Regenerative Therapy (Mar 2022)

Clinical course of more than 10 years in a patient with extensive skin burns who received cultured epidermal autograft transplantation

  • Takanobu Kan,
  • Shunsuke Takahagi,
  • Daiki Matsubara,
  • Emi Murakami,
  • Mikio Kawai,
  • Michihiro Hide,
  • Akio Tanaka

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19
pp. 154 – 157

Abstract

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Cultured epidermal autografts (CEAs) are used to treat extensive burns, giant congenital melanocytic nevi, and epidermolysis bullosa, but information about the long-term clinical course after CEA transplantation is scarce. Here we report 10 years’ progress of a 7-year-old Japanese girl who suffered from a scald burn injury affecting 80% of her total body surface area and was treated with CEA transplantation. The skin of a child with extensive burns treated with CEAs appeared soft and of a good texture, even after 10 years, and recovery of skin pigmentation and scar condition were better at sites with a combination of CEAs and autologous skin grafts than those with CEAs alone.

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