. However, little is known about how scaffolds support tendon stem cell growth or facilitate tendon regeneration. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the structural and biological properties of a bioactive collagen scaffold (BCS) with the potential to promote tendon repair. Additionally, we conducted a pilot clinical study to assess the safety and feasibility of using the BCS for repair of RC tears. METHODS: A series of physical, ultrastructural, molecular and in vitro tests determined the biocompatibility and teno-inductive properties of this BCS. In addition, a prospective case study of 18 patients with RC tendon tears (>20 ​mm in diameter) was performed in an open-label, single-arm study, involving either mini-open or arthroscopic surgical RC repair with the BCS. Clinical assessment of RC repair status was undertaken by MRI-imaging at baseline, 6 and 12 months and patient evaluated questionnaires were taken at baseline as well as 3, 6 & 12 months. RESULTS: The BCS consists of highly purified type-I collagen, in bundles of varying diameter, arranged in a higher order tri-laminar structure. BCS have minimal immunogenicity, being cell and essentially DNA-free as well as uniformly negative for the porcine α-Gal protein. BCS seeded with human primary tendon-derived cells and exposed to 6% uniaxial loading conditions in vitro, supported increased levels of growth and proliferation as well as up-regulating expression of tenocyte differentiation marker genes including TNMD, Ten-C, Mohawk and Collagen-1α1. To test the safety and feasibility of using the BCS for augmentation of RC repairs, we followed the IDEAL framework and conducted a first, open-label single arm prospective case series study of 18 patients. One patient was withdrawn from the study at 3 months due to wound infection unrelated to the BCS. The remaining 17 cases showed that the BCS is safe to be implanted. The patients reported encouraging improvements in functional outcomes (ASES, OSS and Constant-Murley scores), as well as quality of life assessments (AQoL) and a reduction in VAS pain scores. MRI assessment at 12 months revealed complete healing in 64.8% patients (11/17), 3 partial thickness re-tears (17.6%) and 3 full thickness re-tears (17.6%). CONCLUSION: The BCS is composed of type-I collagen that is free of immunogenic proteins and supports tendon-derived cell growth under mechanical loading in vitro. This pilot study shows that it is safe and feasible to use BCS for RC argumentation and further controlled prospective studies are required to demonstrate its efficacy. THE TRANSLATIONAL POTENTIAL OF THIS ARTICLE: The results of this study indicate that this bioactive collagen scaffold has unique properties for supporting tendon growth and that it is non-immunogenic. The clinical study further confirms that the scaffold is a promising biological device for augment of human rotator cuff repairs. Chinese Speaking Orthopaedic Society 2021-12-11 /pmc/articles/PMC8671806/ /pubmed/34976729 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jot.2021.10.006 Text en © 2021 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Article
Chen, Peilin
Wang, Allan
Haynes, William
Landao-Bassonga, Euphemie
Lee, Clair
Ruan, Rui
Breidahl, William
Shiroud Heidari, Behzad
Mitchell, Christopher A.
Zheng, Minghao
A bio-inductive collagen scaffold that supports human primary tendon-derived cell growth for rotator cuff repair
title A bio-inductive collagen scaffold that supports human primary tendon-derived cell growth for rotator cuff repair
title_full A bio-inductive collagen scaffold that supports human primary tendon-derived cell growth for rotator cuff repair
title_fullStr A bio-inductive collagen scaffold that supports human primary tendon-derived cell growth for rotator cuff repair
title_full_unstemmed A bio-inductive collagen scaffold that supports human primary tendon-derived cell growth for rotator cuff repair
title_short A bio-inductive collagen scaffold that supports human primary tendon-derived cell growth for rotator cuff repair
title_sort bio-inductive collagen scaffold that supports human primary tendon-derived cell growth for rotator cuff repair
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8671806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34976729
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jot.2021.10.006
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