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Hypothermic preservation of endothelialized gas‐exchange membranes

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-11-25, 14:18 authored by Michael Pflaum, Hayan Merhej, Ariana Peredo, Adim De, Daniele Dipresa, Bettina Wiegmann, Willem Wolkers, Axel Haverich, Sotiris KorossisSotiris Korossis
Endothelialization of the blood contacting surfaces of blood-contacting medical devices, such as cardiovascular prostheses or biohybrid oxygenators, represents a plausible strategy for increasing their hemocompatibility. Nevertheless, isolation and expansion of autologous endothelial cells (ECs) usually requires multiple processing steps and time to obtain sufficient cell numbers. This excludes endothelialization from application in acute situations. Off-the-shelf availability of cell-seeded biohybrid devices could be potentially facilitated by hypothermic storage. In this study, the survival of cord-blood-derived endothelial colony forming cells (ECFCs) that were seeded onto polymethylpentene (PMP) gas-exchange membranes and stored for up to 2 weeks in different commercially available and commonly used preservation media was measured. While storage at 4°C in normal growth medium (EGM-2) for 3 days resulted in massive disruption of the ECFC monolayer and a significant decline in viability, ECFC monolayers preserved in Chillprotec could recover after up to 14 days with negligible effects on their integrity and viability. ECFC monolayers preserved in Celsior, HTS-FRS, or Rokepie medium showed a significant decrease in viability after 7 days or longer periods. These results demonstrated the feasibility of hypothermic preservation of ECFC monolayers on gas-exchange membranes for up to 2 weeks, with potential application on the preservation of pre-endothelialized oxygenators and further biohybrid cardiovascular devices.

Funding

Deutsche Zentrum für Lungenforschung. Grant Number: 82DZL00201

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. Grant Numbers: 347346497, 348028075, EXC62 (Rebirth) (24102914), WI 4088/1‐2

History

School

  • Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering

Published in

Artificial Organs

Volume

44

Issue

12

Pages

e552 - e565

Publisher

International Center for Artificial Organ and Transplantation (ICAOT) and Wiley Periodicals LLC

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© The Authors

Publisher statement

This is an Open Access Article. It is published by Wiley under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence (CC BY 4.0). Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Acceptance date

2020-07-06

Publication date

2020-08-13

Copyright date

2020

ISSN

0160-564X

eISSN

1525-1594

Language

  • en

Depositor

Prof Sotiris Korossis. Deposit date: 24 November 2020

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