Breast Augmentation and Reconstruction from a Regenerative Medicine Point of View: State of the Art and Future Perspectives
Author(s) -
Luke Visscher,
Matthew Cheng,
Mohit P. Chhaya,
Madeline L. Hintz,
JanThorsten Schantz,
Phong A. Tran,
Owen Ung,
Clement Wong,
Dietmar W. Hutmacher
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
tissue engineering part b reviews
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.579
H-Index - 91
eISSN - 1937-3376
pISSN - 1937-3368
DOI - 10.1089/ten.teb.2016.0303
Subject(s) - breast reconstruction , scope (computer science) , regenerative medicine , medicine , silicone , scaffold , breast augmentation , state of art , tissue engineering , surgery , state (computer science) , intensive care medicine , risk analysis (engineering) , stem cell , computer science , medical physics , biomedical engineering , breast cancer , data science , implant , biology , chemistry , organic chemistry , algorithm , cancer , genetics , programming language
Breast reconstruction and augmentation are very common procedures, yet the prevailing current methods utilize silicone implants that may have significant local complications requiring reoperation. Lipofillling is increasingly used to contour and is considered safe, however, its utility is limited by significant volume loss. A new approach could offer an alternative and increase the scope of patient choice. A small number of teams around the world are investigating a breast tissue engineering (TE) paradigm. Conventional breast TE concepts are based on seeding a scaffold with the patients' own stem cells. However, the clinical viability of many of these approaches is limited by their costs in relevant volumes. In this article the state of the art of tissue-engineered breast reconstruction is reviewed and future perspectives are presented and discussed.
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