Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy (Jun 2023)

Successful restoration of corneal surface integrity with a tissue-engineered allogeneic implant in severe keratitis patients

  • Carmen González-Gallardo,
  • Juliana Martínez-Atienza,
  • Beatriz Mataix,
  • José Ignacio Muñoz-Ávila,
  • J. Daniel Martínez-Rodríguez,
  • Santiago Medialdea,
  • Antonio Ruiz-García,
  • Antonio Lizana-Moreno,
  • Salvador Arias-Santiago,
  • Manuel de la Rosa-Fraile,
  • Ingrid Garzon,
  • Antonio Campos,
  • Natividad Cuende,
  • Miguel Alaminos,
  • Miguel González-Andrades,
  • Rosario Mata

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 162
p. 114612

Abstract

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Objectives: Corneal diseases are among the main causes of blindness, with approximately 4.6 and 23 million patients worldwide suffering from bilateral and unilateral corneal blindness, respectively. The standard treatment for severe corneal diseases is corneal transplantation. However, relevant disadvantages, particularly in high-risk conditions, have focused the attention on the search for alternatives. Methods: We report interim findings of a phase I-II clinical study evaluating the safety and preliminary efficacy of a tissue-engineered corneal substitute composed of a nanostructured fibrin-agarose biocompatible scaffold combined with allogeneic corneal epithelial and stromal cells (NANOULCOR). 5 subjects (5 eyes) suffering from trophic corneal ulcers refractory to conventional treatments, who combined stromal degradation or fibrosis and limbal stem cell deficiency, were included and treated with this allogeneic anterior corneal substitute. Results: The implant completely covered the corneal surface, and ocular surface inflammation decreased following surgery. Only four adverse reactions were registered, and none of them were severe. No detachment, ulcer relapse nor surgical re-interventions were registered after 2 years of follow-up. No signs of graft rejection, local infection or corneal neovascularization were observed either. Efficacy was measured as a significant postoperative improvement in terms of the eye complication grading scales. Anterior segment optical coherence tomography images revealed a more homogeneous and stable ocular surface, with complete scaffold degradation occurring within 3–12 weeks after surgery. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that the surgical application of this allogeneic anterior human corneal substitute is feasible and safe, showing partial efficacy in the restoration of the corneal surface.

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