Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology (Jul 2024)

Hydrogel-chitosan and polylactic acid-polycaprolactone bioengineered scaffolds for reconstruction of mandibular defects: a preclinical in vivo study with assessment of translationally relevant aspects

  • Marco Ferrari,
  • Marco Ferrari,
  • Marco Ferrari,
  • Stefano Taboni,
  • Stefano Taboni,
  • Stefano Taboni,
  • Stefano Taboni,
  • Harley H. L. Chan,
  • Jason Townson,
  • Tommaso Gualtieri,
  • Tommaso Gualtieri,
  • Leonardo Franz,
  • Leonardo Franz,
  • Alessandra Ruaro,
  • Alessandra Ruaro,
  • Alessandra Ruaro,
  • Smitha Mathews,
  • Michael J. Daly,
  • Catriona M. Douglas,
  • Catriona M. Douglas,
  • Catriona M. Douglas,
  • Donovan Eu,
  • Donovan Eu,
  • Donovan Eu,
  • Axel Sahovaler,
  • Axel Sahovaler,
  • Axel Sahovaler,
  • Nidal Muhanna,
  • Nidal Muhanna,
  • Manuela Ventura,
  • Manuela Ventura,
  • Kamol Dey,
  • Kamol Dey,
  • Stefano Pandini,
  • Chiara Pasini,
  • Federica Re,
  • Federica Re,
  • Simona Bernardi,
  • Simona Bernardi,
  • Katia Bosio,
  • Katia Bosio,
  • Davide Mattavelli,
  • Davide Mattavelli,
  • Francesco Doglietto,
  • Francesco Doglietto,
  • Shrinidh Joshi,
  • Ralph W. Gilbert,
  • Piero Nicolai,
  • Piero Nicolai,
  • Sowmya Viswanathan,
  • Luciana Sartore,
  • Domenico Russo,
  • Jonathan C. Irish,
  • Jonathan C. Irish

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2024.1353523
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Background: Reconstruction of mandibular bone defects is a surgical challenge, and microvascular reconstruction is the current gold standard. The field of tissue bioengineering has been providing an increasing number of alternative strategies for bone reconstruction.Methods: In this preclinical study, the performance of two bioengineered scaffolds, a hydrogel made of polyethylene glycol-chitosan (HyCh) and a hybrid core-shell combination of poly (L-lactic acid)/poly (ε-caprolactone) and HyCh (PLA-PCL-HyCh), seeded with different concentrations of human mesenchymal stromal cells (hMSCs), has been explored in non-critical size mandibular defects in a rabbit model. The bone regenerative properties of the bioengineered scaffolds were analyzed by in vivo radiological examinations and ex vivo radiological, histomorphological, and immunohistochemical analyses.Results: The relative density increase (RDI) was significantly more pronounced in defects where a scaffold was placed, particularly if seeded with hMSCs. The immunohistochemical profile showed significantly higher expression of both VEGF-A and osteopontin in defects reconstructed with scaffolds. Native microarchitectural characteristics were not demonstrated in any experimental group.Conclusion: Herein, we demonstrate that bone regeneration can be boosted by scaffold- and seeded scaffold-reconstruction, achieving, respectively, 50% and 70% restoration of presurgical bone density in 120 days, compared to 40% restoration seen in spontaneous regeneration. Although optimization of the regenerative performance is needed, these results will help to establish a baseline reference for future experiments.

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