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A biomimetic reverse thermal gel for the treatment of myocardial infarction

$214,900R21FY2014HLNIH

University Of Colorado Denver, Aurora CO

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Abstract

DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): With an estimated 635,000 Americans with coronary artery disease (CAD) each year, there is a clear need for an alternative treatment strategy. Myocardial infarction (MI) is a leading CAD caused by the death of heart muscle tissues. The current treatment paradigm is focused on pharmacological (reducing oxygen demand or increasing blood flow) or surgical intervention including surgical bypass to reconstruct blood flow path. Recent work has taken a more biomedical approach in which angiogenesis using growth factors in infarction site is targeted as a means to provide blood flow and oxygen supply. While some approaches are dependent on direct administration of pure growth factors, experience in the wider field of cardiovascular tissue engineering has taught us that a scaffold-based approach may be the most promising strategy. We have recently developed a polymeric injectable biomaterial that serves itself well to this application owing to is reverse thermal gelling properties. These properties allow it too rapidly and reversibly transition between a liquid at room temperature and a solid at body temperature, permitting injection through a small gauge needle or catheter directly at the target site and then formation of a cohesive solid polymer network upon reaching body temperature. This approach has many advantages over other scaffold-based approaches including minimally- invasive deployment, in situ conformation to the injury site and tunable physical properties to mimic the host environment. In addition, this system can be readily functionalized to mimic specific biofunction of natural heparin to enhance stability and localized expression of growth factors, and thereby achieve localized angiogenesis in MI site with substantial recovery of heart function. Towards developing a system that can maximize these advantages, we have constructed this application around two specific aims: 1) determine appropriate version of heparin-mimicking reverse thermal gel (SRTG) that substantially sustains growth factor expression in vitro and 2) demonstrate substantial angiogenesis and MI treatment effect by in vivo rat MI model.

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