Suitable characteristics in the selection of human allogeneic chondrocytes donors to increase the number of viable cells for cartilage repair.

Cell Tissue Bank

Instituto Nacional de Rehabilitación Luis Guillermo Ibarra Ibarra, Calzada México Xochimilco 289, 14389, Mexico City, ZC, Mexico.

Published: December 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Autologous chondrocyte implantation provides effective long-term results for cartilage lesions, but challenges remain in acquiring enough viable cells in a single-stage procedure.
  • Researchers compared viable chondrocytes from living and cadaveric donors, finding that cadaveric cartilage yielded more cells per gram than living donor cartilage, despite a longer time from death to sample processing.
  • The study concludes that viable chondrocytes can be effectively harvested from cadaveric donors, achieving comparable cell counts and viability levels to those from living donors.

Article Abstract

Autologous chondrocyte implantation has shown optimal long-term outcomes in the treatment of cartilage lesions. The challenge for a single-stage approach lies in obtaining sufficient number of cells with high viability. The answer could lie in supplementing or replacing them with allogenic chondrocytes coming from cadaveric donors. In the present work, we aimed to compare the number of viable cells isolated from cartilage of live and cadaveric donors and to determine the suitable characteristics of the best donors. A total of 65 samples from donors aged from 17 to 55 years, either women or men, were enrolled in this study (33 living vs. 32 cadaveric). The mean time of hours from death to processing samples in cadaveric donors was higher compared to live donors (64.3 ± 17.7 vs. 4.6±6.4). The number of isolated chondrocytes per gram of cartilage was higher in cadaveric donors (5.389 × 10 compared to 3.067 × 10 in living donors), whereas the average of cell viability was comparable in both groups (84.16% cadaveric, 87.8% alive). It is possible to obtain viable chondrocytes from cartilage harvested from cadaveric donors, reaching a similar cell number and viability to that obtained from the cartilage of living donors.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10030348PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10561-023-10074-4DOI Listing

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