Abstract

An urgent need exists to develop large animal models for preclinical testing of new cell therapies designed to replace lost or damaged tissues. Patients receiving irradiation for treatment of head and neck cancers frequently develop xerostomia/dry mouth, a condition that could one day be treated by cell therapy to repopulate functional saliva-producing cells. Using immunosuppression protocols developed for patients receiving whole face transplants, we successfully used immunosuppressed miniswine as a suitable host animal to evaluate the long-term stability, biocompatibility, and fate of matrix-modified hyaluronate (HA) hydrogel/bioscaffold materials containing encapsulated salivary human stem/progenitor cells (hS/PCs). An initial biocompatibility test was conducted in parotids of untreated miniswine. Subsequent experiments using hS/PC-laden hydrogels were performed in animals, beginning an immunosuppression regimen on the day of surgery. Implant sites included the kidney capsule for viability testing and the parotid gland for biointegration time periods up to eight weeks. No transplant rejection was seen in any animal assessed by analysis of the tissues near the site of the implants. First-generation implants containing only cells in hydrogel proved difficult to handle in the surgical suite and were modified to adhere to a porcine small intestinal submucosa (SIS) membrane for improved handling and could be delivered through the da Vinci surgical system. Several different surgical techniques were assessed using the second-generation 3D-salivary tissue (3D-ST) for ease and stability both on the kidney capsule and in the capsule-less parotid gland. For the kidney, sliding the implant under the capsule membrane and quick stitching proved superior to other methods. For the parotid gland, creation of a tissue “pocket” for placement and immediate multilayer tissue closure were well tolerated with minimal tissue damage. Surgical clips were placed as fiduciary markers for tissue harvest. Some implant experiments were conducted with miniswine 90 days post-irradiation when salivation decreased significantly. Sufficient parotid tissue remained to allow implant placement, and animals tolerated immunosuppression. In all experiments, viability of implanted hS/PCs was high with clear signs of both vascular and nervous system integration in the parotid implants. We thus conclude that the immunosuppressed miniswine is a high-value emerging model for testing human implants prior to first-in-human trials.

Highlights

  • Xerostomia, the subjective perception of dry mouth due to hyposalivation, is a serious oral morbidity affecting millions of people worldwide

  • We show that immunosuppressed miniswine display no tissue reaction to encapsulated human stem/ progenitor cells (hS/PCs) in migration-permissive hydrogels over a multi-week implant period during which the implanted cells remain viable

  • By the time of shipment, hS/PCs had assembled into spherical structures averaging 30–50 μm in diameter. 3D-salivary tissue (3D-ST) in plates filled with medium were placed in sealed containers and priority-shipped overnight by commercial carrier to Pittsburgh where upon arrival, they were transferred into cell culture plates with fresh medium and into proper culture conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Xerostomia, the subjective perception of dry mouth due to hyposalivation, is a serious oral morbidity affecting millions of people worldwide. The precise prevalence of this condition is unknown, but extrapolation of public health figures for upperairway cancers indicates that over 50,000 new cases/year occur in the U.S alone. It is estimated that more than 150,000 Americans suffer from some degree of irradiationinduced xerostomia, and millions of other individuals suffer from xerostomia attributed to other causes including age, injury, and autoimmune disease (Maeshima et al, 2013). The latter group will benefit from the ability to allograft replacement tissues

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