A preclinical evaluation of an autologous living hyaline-like cartilaginous graft for articular cartilage repair: a pilot study

In this pilot study, an autologous synthetic scaffold-free construct with hyaline quality, termed living hyaline cartilaginous graft (LhCG), was applied for treating cartilage lesions. Implantation of autologous LhCG was done at load-bearing regions of the knees in skeletally mature mini-pigs for 6...

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Main Authors: Peck, Yvonne, He, Pengfei, Chilla, Geetha Soujanya V. N., Poh, Chueh Loo, Wang, Dong-An
Other Authors: School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2015
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/81060
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/39056
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-810602023-12-29T06:50:05Z A preclinical evaluation of an autologous living hyaline-like cartilaginous graft for articular cartilage repair: a pilot study Peck, Yvonne He, Pengfei Chilla, Geetha Soujanya V. N. Poh, Chueh Loo Wang, Dong-An School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering In this pilot study, an autologous synthetic scaffold-free construct with hyaline quality, termed living hyaline cartilaginous graft (LhCG), was applied for treating cartilage lesions. Implantation of autologous LhCG was done at load-bearing regions of the knees in skeletally mature mini-pigs for 6 months. Over the course of this study, significant radiographical improvement in LhCG treated sites was observed via magnetic resonance imaging. Furthermore, macroscopic repair was effected by LhCG at endpoint. Microscopic inspection revealed that LhCG engraftment restored cartilage thickness, promoted integration with surrounding native cartilage, produced abundant cartilage-specific matrix molecules, and re-established an intact superficial tangential zone. Importantly, the repair efficacy of LhCG was quantitatively shown to be comparable to native, unaffected cartilage in terms of biochemical composition and biomechanical properties. There were no complications related to the donor site of cartilage biopsy. Collectively, these results imply that LhCG engraftment may be a viable approach for articular cartilage repair. Published version 2015-12-11T08:53:59Z 2019-12-06T14:20:34Z 2015-12-11T08:53:59Z 2019-12-06T14:20:34Z 2015 Journal Article Peck, Y., He, P., Chilla, G. S. V. N., Poh, C. L., & Wang, D.-A. (2015). A preclinical evaluation of an autologous living hyaline-like cartilaginous graft for articular cartilage repair: a pilot study. Scientific Reports, 5, 16225-. 2045-2322 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/81060 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/39056 10.1038/srep1622510.1038/srep16225 26549401 en Scientific Reports This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ 14 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
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language English
description In this pilot study, an autologous synthetic scaffold-free construct with hyaline quality, termed living hyaline cartilaginous graft (LhCG), was applied for treating cartilage lesions. Implantation of autologous LhCG was done at load-bearing regions of the knees in skeletally mature mini-pigs for 6 months. Over the course of this study, significant radiographical improvement in LhCG treated sites was observed via magnetic resonance imaging. Furthermore, macroscopic repair was effected by LhCG at endpoint. Microscopic inspection revealed that LhCG engraftment restored cartilage thickness, promoted integration with surrounding native cartilage, produced abundant cartilage-specific matrix molecules, and re-established an intact superficial tangential zone. Importantly, the repair efficacy of LhCG was quantitatively shown to be comparable to native, unaffected cartilage in terms of biochemical composition and biomechanical properties. There were no complications related to the donor site of cartilage biopsy. Collectively, these results imply that LhCG engraftment may be a viable approach for articular cartilage repair.
author2 School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
author_facet School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Peck, Yvonne
He, Pengfei
Chilla, Geetha Soujanya V. N.
Poh, Chueh Loo
Wang, Dong-An
format Article
author Peck, Yvonne
He, Pengfei
Chilla, Geetha Soujanya V. N.
Poh, Chueh Loo
Wang, Dong-An
spellingShingle Peck, Yvonne
He, Pengfei
Chilla, Geetha Soujanya V. N.
Poh, Chueh Loo
Wang, Dong-An
A preclinical evaluation of an autologous living hyaline-like cartilaginous graft for articular cartilage repair: a pilot study
author_sort Peck, Yvonne
title A preclinical evaluation of an autologous living hyaline-like cartilaginous graft for articular cartilage repair: a pilot study
title_short A preclinical evaluation of an autologous living hyaline-like cartilaginous graft for articular cartilage repair: a pilot study
title_full A preclinical evaluation of an autologous living hyaline-like cartilaginous graft for articular cartilage repair: a pilot study
title_fullStr A preclinical evaluation of an autologous living hyaline-like cartilaginous graft for articular cartilage repair: a pilot study
title_full_unstemmed A preclinical evaluation of an autologous living hyaline-like cartilaginous graft for articular cartilage repair: a pilot study
title_sort preclinical evaluation of an autologous living hyaline-like cartilaginous graft for articular cartilage repair: a pilot study
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/81060
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/39056
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