Abstract

Rotator cuff (RC) tears represent a large proportion of musculoskeletal injuries attended to at the clinic and thereby make RC repair surgeries one of the most widely performed musculoskeletal procedures. Despite the high incidence rate of RC tears, operative treatments have provided minimal functional gains and suffer from high re-tear rates. The hypocellular nature of tendon tissue poses a limited capacity for regeneration. In recent years, great strides have been made in the area of tendonogenesis and differentiation towards tendon cells due to a greater understanding of the tendon stem cell niche, development of advanced materials, improved scaffold fabrication techniques, and delineation of the phenotype development process. Though in vitro models for tendonogenesis have shown promising results, in vivo models have been less successful. The present work investigates structured matrices mimicking the tendon microenvironment as cell delivery vehicles in a rat RC tear model. RC injuries augmented with a matrix delivering rat mesenchymal stem cells (rMSCs) showed enhanced regeneration over suture repair alone or repair with augmentation, at 6 and 12-weeks post-surgery. The local delivery of rMSCs led to increased mechanical properties and improved tissue morphology. We hypothesize that the mesenchymal stem cells function to modulate the local immune and bioactivity environment through autocrine/paracrine and/or cell homing mechanisms. This study provides evidence for improved tendon healing with biomimetic matrices and delivered MSCs with the potential for translation to larger, clinical animal models. The enhanced regenerative healing response with stem cell delivering biomimetic matrices may represent a new treatment paradigm for massive RC tendon tears.

Highlights

  • Tendon injuries constitute a significant unmet clinical need with rotator cuff (RC) pathology being highly prevalent [1] and mostly involving tears of the supraspinatus tendon in the shoulder [2]

  • While similar observations were made for the scaffold alone group (Fig 2C), the rat mesenchymal stem cells (rMSCs) delivery group took on more of an intact tendon appearance

  • With this pattern in mind, RC augmentation using the extracellular matrix (ECM) mimetic scaffold delivering rMSCs demonstrated a greater degree of healing compared to the other experimental groups as evidenced by Mason Trichrome staining (Figs 2 and 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Tendon injuries constitute a significant unmet clinical need with rotator cuff (RC) pathology being highly prevalent [1] and mostly involving tears of the supraspinatus tendon in the shoulder [2]. This musculotendon unit is solely responsible for the first 30 degrees of arm abduction, and an injury presents considerable morbidity [3]. Laurencin et al defined this new field as ‘Regenerative Engineering’, which is the convergence of advanced materials science, stem cell science, physics, developmental biology, and clinical translation to answer the grand challenge, i.e. regenerate complex multi-cellular tissues [6]

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