Development of a tissue-engineered human oral mucosa: from the bench to the bed side.

Cells, tissues, organs 2004 Vol.176(1-3) p. 134-52

Izumi K, Song J, Feinberg SE

Abstract

The main objective of this publication is to make the reader aware of the complexity and steps that are necessary to make a Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved laboratory produced cell-based device, for use in clinical trials for reconstructive surgery. Most tissue-engineered cell-based devices are considered as 'human somatic cell therapy' and fall under the auspices of the Center of Biologic Evaluation and Research (CBER) and are considered a combination product by the FDA. We have illustrated the algorithm that is necessary to follow an Independent New Drug (IND) application by using our ex vivo produced oral mucosa equivalents (EVPOME), a tissue-engineered oral mucosa, as an example of a cell-based device that needs FDA approval prior to clinical application. By illustrating the experimental approach and presenting resulting data we attempt to explain each step that we address along the way.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
해부 EVPOME → ex vivo produced oral mucosa equivalents scispacy 1
합병증 oral mucosa scispacy 1
약물 FDA scispacy 1
기타 human oral mucosa scispacy 1
기타 human somatic cell scispacy 1
기타 oral mucosa scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Animals; Capillaries; Cell Culture Techniques; Cell Division; Cell Survival; Collagen; Device Approval; Dogs; Epithelial Cells; Glucose; Graft Survival; Humans; Immunohistochemistry; Investigational New Drug Application; Keratinocytes; Ki-67 Antigen; Membrane Proteins; Mice; Mice, SCID; Microscopy, Electron; Models, Animal; Mouth Mucosa; Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen; Surgery, Plastic; Tissue Engineering; United States; United States Food and Drug Administration