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Article Abstract

Background: Retraction and degenerative changes of chronic rotator cuff tears limit the healing capacity after routine surgical repair.

Purpose: To fabricate a mesenchymal stem cell-derived exosome (MSC-Exos) loaded patch and evaluate the effect of this patch on the activity of rabbit tenocytes in vitro and on the repair of chronic rotator cuff tears associated with degenerative changes in vivo.

Study Design: Controlled laboratory study.

Methods: The MSC-Exos loaded patch was fabricated using a dynamic wet-spinning system. In the in vitro studies, the proliferation and migration activities of tenocytes were evaluated by culturing tenocytes with saline, a fiber-aligned patch, or an MSC-Exos loaded patch. In the in vivo studies, a rabbit model of chronic rotator cuff tear was established and directly repaired, repaired with fiber-aligned patch augmentation (RFPA group), and repaired with MSC-Exos loaded patch augmentation (REPA group). Histological and biomechanical analyses were performed at 4, 8, and 12 weeks after surgery.

Results: An MSC-Exos loaded patch with inner aligned fibers, a loose microstructure, and reliable initial strength was fabricated using a dynamic wet-spinning system. The MSC-Exos loaded patch significantly promoted tenocyte proliferation and migration activities in vitro. In vivo, the REPA group exhibited significantly higher tendon maturing scores at 8 and 12 weeks after surgery compared with both the control and the RFPA groups. Fatty infiltration was significantly reduced in the REPA group at 4, 8, and 12 weeks compared with both the control and the RFPA groups. Biomechanical properties, including load to failure and stress, were also significantly improved at 12 weeks in the REPA group compared with both the control and the RFPA groups.

Conclusion: Results in the present study suggested that an MSC-Exos loaded patch was able to enhance the repair of a chronic rotator cuff tear by providing mechanical support and minimizing degeneration.

Clinical Relevance: This work supported the idea that loading bioactive MSC-Exos into a traditionally designed rotator cuff patch might exert a better effect on the repair of chronic rotator cuff tears than augmented patch repair alone.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/03635465221096490DOI Listing

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