• DocumentCode
    122831
  • Title

    An “off-the shelf” synthetic membrane to simplify regeneration of damaged corneas

  • Author

    Sefat, Farshid ; Ortega, Ilida ; McKean, Robert ; Deshpande, Paru ; Ramachandran, Charanya ; Hill, C.J. ; Tzokov, Svetomir B. ; Claeyssens, F. ; Sangwan, Virender S. ; Ryan, Anthony J. ; MacNeil, Sheila

  • Author_Institution
    Centre for Biomater. & Tissue Eng., Univ. of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    17-20 Feb. 2014
  • Firstpage
    59
  • Lastpage
    62
  • Abstract
    Our overall aim is to develop a synthetic off-the-shelf alternative to human amniotic membrane which is currently used for delivering cultured limbal stem cells to the cornea in patients who suffer scarring of the cornea because of the loss of limbal stem cells. We have recently reported that both cultured cells and limbal explants grow well on electrospun Poly(D, L-lactide-co-glycolide) (PLGA) (44 kg/mol) with a 50:50 ratio of lactide and glycolide and sterilized with γ-irradiation. Prior to undertaking a clinical study our immediate aim now is to achieve long term storage of the membranes in convenient to use packaging. Membranes were electrospun from Poly(D, L-lactide-co-glycolide) (44 kg/mol) with a 50:50 ratio of lactide and glycolide and sterilized with γ-irradiation and then stored dry (with desiccant) for several months at -80°C and -20°C, Room temperature (UK and India), 37°C and 50°C. We explored the contribution of vacuum sealing and the use of a medical grade bag (PET/Foil/LDPE) to achieve a longer shelf life. Confirmation of membranes being suitable for clinical use was obtained by culturing tissue explants on membranes post storage. When scaffolds were stored dry the rate of breakdown was both temperature and time dependent. At -20°C and -80°C there was no change in fiber diameter over 18 months of storage, and membranes were stable for 12 months at 4°C while at 50°C (above the transition temperature for PLGA) scaffolds lost integrity after several weeks. The use of vacuum packaging and a medical grade bag both improved the storage shelf-life of the scaffolds. The impact of temperature on storage is summarized beneath. We report that this synthetic membrane can be used as an off-the-shelf or-out-of-the freezer alternative to the amniotic membrane for corneal regeneration.
  • Keywords
    biological effects of gamma-rays; biological tissues; biomembranes; cellular biophysics; drying; electrospinning; eye; packaging; polymers; vision defects; γ-irradiation; amniotic membrane; corneal regeneration; damaged cornea regeneration; electrospun poly(D,L-lactide-co-glycolide); human amniotic membrane; lactide-glycolide ratio; limbal explants; limbal stem cell culture; medical grade bag; off-the shelf synthetic membrane; off-the-shelf freezer alternative; out-of-the freezer alternative; packaging; scaffold lost integrity; sterilisation; storage shelf-life; temperature -20 degC; temperature -80 degC; temperature 293 K to 298 K; temperature 37 degC; temperature 4 degC; temperature 50 degC; temperature dependence; time dependence; tissue culturing; vacuum packaging; vacuum sealing; vacuum sealing contribution; Biomembranes; Cornea; Positron emission tomography; Scanning electron microscopy; Silicon compounds; Stem cells; Temperature distribution;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Biomedical Engineering (MECBME), 2014 Middle East Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Doha
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/MECBME.2014.6783206
  • Filename
    6783206