The Israel National Skin Bank: Quality Assurance and Graft Performance of Stored Tissues

被引:14
作者
H. Ben-Bassat
M. Chaouat
E. Zumai
N. Segal
U. Cinamon
M. Ron
M.R. Wexler
A. Eldad
机构
[1] Hadassah University Hospital,The Laboratory of Experimental Surgery
[2] The Israel National Skin Bank,Hadassah University Hospital
[3] Hadassah University Hospital,Experimental Surgery
[4] Hadassah University Hospital,The Burn Unit and the Department of Plastic Surgery
[5] IDF Medical Corps,undefined
关键词
tissue banking; skin storage; human allografts; skin preservation; glycerolization; cryopreservation; programmed freezing; transplantation; graft take; mouse recipient model; model; The Israel National Skin Bank;
D O I
10.1023/A:1010183719662
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The Israel National Skin Bank (INSB) was founded jointly by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) Medical Corps and the Ministry of Health in 1986. The prime purpose of the Skin Bank is to treat burn victims incurred at war or during mass casualty incidences. The INSB Protocol is comprised of international skin bank protocols and our previous and present research results. They provide the framework for selecting optimal guidelines for procurement, processing, preservation, storage and evaluation of transplantation performance of viable skin grafts. For evaluation and direct comparison of graft performance of glycerolized or cryopreserved skin stored for long periods, we have applied a mouse recipient model developed by us. This model assesses graft performance before the rejection process takes place. The in vivo design has inherent clinical relevance, which is especially appealing. Cryopreserved skin performed better than glycerolized skin (p > 0.027), but fresh skin performed significantly better than cryopreserved skin (p > 0.003), as analyzed by the Mann–Whitney non-parametric test. Then graft performance of skin specimens were cryopreserved by programmed or stepwise freezing and stored at -80°C or in liquid nitrogen for 1 and 6–10 months was evaluated. The average score of skin preserved by programmed freezing and stored in liquid nitrogen is the highest for both storage periods. This method has a highly significant advantage (p < 0.007) over the others for 6–10 months storage, evaluated by graft adherence. Several interaction factors determine the quality of cryopreserved skin. Highly significant is the interaction factor/'combined effect' of sample variability with the method of cryopreservation or with the storage period. Finally, the results of paired comparison of selected histology criteria of cryopreserved to fresh skin indicated that storage of skin for up to 5 years did not impair significantly its performance compared to fresh skin, whereas, after six years of storage, there was a highly significant (p < 0.001) impairment in skin quality. We offer a simplified in vivo model and analysis for cryopreserved skin graft performance, suggesting that the evaluation procedures, which are issues of great interest in skin banking, may help future skin banks to make informed choices and decisions regarding quality issues.
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页码:303 / 312
页数:9
相关论文
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