Assessing the Effects of VEGF Releasing Microspheres on the Angiogenic and Foreign Body Response to a 3D Printed Silicone-Based Macroencapsulation Device

Publication date

2021-12-04

Authors

Levey, Ruth E
Coulter, Fergal B
Scheiner, Karina CISNI 0000000507309841
Deotti, Stefano
Robinson, Scott T
McDonough, Liam
Nguyen, Thanh T
Steendam, Rob
Canney, Mark
Wylie, Robert

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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cc_by

Abstract

Macroencapsulation systems have been developed to improve islet cell transplantation but can induce a foreign body response (FBR). The development of neovascularization adjacent to the device is vital for the survival of encapsulated islets and is a limitation for long-term device success. Previously we developed additive manufactured multi-scale porosity implants, which demonstrated a 2.5-fold increase in tissue vascularity and integration surrounding the implant when compared to a non-textured implant. In parallel to this, we have developed poly(ε-caprolactone-PEG-ε-caprolactone)-b-poly(L-lactide) multiblock copolymer microspheres containing VEGF, which exhibited continued release of bioactive VEGF for 4-weeks in vitro. In the present study, we describe the next step towards clinical implementation of an islet macroencapsulation device by combining a multi-scale porosity device with VEGF releasing microspheres in a rodent model to assess prevascularization over a 4-week period. An in vivo estimation of vascular volume showed a significant increase in vascularity (* p = 0.0132) surrounding the +VEGF vs. -VEGF devices, however, histological assessment of blood vessels per area revealed no significant difference. Further histological analysis revealed significant increases in blood vessel stability and maturity (** p = 0.0040) and vessel diameter size (*** p = 0.0002) surrounding the +VEGF devices. We also demonstrate that the addition of VEGF microspheres did not cause a heightened FBR. In conclusion, we demonstrate that the combination of VEGF microspheres with our multi-scale porous macroencapsulation device, can encourage the formation of significantly larger, stable, and mature blood vessels without exacerbating the FBR.

Keywords

diabetes, prevascularization, drug delivery, VEGF, medical device, multi-scale porosity, angiogenesis, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Levey, R E, Coulter, F B, Scheiner, K C, Deotti, S, Robinson, S T, McDonough, L, Nguyen, T T, Steendam, R, Canney, M, Wylie, R, Burke, L P, Dolan, E B, Dockery, P, Kelly, H M, Ghersi, G, Hennink, W E, Kok, R J, O'Cearbhaill, E & Duffy, G P 2021, 'Assessing the Effects of VEGF Releasing Microspheres on the Angiogenic and Foreign Body Response to a 3D Printed Silicone-Based Macroencapsulation Device', Pharmaceutics, vol. 13, no. 12, 2077, pp. 1-16. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics13122077