Myocardial Tissue Engineering for Regenerative Applications

2017 | journal article; overview

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​Myocardial Tissue Engineering for Regenerative Applications​
Fujita, B.   & Zimmermann, W.-H. ​ (2017) 
Current Cardiology Reports19(9) art. 78​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11886-017-0892-4 

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Authors
Fujita, Buntaro ; Zimmermann, Wolfram-Hubertus 
Abstract
Purpose of Review This review provides an overview of the current state of tissue-engineered heart repair with a special focus on the anticipated modes of action of tissue-engineered therapy candidates and particular implications as to transplant immunology. Recent Findings Myocardial tissue engineering technologies have made tremendous advances in recent years. Numerous different strategies are under investigation and have reached different stages on their way to clinical translation. Studies in animal models demonstrated that heart repair requires either remuscularization by delivery of bona fide cardiomyocytes or paracrine support for the activation of endogenous repair mechanisms. Tissue engineering approaches result in enhanced cardiomyocyte retention and sustained remuscularization, but may also be explored for targeted paracrine or mechanical support. Some of the more advanced tissue engineering approaches are already tested clinically; others are at late stages of pre-clinical development. Process optimization towards cGMP compatibility and clinical scalability of contractile engineered human myocardium is an essential step towards clinical translation. Long-term allograft retention can be achieved under immune suppression. HLA matching may be an option to enhance graft retention and reduce the need for comprehensive immune suppression. Summary Tissue-engineered heart repair is entering the clinical stage of the translational pipeline. Like in any effective therapy, side effects must be anticipated and carefully controlled. Allograft implantation under immune suppression is the most likely clinical scenario. Strategies to overcome transplant rejection are evolving and may further boost the clinical acceptance of tissue-engineered heart repair.
Issue Date
2017
Journal
Current Cardiology Reports 
Project
SFB 1002: Modulatorische Einheiten bei Herzinsuffizienz 
SFB 1002 | C04: Fibroblasten-Kardiomyozyten Interaktion im gesunden und erkrankten Herzen: Mechanismen und therapeutische Interventionen bei Kardiofibroblastopathien 
SFB 1002 | S01: In vivo und in vitro Krankheitsmodelle 
Working Group
RG Zimmermann (Engineered Human Myocardium) 
ISSN
1523-3782
Language
English

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