Porcine acellular lung matrix for wound healing and abdominal wall reconstruction: A pilot study.
Abstract
Surgical wound healing applications require bioprosthetics that promote cellular infiltration
and vessel formation, metrics associated with increased mechanical strength and resistance
to infection. Porcine acellular lung matrix is a novel tissue scaffold known to promote
cell adherence while minimizing inflammatory reactions. In this study, we evaluate
the capacity of porcine acellular lung matrix to sustain cellularization and neovascularization
in a rat model of subcutaneous implantation and chronic hernia repair. We hypothesize
that, compared to human acellular dermal matrix, porcine acellular lung matrix would
promote greater cell infiltration and vessel formation. Following pneumonectomy, porcine
lungs were processed and characterized histologically and by scanning electron microscopy
to demonstrate efficacy of the decellularization. Using a rat model of subcutaneou
implantation, porcine acellular lung matrices (n = 8) and human acellular dermal matrices
(n = 8) were incubated in vivo for 6 weeks. To evaluate performance under mechanically
stressed conditions, porcine acellular lung matrices (n = 7) and human acellular dermal
matrices (n = 7) were implanted in a rat model of chronic ventral incisional hernia
repair for 6 weeks. After 6 weeks, tissues were evaluated using hematoxylin and eosin
and Masson's trichrome staining to quantify cell infiltration and vessel formation.
Porcine acellular lung matrices were shown to be successfully decellularized. Following
subcutaneous implantation, macroscopic vessel formation was evident. Porcine acellular
lung matrices demonstrated sufficient incorporation and showed no evidence of mechanical
failure after ventral hernia repair. Porcine acellular lung matrices demonstrated
significantly greater cellular density and vessel formation when compared to human
acellular dermal matrix. Vessel sizes were similar across all groups. Cell infiltration
and vessel formation are well-characterized metrics of incorporation associated with
improved surgical outcomes. Porcine acellular lung matrices are a novel class of acellular
tissue scaffold. The increased cell and vessel density may promote long-term improved
incorporation and mechanical properties. These findings may be due to the native lung
scaffold architecture guiding cell migration and vessel formation. Porcine acellular
lung matrices represent a new alternative for surgical wound healing applications
where increased cell density and vessel formation are sought.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26292Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1177/2041731415626018Publication Info
Fernandez-Moure, Joseph S; Van Eps, Jeffrey L; Rhudy, Jessica R; Cabrera, Fernando
J; Acharya, Ghanashyam S; Tasciotti, Ennio; ... Nichols, Joan E (2016). Porcine acellular lung matrix for wound healing and abdominal wall reconstruction:
A pilot study. Journal of tissue engineering, 7. pp. 2041731415626018. 10.1177/2041731415626018. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26292.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Joseph Steven Fernandez-Moure
Assistant Professor of Surgery

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