Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of intra operative ablation on the viability, distribution, phenotype, and potential for culture expansion of bursal cells harvested during arthroscopic rotator cuff surgery. MethodsTissue was collected during primary arthroscopic rotator cuff repair on six healthy, randomly selected patients from a fellowship-trained surgeon’s practice between September 2020 and January 2021. There were 3 females (age 60 ± 8 years) and 3 males (age 61 ± 10 years). At the time of surgery, subacromial bursal tissue was subjected to no ablation, one second, or three seconds of ablation. Tissues were collected by an autograft harvesting system connected to an arthroscopic shaver and a pituitary grasper. Tissue fragments from each condition were sampled for viability testing or cell isolation. A viability kit with confocal microscopy was used to assess live and dead cells. Cell isolation consisted of collagenase digestion or placing tissue fragments onto tissue culture treated plates that induced migration of cells out of the tissue. Cell proliferation rates were monitored and surface markers for mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) and pericytes were analyzed via multi-color flow cytometry. ResultsIncreased ablation time significantly reduced cell viability. The mean percentage of live cells was 55.2 ± 27.2% (range 26-90% live) in the control group, 46.8 ± 23.8% (range 9.6-69.6% p = 0.045) in the short, and 35.5 ± 19% (range 11-54% p = 0.03) in the long ablation group. No significant differences in population doubling level (1.6 ± 0.5 days) and population doubling time (6.7 ± 2.4 days) were observed in cells from any treatment. The surface marker profile indicated an MSC phenotype with absence of a pericyte population. Ablation or cell isolation procedure had no significant effect on the surface marker profile of isolated cells. ConclusionRadiofrequency ablation significantly reduced the overall tissue viability, but had no significant effect on cell proliferation, or expression of surface markers on isolated subacromial bursal cells harvested arthroscopically. Clinical RelevanceAnalysis of the viability and performance of cells harvested after the use of ablation devices using mechanical surgical collection during RCR surgery could further our understanding of subacromial bursal tissue and its potential role in augmenting rotator cuff repair healing.

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