miércoles, 23 de octubre de 2013

The first tissue-engineered airway transplantation: 5-year follow-up results : The Lancet

The first tissue-engineered airway transplantation: 5-year follow-up results : The Lancet

The Lancet, Early Online Publication, 23 October 2013
doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(13)62033-4Cite or Link Using DOI
This article can be found in the following collections: Respiratory Medicine (Respiratory medicine-other)

The first tissue-engineered airway transplantation: 5-year follow-up results

Summary

Background

In 2008, the first transplantation of a tissue-engineered trachea in a human being was done to replace an end-staged left main bronchus with malacia in a 30-year-old woman. We report 5 year follow-up results.

Methods

The patient was followed up approximately every 3 months with multidetector CT scan and bronchoscopic assessment. We obtained mucosal biopsy samples every 6 months for histological, immunohistochemical, and electron microscopy assessment. We also assessed quality of life, respiratory function, cough reflex test, and production and specificity of recipient antibodies against donor human leucocyte antigen.

Findings

By 12 months after transplantation, a progressive cicatricial stenosis had developed in the native trachea close to the tissue-engineered trachea anastomosis, which needed repeated endoluminal stenting. However, the tissue-engineered trachea itself remained open over its entire length, well vascularised, completely re-cellularised with respiratory epithelium, and had normal ciliary function and mucus clearance. Lung function and cough reflex were normal. No stem-cell-related teratoma formed and no anti-donor antibodies developed. Aside from intermittent bronchoscopic interventions, the patient had a normal social and working life.

Interpretation

These clinical results provide evidence that a tissue-engineering strategy including decellularisation of a human trachea, autologous epithelial and stem-cell culture and differentiation, and cell-scaffold seeding with a bioreactor is safe and promising.

Funding

European Commission, Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation, Swedish Research Council, ALF Medicine.

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario