Engineered phalangeal grafts for children with symbrachydactyly: A proof of concept

Author:

Schaller Romain12,Moya Adrien1,Zhang Gangyu1,Chaaban Mansoor1ORCID,Paillaud Robert1,Bartoszek Ewelina M1ORCID,Schaefer Dirk J2,Martin Ivan1ORCID,Kaempfen Alexandre23,Scherberich Arnaud12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedicine, University Hospital Basel, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland

2. Department of Plastic, Reconstructive, Aesthetic and Hand Surgery, University Hospital Basel, Basel, Switzerland

3. Paediatric Orthopaedic, University Children’s Hospital Basel, Basel, Switzerland

Abstract

Tissue engineering approaches hold great promise in the field of regenerative medicine, especially in the context of pediatric applications, where ideal grafts need to restore the function of the targeted tissue and consider growth. In the present study, we aimed to develop a protocol to engineer autologous phalangeal grafts of relevant size for children suffering from symbrachydactyly. This condition results in hands with short fingers and missing bones. A previously-described, developmentally-inspired strategy based on endochondral ossification (ECO)—the main pathway leading to bone and bone marrow development—and adipose derived-stromal cells (ASCs) as the source of chondroprogenitor was used. First, we demonstrated that pediatric ASCs associated with collagen sponges can generate hypertrophic cartilage tissues (HCTs) in vitro that remodel into bone tissue in vivo via ECO. Second, we developed and optimized an in vitro protocol to generate HCTs in the shape of small phalangeal bones (108–390 mm3) using freshly isolated adult cells from the stromal vascular fraction (SVF) of adipose tissue, associated with two commercially available large collagen scaffolds (Zimmer Plug® and Optimaix 3D®). We showed that after 12 weeks of in vivo implantation in an immunocompromised mouse model such upscaled grafts remodeled into bone organs (including bone marrow tissues) retaining the defined shape and size. Finally, we replicated similar outcome (albeit with a slight reduction in cartilage and bone formation) by using minimally expanded pediatric ASCs (3 × 106 cells per grafts) in the same in vitro and in vivo settings, thereby validating the compatibility of our pediatric phalanx engineering strategy with a clinically relevant scenario. Taken together, these results represent a proof of concept of an autologous approach to generate osteogenic phalangeal grafts of pertinent clinical size, using ASCs in children born with symbrachydactyly, despite a limited amount of tissue available from pediatric patients.

Funder

Universität Basel

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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