4.4 Article

Innovative Molecular and Cellular Therapeutics in Cleft Palate Tissue Engineering

Journal

TISSUE ENGINEERING PART B-REVIEWS
Volume 27, Issue 3, Pages 215-237

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/ten.teb.2020.0181

Keywords

cleft palate; tissue engineering; drug delivery; regenerative surgery; craniofacial; polymer scaffold

Funding

  1. National Institute of Health/National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research [DE019471, DE027255]
  2. American Cleft PalateCraniofacial Association
  3. Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Utah
  4. Ole and Marty Jensen Endowment Fund

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Clefts of the lip and/or palate are common orofacial birth defects, with challenges in correcting severe cleft defects through surgery alone. Advances in tissue engineering offer new avenues to stimulate bone formation at the site of surgical correction for palatal clefts, potentially improving treatment outcomes.
Clefts of the lip and/or palate are the most prevalent orofacial birth defects occurring in about 1:700 live human births worldwide. Early postnatal surgical interventions are extensive and staged to bring about optimal growth and fusion of palatal shelves. Severe cleft defects pose a challenge to correct with surgery alone, resulting in complications and sequelae requiring life-long, multidisciplinary care. Advances made in materials science innovation, including scaffold-based delivery systems for precision tissue engineering, now offer new avenues for stimulating bone formation at the site of surgical correction for palatal clefts. In this study, we review the present scientific literature on key developmental events that can go awry in palate development and the common surgical practices and challenges faced in correcting cleft defects. How key osteoinductive pathways implicated in palatogenesis inform the design and optimization of constructs for cleft palate correction is discussed within the context of translation to humans. Finally, we highlight new osteogenic agents and innovative delivery systems with the potential to be adopted in engineering-based therapeutic approaches for the correction of palatal defects. Impact statement Tissue-engineered scaffolds supplemented with osteogenic growth factors have attractive, largely unexplored possibilities to modulate molecular signaling networks relevant to driving palatogenesis in the context of congenital anomalies (e.g., cleft palate). Constructs that address this need may obviate current use of autologous bone grafts, thereby avoiding donor-site morbidity and other regenerative challenges in patients afflicted with palatal clefts. Combinations of biomaterials and drug delivery of diverse regenerative cues and biologics are currently transforming strategies exploited by engineers, scientists, and clinicians for palatal cleft repair.

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