Exploring the Efficacy of Selected Allografts in Chronic Wound Healing: Evidence from Murine Models and Clinical Data for a Proposed Treatment Algorithm.

IF 5.8 3区 医学 Q1 DERMATOLOGY
Charlotte R Reed, Tokoya Williams, Iulianna Taritsa, Kevin Wu, Evangelia Chnari, Madeline J O'Connor, Bradley A Melnick, Kelly C Ho, Marc Long, Kristin N Huffman, Robert D Galiano
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Abstract

Significance: Chronic wounds can lead to poor outcomes for patients, with risks, including amputation and death. In the United States, chronic wounds affect 2.5% of the population and cost up to $28 billion per year in primary health care costs. Recent Advances: Allograft tissues (dermal, amnion, and amnion/chorion) have shown efficacy in improving healing of chronic, recalcitrant wounds in human patients, as evidenced by multiple clinical trials. Their mechanisms of actions have been relatively understudied, until recently. Research in murine models has shown that dermal allografts promote reepithelialization, amnion allografts promote granulation tissue formation and angiogenesis, and amnion/chorion allografts support all stages of wound healing. These findings confirm their effectiveness and illuminate their therapeutic mechanisms. Critical Issues: Despite the promise of allografts in chronic wound care, a gap exists in understanding which allografts are most effective during each wound healing stage. The variable efficacy among each type of allograft suggests a mechanistic approach toward a proposed clinical treatment algorithm, based on wound characteristics and patient's needs, may be beneficial. Future Directions: Recent advances in allografts provide a framework for further investigations into patient-specific allograft selection. This requires additional research to identify which allografts support the best outcomes during each stage of wound healing and in which wound types. Longitudinal human studies investigating the long-term impacts of allografts, particularly in the remodeling phase, are also essential to developing a deeper understanding of their role in sustained wound repair and recovery.

探索选定异体移植在慢性伤口愈合中的疗效:从小鼠模型和临床数据中获取证据,提出治疗方案。
意义重大:慢性伤口会给患者带来不良后果,风险包括截肢和死亡。在美国,2.5%的人口受到慢性伤口的影响,每年的基本医疗费用高达 280 亿美元:同种异体组织(真皮、羊膜和羊膜/绒毛膜)在改善人类慢性顽固伤口的愈合方面具有疗效,多项临床试验证明了这一点。但直到最近,对其作用机制的研究还相对不足。对小鼠模型的研究表明,真皮同种异体移植可促进再上皮化,羊膜同种异体移植可促进肉芽组织形成和血管生成,羊膜/绒毛膜同种异体移植可支持伤口愈合的各个阶段。这些发现不仅证实了异体移植物的有效性,还揭示了异体移植物在患者身上发挥治疗作用的作用机制:尽管同种异体移植在慢性伤口护理方面大有可为,但在了解哪种同种异体移植在伤口愈合的各个阶段最有效方面仍存在差距。每种类型的同种异体移植的疗效各不相同,这表明根据伤口特点和患者需求制定临床治疗算法的机理方法可能是有益的:同种异体移植的最新进展为进一步研究如何根据患者的具体需求选择同种异体移植提供了框架。这就需要进行更多的研究,以确定在伤口愈合过程的每个阶段,哪种同种异体移植物能达到最佳效果,以及对特定类型伤口的效用。纵向人体研究调查同种异体移植物的长期影响,特别是在重塑阶段的影响,对于深入了解同种异体移植物在伤口持续修复和恢复中的作用也至关重要。
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来源期刊
Advances in wound care
Advances in wound care Medicine-Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
12.10
自引率
4.10%
发文量
62
期刊介绍: Advances in Wound Care rapidly shares research from bench to bedside, with wound care applications for burns, major trauma, blast injuries, surgery, and diabetic ulcers. The Journal provides a critical, peer-reviewed forum for the field of tissue injury and repair, with an emphasis on acute and chronic wounds. Advances in Wound Care explores novel research approaches and practices to deliver the latest scientific discoveries and developments. Advances in Wound Care coverage includes: Skin bioengineering, Skin and tissue regeneration, Acute, chronic, and complex wounds, Dressings, Anti-scar strategies, Inflammation, Burns and healing, Biofilm, Oxygen and angiogenesis, Critical limb ischemia, Military wound care, New devices and technologies.
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