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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 15 - 15
10 May 2024
Longoni A Arnold S Major GS Jiang A Wise L Hooper G Kieser D Woodfield T Rnjak-Kovacina J Lim K
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INTRODUCTION

Stimulation of angiogenesis via the delivery of growth factors (GFs) like vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is a promising strategy for the treatment of avascular necrosis (AVN). Tyraminated poly-vinyl-alcohol hydrogels (PVA-Tyr), which have the ability to covalently incorporate GFs, were proposed as a platform for the controlled delivery of therapeutic levels VEGF to the necrotic areas[1]. Nevertheless, PVA hydrophilicity and bioinertness limits its integration with the host tissues. The aim of this study was to investigated the effectiveness of incorporating gelatin, an FDA-approved, non-immunogeneic biomaterial with biological recognition sites, as a strategy to facilitate blood vessels invasion of PVA-Tyr hydrogels and to restore the vascular supply to necrotic tissues.

METHODS

Progressively higher gelatin concentrations (0.01–5wt%) were incorporated in the PVA-Tyr network. Hydrogel physico-chemical properties and endothelial cell attachment were evaluated. Afterwards, the capability of the released VEGF and gelatin to promote vascularization was evaluated via chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) assay. VEGF-loaded PVA-Tyr hydrogels with or without gelatin (n=7) were implanted in a subcutaneous mouse model for 3 weeks. Vascularization (CD31+ cells) and cell infiltration (H&E) were evaluated. Finally, AVN was induced in 6 weeks old male piglets as previously described [2]. A transphyseal hole (3mm) was drilled and PVA-Tyr hydrogels with 1% gelatin were delivered in the defects. Piglets were euthanized after 4 weeks and microCT analysis was performed.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 37 - 37
10 May 2024
Woodfield T Major G Longoni A Simcock J Hooper G Lim K
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Introduction

Autologous fat grafting has favourable potential as a regenerative strategy and is the current gold-standard to repair large contour defects, as needed in breast reconstruction after mastectomy and traumatic soft tissue reconstruction. Clinically, there is a limit on the volume of lipoaspirate which can be utilised to repair a soft-tissue defect. Surgical complications are the result of poor structural fidelity of lipoaspirate and graft resorption as a filling material and are hindered further by poor graft vascularisation. This study aims to develop injectable lipoaspirate-derived adipose tissue grafts with enhanced biologically and clinically-admissible structural and functional properties adopting light photocrosslinking of unmodified lipoaspirate.

Methods

Patient-derived lipoaspirate was harvested and crosslinked using novel photoinitiator and exposure to visible light (wavelength 450nm) in surgery, establishing bonds between extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins within the material. The degree of crosslinking was tuned (photoinitiator concentration, light exposure, light intensity) and covalent bond formation measured using mass spectrometry. To predict patient response, SWATH-MS was used to identify differences in patient ECM and crosslinked grafts were implanted in vivo using a subcutaneous mouse model. Functional vessel formation and resorption were quantified using micro-CT and tissue-remodelling was assessed via histology.