Cell and tissue banking
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Cell and tissue banking · Jan 2002
Effectiveness and Safety of the PEGT/PBT Copolymer Scaffold as Dermal Substitute in Scar Reconstruction Wounds (Feasibility Trial).
Skin defects left after excision of hypertrophic scars were treated with a dermal substitute and split-thickness skin grafts transplanted after vascularisation of the substitute. The used substitute was a synthetic porous scaffold made from the biodegradable copolymer polyethyleneglycol-terephtalate and polybuthylene-terephtalate. The study was designed to assess the rate of granulation tissue formation, graft take, and after 3 and 12 months the quality of life (pain, comfort of treatment, cosmetic or functional nuisance), scar formation and wound contraction. ⋯ All 5 patients showed an improvement in the total Vancouver Scar Score compared to the value before scar removal being similar to what can be expected when treated with split-thickness skin grafts alone. No unanticipated adverse effects due to application of the substitute were observed. We conclude that although this synthetic dermal substitute can be safely used in humans, the presence of 3D dermal template in a full-thickness skin defect will not automatically improve the skin tissue regeneration process or inhibit wound contraction.