Skin substitutes and wound healing: Current status and challenges

被引:0
|
作者
Eisenbud, D
Huang, NF
Luke, S
Silberklang, M
机构
[1] Ortec Int Inc, Dept Res & Dev, New York, NY 10032 USA
[2] Millburn Surg Associates, Millburn, NJ USA
[3] Univ Calif Berkeley Univ Calif San Francisco, Joint Grad Program Bioengn, Berkeley, CA USA
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R75 [皮肤病学与性病学];
学科分类号
100206 ;
摘要
Bioengineered skin substitutes have emerged over the post 20 years as the most carefully studied and proven of the advanced wound management technologies. While the initial impetus for their development was to replace autograft, allograft, and xenograft in burn applications, they have found even wider application in the treatment of chronic venous and chronic diabetic ulcers. The current review addresses the history of skin substitutes', surveys the landscape of existing Food and Drug Administration-approved products and other promising innovations that appear close to market, and discusses the reasoning and controversies associated with design of these products. While acellular biologic constructs are discussed, the authors focus on products that include autologous or allogeneic cells. The various clinical trials supporting the use of skin substitutes for different wound healing indications are reviewed. The preponderance of literature supports the cost effectiveness of using skin substitutes, in healing burn, autograft donor site, diabetic, and venous wounds. In addition, better methods for early identification of diabetic and venous ulcers that may not heal well with standard treatment should improve the process of triaging candidates for skin substitute therapy. In the future, attaining a more detailed understanding of the mechanisms by which skin substitutes induce accelerated healing, including a better appreciation of the roles of cytokines and cell scaffolds, may lead to product enhancements that increase efficacy. Ongoing progress toward overcoming issues, such as abbreviated shelf life and distribution difficulties, as well as high manufacturing costs, should enable broader implementation of skin substitutes in acute and chronic wound therapy.
引用
收藏
页码:2 / 17
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Comparison of five dermal substitutes in full-thickness skin wound healing in a porcine model
    Philandrianos, Cecile
    Andrac-Meyer, Lucile
    Mordon, Serge
    Feuerstein, Jean-Marc
    Sabatier, Florence
    Veran, Julie
    Magalon, Guy
    Casanova, Dominique
    BURNS, 2012, 38 (06) : 820 - 829
  • [42] Comparison of advanced therapy medicinal product gingiva and skin substitutes and their in vitro wound healing potentials
    Boink, Mireille A.
    Roffel, Sanne
    Breetveld, Melanie
    Thon, Maria
    Haasjes, Michiel S. P.
    Waaijman, Taco
    Scheper, Rik J.
    Blok, Chantal S.
    Gibbs, Susan
    JOURNAL OF TISSUE ENGINEERING AND REGENERATIVE MEDICINE, 2018, 12 (02) : E1088 - E1097
  • [43] Optimized epidermal barrier in vitro and wound healing in vivo of cultured skin substitutes by media formulations
    Boyce, ST
    Supp, AP
    Swope, VB
    JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY, 1997, 108 (04) : 181 - 181
  • [44] Closure of the Excised Burn Wound: Autografts, Semipermanent Skin Substitutes, and Permanent Skin Substitutes
    Sheridan, Robert
    CLINICS IN PLASTIC SURGERY, 2009, 36 (04) : 643 - +
  • [45] CURRENT STATUS OF ERYTHROCYTE SUBSTITUTES
    BIRO, GP
    CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION JOURNAL, 1983, 129 (03) : 237 - 244
  • [46] Current status on vascular substitutes
    Lejay, Anne
    Vento, Vincenzo
    Kuntz, Salome
    Steinmetz, Lydie
    Georg, Yannick
    Thaveau, Fabien
    Heim, Frederic
    Chakfe, Nabil
    JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY, 2020, 61 (05): : 538 - 543
  • [47] BLOOD SUBSTITUTES - CURRENT STATUS
    WINSLOW, RM
    TRANSFUSION, 1989, 29 (09) : 753 - 754
  • [48] Advances in wound dressings and cultured skin substitutes
    Kuroyanagi Y.
    Journal of Artificial Organs, 1999, 2 (2) : 97 - 116
  • [49] Biological skin substitutes for wound cover and closure
    Hrabchak, Christopher
    Flynn, Lauren
    Woodhouse, Kimberly A.
    EXPERT REVIEW OF MEDICAL DEVICES, 2006, 3 (03) : 373 - 385
  • [50] Innovative wound therapy and skin substitutes for burns
    Vogt, P. M.
    Kolokythas, P.
    Niederbichler, A.
    Knobloch, K.
    Reimers, K.
    Choi, C. Y.
    CHIRURG, 2007, 78 (04): : 335 - +