Affiliation:
1. Hagey Laboratory for Pediatric Regenerative Medicine, Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Department of Surgery Stanford University School of Medicine Stanford California USA
2. Department of Surgery The University of Arizona College of Medicine Tucson Arizona USA
3. Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine Stanford University Stanford California USA
Abstract
AbstractTopical patch delivery of deferoxamine (DFO) has been studied as a treatment for this fibrotic transformation in irradiated tissue. Efficacy of a novel cream formulation of DFO was studied as a RIF therapeutic in unwounded and excisionally wounded irradiated skin. C57BL/6J mice underwent 30 Gy of radiation to the dorsum followed by 4 weeks of recovery. In a first experiment, mice were separated into six conditions: DFO 50 mg cream (D50), DFO 100 mg cream (D100), soluble DFO injections (DI), DFO 1 mg patch (DP), control cream (Vehicle), and irradiated untreated skin (IR). In a second experiment, excisional wounds were created on the irradiated dorsum of mice and then divided into four treatment groups: DFO 100 mg Cream (W‐D100), DFO 1 mg patch (W‐DP), control cream (W‐Vehicle), and irradiated untreated wounds (W‐IR). Laser Doppler perfusion scans, biomechanical testing, and histological analysis were performed. In irradiated skin, D100 improved perfusion compared to D50 or DP. Both D100 and DP enhanced dermal characteristics, including thickness, collagen density and 8‐isoprostane staining compared to untreated irradiated skin. D100 outperformed DP in CD31 staining, indicating higher vascular density. Extracellular matrix features of D100 and DP resembled normal skin more closely than DI or control. In radiated excisional wounds, D100 facilitated faster wound healing and increased perfusion compared to DP. The 100 mg DFO cream formulation rescued RIF of unwounded irradiated skin and improved excisional wound healing in murine skin relative to patch delivery of DFO.