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Published in: Surgical Endoscopy 11/2010

01-11-2010

Pushing the envelope in biomaterial research: initial results of prosthetic coating with stem cells in a rat model

Authors: Charles J. Dolce, Dimitrios Stefanidis, Jennifer E. Keller, K. C. Walters, William L. Newcomb, Jessica J. Heath, H. J. Norton, Amy E. Lincourt, Kent W. Kercher, B. T. Heniford

Published in: Surgical Endoscopy | Issue 11/2010

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Abstract

Background

Coating prosthetic for hernia repair with a patient’s own cells could improve biocompatibility by decreasing inflammation and adhesion formation and by increasing tissue ingrowth and resistance to infection. The objective of this study was to prove the feasibility of prosthetic coating with stem cells and to assess its resistance to adhesion formation when implanted in an animal model.

Methods

Adult Lewis rat bone marrow stem cells were harvested and cultured. Stem cells were then implanted on three different prosthetics. The prosthetic with the best stem cell adherence was implanted intraperitoneally into six adult rats. Untreated prosthetic was implanted in control animals (n = 12). After 2 weeks, intra-abdominal adhesions were graded using an adhesion scoring scale by two surgeons who were blinded to the animal group. Data were analyzed using the Wilcoxon rank-sum test.

Results

Stem cells demonstrated the best adherence and growth on polyglactin prosthetics. After implantation, the stem cell-coated polyglactin prosthetic had <25% of its surface area covered with adhesions in five (83%) samples, whereas the control polyglactin group had only one sample (8.3%) with <25% adhesions, and seven of its samples (58.3%) had >50% surface area adhesions (p < 0.05).

Conclusions

The feasibility of hernia prosthetic coating with stem cells was demonstrated. Furthermore, stem-cell coated polyglactin prosthetic exhibited improved biocompatibility by decreasing adhesion formation in an animal model. Further study is needed to determine the factors that promote stem cell adherence to prosthetics and the in vivo prosthetic biomechanics after stem cell coating. This work is underway in our laboratory.
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Metadata
Title
Pushing the envelope in biomaterial research: initial results of prosthetic coating with stem cells in a rat model
Authors
Charles J. Dolce
Dimitrios Stefanidis
Jennifer E. Keller
K. C. Walters
William L. Newcomb
Jessica J. Heath
H. J. Norton
Amy E. Lincourt
Kent W. Kercher
B. T. Heniford
Publication date
01-11-2010
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Surgical Endoscopy / Issue 11/2010
Print ISSN: 0930-2794
Electronic ISSN: 1432-2218
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00464-010-1026-x

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