4.7 Article

Thermoresponsive and Injectable Hydrogel for Tissue Agnostic Regeneration

Journal

ADVANCED HEALTHCARE MATERIALS
Volume 11, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/adhm.202201714

Keywords

injectable hydrogel; platform technology; regenerative medicine

Funding

  1. Australian Government
  2. Australian Postgraduate Research Award scholarship
  3. New South Wales government
  4. University of Sydney

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The engineered injectable hydrogel supports the body's healing capability by providing a temporary matrix for cell growth and vascularization. This synthetic biomaterial shows great therapeutic potential in clinical applications and addresses current challenges faced by injectable systems.
Injectable hydrogels can support the body's innate healing capability by providing a temporary matrix for host cell ingrowth and neovascularization. The clinical adoption of current injectable systems remains low due to their cumbersome preparation requirements, device malfunction, product dislodgment during administration, and uncontrolled biological responses at the treatment site. To address these challenges, a fully synthetic and ready-to-use injectable biomaterial is engineered that forms an adhesive hydrogel that remains at the administration site regardless of defect anatomy. The product elicits a negligible local inflammatory response and fully resorbs into nontoxic components with minimal impact on internal organs. Preclinical animal studies confirm that the engineered hydrogel upregulates the regeneration of both soft and hard tissues by providing a temporary matrix to support host cell ingrowth and neovascularization. In a pilot clinical trial, the engineered hydrogel is successfully administered to a socket site post tooth extraction and forms adhesive hydrogel that stabilizes blood clot and supports soft and hard tissue regeneration. Accordingly, this injectable hydrogel exhibits high therapeutic potential and can be adopted to address multiple unmet needs in different clinical settings.

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