
The clinical use of cryopreserved human skin allografts for transplantation
Author(s) -
Francisco MartínezFlores,
María Chacón-Gómez,
Juan Antonio Madinaveitia-Villanueva,
Araceli Barrera-López,
Lucinda Aguirre-Cruz,
Walter Querevalú-Murillo
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
cirugía y cirujanos
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2444-0507
DOI - 10.1016/j.circen.2015.11.003
Subject(s) - human skin , medicine , total body surface area , tissue bank , body surface area , surgery , cryopreservation , transplantation , skin transplantation , biology , embryo , genetics , microbiology and biotechnology
BackgroundThe biological recovery of human skin allografts is the gold standard for preservation in Skin Banks. However, there is no worldwide consensus about specific allocation criteria for preserved human skin allografts with living cells.A report is presented on the results of 5 years of experience of using human skin allografts in burned patient in the Skin and Tissue Bank at Instituto Nacional de Rehabilitación.Material and methodsThe human skin allografts were obtained from multi-organ donors, processed and preserved at −80°C for 12 months. Allocation criteria were performed according to blood type match, clinical history, and burned body surface.ResultsUp to now, the Skin and Tissue Bank at Instituto Nacional de Rehabilitación has processed and recovered 125,000cm2 of human skin allografts. It has performed 34 surgical implants on 21 burned patients. The average of burn body surface was 59.2%. More than two-thirds (67.7%) of recipients of skin allografts were matched of the same to type blood of the donor, and 66.6% survived after 126 days hospital stay.ConclusionIt is proposed to consider recipient's blood group as allocation criteria to assign tissue; and use human skin allografts on patiens affected with burns over 30% of body surface (according the “rule of the 9”)