TY - JOUR
T1 - Freeze-Dried Chitosan-Platelet-Rich Plasma Implants for Rotator Cuff Tear Repair
T2 - Pilot Ovine Studies
AU - Deprés-Tremblay, Gabrielle
AU - Chevrier, Anik
AU - Hurtig, Mark B.
AU - Snow, Martyn
AU - Rodeo, Scott
AU - Buschmann, Michael D.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2018/11/12
Y1 - 2018/11/12
N2 - Rotator cuff tears are a very common shoulder pathology. Different suturing techniques have been used for surgical cuff repair, but failure of healing remains a significant clinical challenge. The objective of this study was to establish and compare chronic and acute ovine rotator cuff tear models in our laboratory and investigate the feasibility of using chitosan (CS)-platelet-rich plasma (PRP) implants in conjunction with suture anchors to treat rotator cuff tears in large animal models. Repair with suture anchors only was used as control. In two preliminary pilot studies, unilateral full-thickness tears were created in the infraspinatus (ISP) tendon of mature female Texel-cross sheep. In the chronic model (n = 4 sheep), the tendons were capped with silicon and allowed to retract for 6 weeks, leading to degenerative changes, whereas the tendons were immediately repaired in the acute model (n = 4 sheep). Transected ISP tendons were reattached with suture anchors and, in the case of treated shoulders, implants composed of freeze-dried CS solubilized in autologous PRP were additionally applied to the tendon-bone interface and on top of the repaired site. The chronic defect model induced significant tendon degeneration and retraction, which made repair more challenging than in the acute defect model. Half the tendons in the chronic repair model were found to be irrepairable at 6 weeks. In the other half, the tendons could not be reattached to the footprint due to significant retraction, which made this a model of tissue formation in a gap. In contrast, the acute tendon repair model was executed easily. Extensive bone remodeling and tissue ingrowth at the tendon-bone interface were observed in the case of treatment with anchors + CS-PRP in both models, suggesting that CS-PRP implants could potentially modulate rotator cuff healing processes in large animal models.
AB - Rotator cuff tears are a very common shoulder pathology. Different suturing techniques have been used for surgical cuff repair, but failure of healing remains a significant clinical challenge. The objective of this study was to establish and compare chronic and acute ovine rotator cuff tear models in our laboratory and investigate the feasibility of using chitosan (CS)-platelet-rich plasma (PRP) implants in conjunction with suture anchors to treat rotator cuff tears in large animal models. Repair with suture anchors only was used as control. In two preliminary pilot studies, unilateral full-thickness tears were created in the infraspinatus (ISP) tendon of mature female Texel-cross sheep. In the chronic model (n = 4 sheep), the tendons were capped with silicon and allowed to retract for 6 weeks, leading to degenerative changes, whereas the tendons were immediately repaired in the acute model (n = 4 sheep). Transected ISP tendons were reattached with suture anchors and, in the case of treated shoulders, implants composed of freeze-dried CS solubilized in autologous PRP were additionally applied to the tendon-bone interface and on top of the repaired site. The chronic defect model induced significant tendon degeneration and retraction, which made repair more challenging than in the acute defect model. Half the tendons in the chronic repair model were found to be irrepairable at 6 weeks. In the other half, the tendons could not be reattached to the footprint due to significant retraction, which made this a model of tissue formation in a gap. In contrast, the acute tendon repair model was executed easily. Extensive bone remodeling and tissue ingrowth at the tendon-bone interface were observed in the case of treatment with anchors + CS-PRP in both models, suggesting that CS-PRP implants could potentially modulate rotator cuff healing processes in large animal models.
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U2 - 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.7b00354
DO - 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.7b00354
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85056862479
SN - 2373-9878
VL - 4
SP - 3737
EP - 3746
JO - ACS Biomaterials Science and Engineering
JF - ACS Biomaterials Science and Engineering
IS - 11
ER -