Abstract

Airway cancers have been increasing in recent years. Tracheal resection is commonly performed during surgery and is burdened from post-operative complications severely affecting quality of life. Tracheal resection is usually carried out in primary tracheal tumors or other neoplasms of the neck region. Regenerative medicine for tracheal replacement using bio-prosthesis is under current research. In recent years, attempts were made to replace and transplant human cadaver trachea. An effective vascular supply is fundamental for a successful tracheal transplantation. The use of biological scaffolds derived from decellularized tissues has the advantage of a three-dimensional structure based on the native extracellular matrix promoting the perfusion, vascularization, and differentiation of the seeded cell typologies. By appropriately modulating some experimental parameters, it is possible to change the characteristics of the surface. The obtained membranes could theoretically be affixed to a decellularized tissue, but, in practice, it needs to ensure adhesion to the biological substrate and/or glue adhesion with biocompatible glues. It is also known that many of the biocompatible glues can be toxic or poorly tolerated and induce inflammatory phenomena or rejection. In tissue and organ transplants, decellularized tissues must not produce adverse immunological reactions and lead to rejection phenomena; at the same time, the transplant tissue must retain the mechanical properties of the original tissue. This review describes the attempts so far developed and the current lines of research in the field of tracheal replacement.

Highlights

  • Airway diseases requiring surgical treatment have been increasing in recent years, due to the higher incidence of respiratory tract cancer (19% of tumors in Italy) [1]

  • Post-operative period burdened by several complications: recurrent stenosis, permanent tracheostomy, even death

  • Allografts need to be revascularized, cryopreserved to inhibit allogenicity and maintain structural functionality and integrity Aortic matrices played a significant role by the release of proangiogenic, chemoattractant, proinflammatory and immunomodulatory cytokines, and growth factors

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Summary

Introduction

Airway diseases requiring surgical treatment have been increasing in recent years, due to the higher incidence of respiratory tract cancer (19% of tumors in Italy) [1]. Tracheal resections frequently cause disability, due to the loss of phonation and the presence of a permanent tracheostomy (that represents an easy access to pathogens responsible of recurrent lower respiratory tract infections, often lethal). Laryngotracheal stenosis is the main cause of re-intervention in the upper respiratory tract. Tracheal resections inferior to 50% of the tracheal length are currently repaired by end-to-end anastomosis [2]. The extent of tracheal resection length of depends on age, posture, and severity of disease [3,4,5]

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