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Heart Valve Recellularization: New Treatment for Heart Disease

by Dr. Michael Lee – Health Editor

Human Tissue Successfully Grown on Animal Heart Valves ​in Landmark ‍Study

Seoul, South Korea – In a breakthrough with the potential ​too revolutionize heart valve replacement, researchers at a South Korean hospital have ‌successfully recellularized xenogeneic (animal-derived) heart valves with​ human cells in vitro. The achievement,⁣ published in the online‌ edition⁤ of ‘Tissue Engineering: Part A’, marks the first presentation of its ‍kind and offers a promising path ‍toward eliminating the need for lifelong immunosuppressant drugs for patients receiving valve replacements.

Currently,heart valve replacements often rely on mechanical valves or ​bioprosthetic valves made from animal tissue – typically pig or cow pericardium. While bioprosthetic valves avoid the need for ​long-term blood‌ thinners, they inevitably degrade and require re-operation after 10-15 years.Furthermore,the⁢ animal origin triggers an immune response,necessitating ongoing immunosuppression to prevent rejection. this new research tackles both issues by stripping​ the animal tissue of its antigens ⁢(decellularization) ‌and then repopulating it with a patient’s own cells, effectively creating a personalized, living valve.

The research team, led by Professor Lim Hong-guk of pediatric Thoracic Surgery, maximized antigen removal through⁢ decellularization and a combined enzyme treatment. They then co-cultured cells on the‍ decellularized valve,observing rapid infiltration and⁤ stable settlement. Crucially, the expression of key proteins associated with tissue regeneration – vimentin, calponin, fibronectin, von Willebrand factor (vWF), and CD31 ‍- all increased, indicating triumphant cell settlement ⁣and the formation of vascular endothelial cells.

“This⁣ study…is ⁤the first in the world to demonstrate the possibility ⁢of in vitro recellularization by co-culturing human cells,” stated Professor Lim. “We will continue research to connect this ‌technology to​ actual patient treatment in the future.”

The study was funded by Lee Kun-hee’s Pediatric Cancer and Rare Disease Overcoming Project.The research builds on ⁢the​ team’s prior success ‍with a pulmonary artery stent valve developed in 2018, utilizing a self-developed anti-calcification protocol ⁢applied‌ to pig pericardium. That valve has since​ been implanted in 872 patients ‍with excellent results. Researchers⁣ Soyoung Kim of the Biomedical Research Institute and Kibeom Kim of the Department of Pediatrics also contributed to the study.

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