Tissue-engineered and autologous pericardium in congenital heart surgery: comparative histopathological study of human vascular explants.

Eur J Cardiothorac Surg

Department of Congenital Heart Surgery-Pediatric Heart Surgery, Deutsches Herzzentrum der Charité, Berlin, Germany.

Published: March 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate how well different types of vascular patches (bovine, equine, and human autologous pericardium) are accepted by the body when used for repairing congenital heart defects.
  • Various histological techniques were employed to analyze tissue composition and assess biocompatibility, scoring factors like inflammation and degradation.
  • Results showed that human autologous patches had better biocompatibility compared to tissue-engineered types, with bovine patches demonstrating significant calcifications and equine patches showing more foreign body reactions.

Article Abstract

Objectives: The goal of this histological study was to assess the biocompatibility of vascular patches used in the repair of congenital heart defects.

Methods: We examined tissue-engineered bovine (n = 7) and equine (n = 7) patches and autologous human pericardium (n = 7), all explanted due to functional issues or follow-up procedures. Techniques like Movat-Verhoeff, von Kossa and immunohistochemical staining were used to analyse tissue composition, detect calcifications and identify immune cells. A semi-quantitative scoring system was implemented to evaluate the biocompatibility aspects, thrombus formation, extent of pannus, inflammation of pannus, cellular response to patch material, patch degradation, calcification and neoadventitial inflammation.

Results: We observed distinct material degradation patterns among types of patches. Bovine patches showed collagen disintegration and exudate accumulation, whereas equine patches displayed edematous swelling and material dissolution. Biocompatibility scores were lower in terms of cellular response, degradation and overall score for human autologous pericardial patches compared to tissue-engineered types. The extent of pannus formation was not influenced by the type of patch. Bovine patches had notable calcifications causing tissue hardening, and foreign body giant cells were more frequently seen in equine patches. Plasma cells were frequently detected in the neointimal tissue of engineered patches.

Conclusions: Our results confirm the superior biocompatibility of human autologous patches and highlight discernible variations in the changes of patch material and the cellular response to patch material between bovine and equine patches. Our approach implements the semi-quantitative scoring of various aspects of biocompatibility, facilitating a comparative quantitative analysis across all types of patches, despite their inherent differences.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10924714PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ejcts/ezae027DOI Listing

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