Correction of Significant Urethral Anomalies Using a Tissue-Engineered Human Urethral Substitute: Proof of Concept
Christophe Caneparo, Elissa Elia, Stéphane Chabaud, François Berthod, Julie Fradette, Stéphane Bolduc

TL;DR
Researchers developed a tissue-engineered human urethral substitute and tested it in rabbits, showing partial success in repairing urethral anomalies.
Contribution
A novel tissue-engineered urethral substitute without exogenous biomaterials was created and tested in a preclinical model.
Findings
The engineered urethral substitute showed mechanical and functional properties similar to native tissues.
Successful integration was observed in half of the rabbits, despite a lower success rate compared to controls.
The study highlights the potential of self-assembled tissues for urethral reconstruction.
Abstract
Urethral reconstruction remains a challenge. Indeed, the use of oral mucosa, the reference biomaterial for urethroplasty, is associated with two main drawbacks: the limited availability of autologous tissues and potential short- and long-term complications, especially for patients with recurrences or severe anomalies. Therefore, the development of alternative approaches, such as urethral tissue engineering, is necessary. A new type of human urethral substitute devoid of exogenous biomaterials has been reconstructed in vitro. It presented sufficient mechanical strength and had histological and functional properties comparable to native tissues. These reconstructed tissues were implanted in vivo to repair hypospadias induced in tacrolimus-immunosuppressed rabbits via a two-stage urethroplasty. In the first stage, the distal part of the native urethra was removed, and a flat graft was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUrological Disorders and Treatments · Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine
