In situ tissue engineering that uses resorbable synthetic heart valve scaffolds is an affordable and practical approach for heart valve replacement; therefore, it is attractive for clinical use. This study showed no consistent collagen organization in the predefined direction of electrospun scaffolds made from a resorbable supramolecular elastomer with random or circumferentially aligned fibers, after 12 months of implantation in sheep. These unexpected findings and the observed intervalvular variability highlight the need for a mechanistic understanding of the long-term in situ remodeling processes in large animal models to improve predictability of outcome toward robust and safe clinical application.
Keywords: GPC, gel permeation chromatography; SEM, scanning electron microscopy; TEHV, tissue-engineered heart valve; TTE, transthoracic echocardiography; aTEHV, anisotropic tissue-engineered heart valve; cell biology/structural biology; rTEHV, random tissue-engineered heart valve; valvular heart disease.
© 2020 The Authors.