Platelet-Rich Therapies in Hernia Repair: A Comprehensive Review of the Impact of Platelet Concentrates on Mesh Integration in Hernia Management
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Platelet-Rich Plasma Products
1.2. Mesh Coating
2. Materials and Methods
Literature Search Strategy
3. Experimental Models Based on the Type of Mesh
3.1. Synthetic Meshes
3.2. Biological Implants
3.3. Composite Implants
4. Applications in Clinical Medicine
5. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Growth Factors and Cytokines | Functions |
---|---|
platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) [29] | Proliferation of mesenchymal cells and osteoblasts Regulation of granulocytes, monocytes, and fibroblasts migration and mitogenesis Control of extracellular matrix Regulation of collagenase secretion and collagen synthesis Contribution to bone formation |
epidermal growth factor (EGF) [29] | Enhancement of cellular differentiation Proliferation and differentiation of mesenchymal cells |
transforming growth factor -β (TGF -β) [30] | Control of cellular mitosis and differentiation Proliferation and differentiation of mesenchymal cells via paracrine action Regulation of collagenase secretion and collagen synthesis Stimulation of endothelial chemotaxis and angiogenesis Inhibition of macrophage and lymphocyte proliferation |
insulin growth factor 1 (IGF-1) [30] | Chemotaxis of fibroblasts Stimulation of protein synthesis Proliferation and differentiation of osteoblasts |
vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) [31] | Increase in angiogenesis and vessel permeability Stimulation of endothelial cell mitogenesis |
keratinocyte growth factor (KGF) [30] | Control of epithelial migration and proliferation |
platelet factor 4 (PF-4) [30] | Regulation of leucocytes chemotaxis and activation |
connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) [30] | Promotion of neoangiogenesis, cartilage formation, fibrosis, and platelet adhesion |
tumor necrosis factor (TNF) [30] | Regulation of monocyte migration, fibroblast proliferation, and macrophage activation Promotion of angiogenesis |
angiopoietin (Ang-1) [31] | Promotion of angiogenesis Migration and proliferation of endothelial cells. Support of blood vessel development |
stromal cell-derived factor -1α (SDF-1α) [31] | Control of CD34+ cells chemotaxis, proliferation and differentiation Promotion of angiogenesis Chemotaxis of mesenchymal stem cells and leucocytes |
hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) [30] | Control of cell growth and motility in epithelial/endothelial cells Promotion of epithelial repair and neovascularization |
(a-b)- fibroblast growth factor (FGF) [31] | Growth and differentiation of chondrocytes and osteoblasts Promotion of mesenchymal cells, chondrocytes, and osteoblasts mitogenesis |
PRP-Mediated Activities in Synergic Mesh–PRP Hernia Repair |
---|
Increase in chronic inflammation [45] |
Increase in collagen formation and deposition [45,46] |
Increase in new tissue mechanical strength [45] |
Εnhancement of angiogenesis [47] |
Myofibroblast recruitment and tissue ingrowth [16] |
Reduction of CD8+ cell concentrates and multinucleated giant cell infiltration [33] |
Improvement of stromal cell migration/proliferation and deposition of the provisional matrix required for sufficient wound healing [45] |
Reduction of adhesion formation through fibrinolysis of adhesions and reduced mature transformation [46] |
Regulation of chemotaxis of immune cells [16] |
Reduction of inflammatory cytokine production [48] |
Reduction of loss of endogenous antioxidants [49] |
Reduction of matrix metalloproteinase expression [48] |
Study | Country | Groups—Number of Animals | Animal Type | Age | Weight | Sex | Euthanasia |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Heffner et al., 2012 [63] | USA | —42 animals classified into 3 groups: Group 1: primary repair only; Group 2: primary repair with implant and PRP; Group 3: primary repair with implant, PRP, and BM-MSCs | Lewis rats | Adult | 250–300 gr | M | 4 and 8 weeks |
Van Eps et al., 2015 [16] | USA | —32 animals classified into 2 groups: mesh only (control) or mesh–PRP —8 animals for blood sampling and PRP production | Lewis rats | Adult | Non-stated | M | 3 and 6 months |
Fernandez-Moure et al., 2015 [67] | USA | —42 animals classified into 2 groups: PRP–mesh group or saline–mesh groups —10 animals for blood sampling and PRP production | Lewis rats | Non-stated | 300–315 g | M | 2, 4, and 6 weeks |
Avila et al., 2016 [56] | Brazil | —30 animals classified into 2 groups: mesh-only or PRP-coated mesh | White New Zealand rabbits | Adult | Non-stated | F | 7, 30, and 90 days |
Fernandez-Moure et al., 2017 [69] | USA | —84 animals classified into 2 groups: Group 1: Permacol™ cADM and Group 2: Strattice™-ncADM. Groups were afterward divided into PRP or saline-coated (7 animals in each subgroup) —10 animals for blood sampling and PRP production | Wistar rats | Non-stated | 300–315 gr | M | 2, 4, and 6 weeks |
Abouelnasr et al., 2017 [46] | Egypt, Japan | —24 animals classified into 2 groups: treated with mesh alone (control group) or mesh and allogenic PRP (PRP group) | Mongrel dogs | 1.5–2 years | 20–30 kg | Non-stated | 2 and 4 months |
Altieri et al., 2017 [45] | USA | —16 animals classified into 3 groups: hiatus repair (HR) (n = 7), HR with biologic graft (HRM) (n = 8); HR with biologic graft and fPC (fPC; n = 9) | Yorkshire pigs | Non-stated | 30–40 kg | F | 8 weeks |
Belebecha et al., 2019 [49] | Brazil | —24 animals classified into 2 groups: sham group and study group, in which mesh was implanted on both sides of the abdominal wall, with only the right side being coated with PRP | New Zealand rabbits | 6 months | 2.91 kg | F | 30 and 60 days |
Van Eps et al., 2019 [68] | USA | —28 animals classified into 2 groups: pADM alone (pADM group) or pADM coated with PRP (pADM–PRP group) | Lewis rats | Non-stated | 250–300 g | M | 3 and 6 months |
El-Husseiny et al., 2020 [47] | Egypt | —36 animals classified into 4 groups (9 animals/group): GBP, PPM, GBP–PRF, and PPM–PRF | Goats | 1–3 years | 20–30 kg | Non-stated | 4, 8, and 12 weeks |
Fernandez-Moure et al., 2021 [33] | USA | —42 animals classified into 2 groups: PRP–mesh or saline–mesh (placebo) | Lewis rats | Non-stated | 300–315 g | M | 2, 4, and 6 weeks |
Fernandez-Moure et al., 2021 [48] | USA | —48 animals classified into 2 groups: PRP–mesh or saline–mesh group —10 animals for blood sampling and PRP production | Lewis rats | Non-stated | 300–315 g | M | 2, 4, and 6 weeks |
Araujo-Gutierrez et al., 2021 [72] | USA | —36 animals classified into 4 groups: control (mesh alone, or saline) or experimental (mesh + PRP), including three different PRP concentrations: 2 million (PRP-LOW); 200 million (PRP-MID); 2 billion (PRP-HIGH) | Lewis rats | Non-stated | 300–315 gr | M | 2 and 4 weeks |
Zedan et al., 2023 [57] | Iraq | —24 animals classified into 2 groups: PPM only (control group) and PPM reinforced with PRF (PRF group) | Sheep | 12 ± 0.2 months | 41 ± 0.4 kg | M | 7, 15, 30, 45 days |
Author | Type of Hernia | Defect Characteristics | Mesh | Type of Mesh | Mesh Dimensions | Fixation Method | Mesh Location |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Heffner et al., 2012 [63] | Ventral hernia | 6 cm midline full-thickness fascial defect | CollaTapeTM (CoTa) (Zimmer Dental, Mississauga, ON, Canada) | type I bovine collagen | 1 × 6 cm | 5–0 Vicryl sutures | Onlay |
Van Eps et al., 2015 [16] | Ventral hernia | 2 cm full-thickness incision of the abdominal wall at the linea alba | Strattice (Life Cell Corporation, Branchburg, NJ, USA) | ncADM | Non-stated (at least a 1.5 cm overlap from the edge) | Eight interrupted 3–0 Prolene sutures | Intraperitoneal underlay |
Fernandez-Moure et al., 2015 [67] | Ventral hernia | Full-thickness (fascia/muscle/peritoneum) abdominal midline defect measuring 2 cm in length | Strattice (Life Cell Corporation, Branchburg, NJ, USA) | porcine ncADM | 2.5 × 1.5 cm | Eight transfascial 5–0 Prolene sutures | Intraperitoneal underlay |
Avila et al., 2016 [56] | Ventral hernia | Dimensions not mentioned | Brand non-stated | PPM | 1 × 1 cm | No fixation | Underlay (subaponeurotic) |
Fernandez-Moure et al., 2017 [69] | Ventral hernia | Full-thickness abdominal midline defect measuring 2 cm × 3 cm | cADM: Permacol (Medtronic, Minneapolis, MN, USA), ncADM: Strattice (Life Cell, Bridgewater, NJ, USA) | cADM and ncADM | Non-stated | Transabdominal polypropylene sutures through fascia and abdominal musculature | Underlay |
Abouelnasr et al., 2017 [46] | Ventral hernia | Full-thickness abdominal wall defect measuring 10 × 6 cm and including muscles and peritoneum | Damour (Further information are not provided) | Polyester/cotton fabric | Covering the edges with 5–8 mm underlay | Interrupted 1–0 Polypropylene monofilament sutures | Underlay |
Altieri et al., 2017 [45] | Hiatal hernia | 1.5 cm hiatal opening | Cook Biodesign 4-layer hiatal hernia graft (Cook, Bloomington, IN, USA) | ADM | 7 × 10 cm | Two 2–0 silk sutures | Hiatus |
Belebecha et al., 2019 [49] | Ventral hernia | 1 × 1-cm partial thickness (internal and external oblique muscles and transversalis fascia) paramedian defect | Advantage (Boston Scientific, Marlborough, MA, USA) | PPM | 1.5 × 2 cm | Four interrupted 4–0 polyglycolic acid sutures | Between the hypodermis and peritoneum |
Van Eps et al., 2019 [68] | Ventral hernia | A full-thickness 2 cm defect, including the peritoneum | Strattice (LifeCell Corporation, Branchburg, NJ, USA) | porcine ncADM | 2.5 x 3 cm | Eight interrupted, 5–0 Prolene sutures | Intraperitoneal onlay |
El-Husseiny et al., 2020 [47] | Ventral hernia | Full-thickness abdominal wall defect, including the peritoneum measuring 6 × 10 cm | Heine Mesh, (30 cm × 30 cm, HEINE MEDIZIN GmbH., Dusseldorf, Germany) | PPM | Non-stated | Interrupted chromic cat gut size 0 sutures | Intraperitoneal underlay |
Fernandez-Moure et al., 2021 [33] | Ventral hernia | Full-thickness abdominal midline fascia/muscle/peritoneum defect measuring 2 cm in length | Alloderm (Lifecell Corporation, Branchburg, NJ, USA) | human ncADM | 2.5 × 1.5 cm | Six transfascial 5–0 Prolene sutures | Intraperitoneal underlay |
Fernandez-Moure et al., 2021 [48] | Ventral hernia | Full-thickness abdominal midline fascia/muscle/peritoneum defect measuring 2 cm in length | Strattice (LifeCell Corporation, NJ, USA) | pADM | 3 × 3 cm | Interrupted transfascial 5–0 Prolene sutures | Intraperitoneal underlay |
Araujo-Gutierrez et al., 2021 [72] | Ventral hernia | Full-thickness abdominal midline incision through fascia, muscle, and/or peritoneum measuring 2 cm | XCM Biologic Tissue Matrix (DSM Biomedical, Exton, PA, USA) | porcine ncADM | 2.5 × 1.5 cm | Eight transfascial 5–0 prolene (Ethicon) sutures | Intraperitoneal underlay |
Zedan et al., 2023 [57] | Ventral hernia | 12 cm vertical incision through the skin and subcutaneous tissue without peritoneum opening | Monoprolen (Betatech Medical, Instabul, Turkey) | PPM | 30 × 30 cm | Non-stated | Modified sublay |
Author | Animal Type | Main Results | Conclusions |
---|---|---|---|
Heffner et al., 2012 [63] | Lewis rats | —Group 2 presented increased tensile strength at 4 and 8 weeks compared to Group 1΄ —Group 2 presented significantly increased modulus of elasticity, modulus of toughness, and energy absorption at both time points compared to Group 1 —At 4 weeks, Group 2 presented significantly increased muscle degeneration rates compared to Group 1 —No significant difference in neovascularization rates and in collagen organization and amount between the two groups | PRP-coated collagen matrix led to improved rates of biomechanical tests without, however, improving neovascularization or quality and quantity of collagen deposition |
Van Eps et al., 2015 [16] | Lewis rats | —No significant difference in seroma formation in each group —At 3 months: Mesh–PRP groups presented significantly increased neovascularization, upregulation of both angiogenic and myofibroblastic genes, increased tissue deposition, and reduced chronic immune cell infiltration compared to mesh group —Peritoneal adhesions were less severe at both 3 and 6 months in the mesh–PRP groups —Mesh–PRP group had no hernia recurrence rate at 6 months, compared to mesh group (7/10) and presented significantly improved mesh preservation | PRP coating induced angiogenesis, myofibroblast recruitment, and newly formed tissue ingrowth leading to improved ADM preservation, reduced rate of severe peritoneal adhesions, and diminished hernia recurrence rate |
Fernandez-Moure et al., 2015 [67] | Lewis rats | —PRP–mesh animals presented increased neovascularization, both macroscopically and on immunohistochemical analysis, and improved mesh incorporation at all time points compared to saline–mesh group —PRP–mesh group displayed increased thickness of tissue deposition at 4 and 6 weeks | —PRP coating led to increased neovascularization and improved incorporation —Enhanced neovascularization triggered by PRP was correlated with faster and greater newly formed tissue deposition |
Avila et al., 2016 [56] | White New Zealand rabbits | —At 90 days, significant increase in the number of inflammatory cells in PRP group, compared to mesh-only group —At 7 days, PRP group presented increased production of collagen I, III, and total compared to mesh-only group | PRP-coating resulted in greater inflammatory cell infiltration at the implant site and increased collagen concentration |
Fernandez-Moure et al., 2017 [69] | Wistar rats | —Seromas presented in 12 animals of cADM–PRP group, in 13 animals of ncADM–PRP group, in 7 animals of cADM, and 6 animals of ncADM —PRP coating led to increased neoangiogenesis in both cADM and ncADM groups at 2 and 4 weeks, with significantly increased rates in ncADMs compared to cADMs —Adhesions were increased and more severe in all PRP-treated groups | —PRP enhances native tissue response and early neovascularization of implant sites —ncADM is more amenable than cADM to PRP-triggered neovascularization |
Abouelnasr et al., 2017 [46] | Mongrel dogs | —Seroma formation was more common in control group compared to PRP group, with no significant difference —Wound dehiscence and infection were observed only in two dogs from the control group —PRP-treated dogs presented significantly increased neovascularization and less severe adhesions compared to control group —PRP-treated dogs presented no hernia recurrence —Histological and molecular tests confirmed increased collagen deposition, neoangiogenesis, and overexpression of angiogenic and myofibroplastic genes in the PRP group at both time points | PRP-coated Damour presented increased neoangiogenesis and tissue deposition, improved graft incorporation, reduced peritoneal adhesions, and diminished hernia recurrence rate |
Altieri et al., 2017 [45] | Yorkshire pigs | —No difference in sample thicknesses, sample wet mass, and vascular deposition among groups —fPC group presented significantly increased mean chronic inflammation and increased tensile strength, yield force, and Young’s modulus, compared to HR and HRM groups —A trend toward increased collagen deposition was demonstrated in fPC group without significant difference | fPC mesh enhancement presented significantly increased mean chronic inflammation and improved biomechanical metrics, as well as a trend toward increased collagen deposition and vascularity compared to primary hiatus repair and repair with biologic implant only |
Belebecha et al., 2019 [49] | New Zealand rabbits | —No significant difference between sham and study groups regarding adhesions at 30 and 60 days —MPO activity was significantly reduced at 60 days on the PRP-coated side. At 60 days, PRP-coated group presented a significant reduction in NAG activity —At 60 days, the PRP presented a reduction in GSH levels and a significant increase in superoxide anion production compared to the uncoated side —PRP coating led to a significant increase in antioxidant levels compared to the uncoated side | Coating of PPM with PRP led to a reduction in OS levels and inflammatory responses without affecting adhesion formation |
Van Eps et al., 2019 [68] | Lewis rats | —pADM–PRP group presented significantly higher Young’s modulus values in ultrasound shear wave elastography at both euthanasia time points compared to pADM group —pADM–PRP group displayed reduced inflammation and improved incorporation along the implant/abdominal wall interface at 3 months, while after 6 months, this group had no hernia recurrence and presented preserved mesh integrity, while all animals treated with uncoated mesh presented either hernia recurrence (4/6) or extreme graft thinning (2/6) | PRP coating leads to reduced inflammation, improves mesh integration, and diminishes hernia recurrence rate when it is used for pADM coating |
El-Husseiny et al., 2020 [47] | Goats | —PRF-treated groups presented significant improvement in ultrasonographic findings and improved connective tissue deposition, mesh incorporation, increased angiogenesis, and reduced inflammatory cell concentration —Improved tensiometric tests were noted in GBP–PRF treated group compared to other groups | Implant enhancement with PRF was superior compared to the use of implant only, through increased neovascularization and tissue deposition, improved implant incorporation, reduced inflammatory response and complications |
Fernandez-Moure et al., 2021 [33] | Lewis rats | —PRP–mesh group did not exhibit significant degradation or thinning and presented more evident vascular ingrowth compared to placebo group —Increased PRP results in decreased inflammatory cytokine production, decreased matrix metalloproteinase expression, and decreased CD8+ T cell infiltration —Increased stiffness of implanted mesh was noted in PRP–mesh group | Alloderm coating with PRP temporally modulates the innate and cytotoxic inflammatory reactions to the mesh, resulting in decreased inflammatory cytokine production early postoperatively, reduced matrix metalloproteinase expression, and decreased CD8+ T cell infiltration in the implant site, thus promoting a healing phenotype toward reduced mesh thinning and increased material stiffness |
Fernandez-Moure et al., 2021 [48] | Lewis rats | —Specimen from PRP-treated animals presented increased cell infiltration and angiogenesis, increased expression of COL1a, PECAM1, and VEGF —PRP-coated meshes displayed increased stiffness compared to the animals treated with saline at 4 and 6 weeks | PRP coating enhances cell recruitment, proliferation, and angiogenesis, resulting in improved tissue regeneration, mesh incorporation, and mechanical strength |
Araujo-Gutierrez et al., 2021 [72] | Lewis rats | —PRP-HIGH group had significantly greater tissue deposition at 4 weeks —PRP-MID showed increasing mesh thickness at 2 weeks —Cell infiltration was significantly higher with PRP-HIGH at both 2 and 4 weeks, while PRP-LOW showed increased cell infiltration only at 4 weeks —No statistically significant differences in neovascularization were found —CD8+ cell infiltrate was significantly decreased at 2 and 4 weeks in PRP-LOW and PRP-MID treated groups —All PRP-treated groups presented significantly decreased MNGC infiltration at 2 weeks. Only PRP-HIGH and PRP-MID groups had a significant reduction in MNGC at 4 weeks | Increasing platelet concentrations resulted in improved graft incorporation and tissue deposition, as well as reduced mesh scaffold degradation, due to blunted foreign body response and reduced inflammation |
Zedan et al., 2023 [57] | Sheep | —Developing seroma in control group, compared to mild seroma in PRF–mesh group —Deposition and maturation of collagen fibers, granulation tissue formation, mononuclear inflammatory cells infiltration, hyperplasia of fibrocytes, collagen deposition, and edema presented earlier in the mesh–PRF group, compared to control group —Expression of IL-6 and IL-12 began earlier in the mesh–PRF group than in the control group | PPM enhancement with PRF led to reduced inflammation and improved histopathological and immunohistochemistry findings |
Author | Type of Study | Number of Patients | Type of Hernia | PRP Use | Main Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Popescu et al., 2021 [77] | Prospective comparative study | 32 patients, classified into 3 groups: standard procedure; mesh+PRF; mesh+PRP | Different types of abdominal wall defects | Coating | Addition of plasma-derived products led to improved and faster mesh integration, compared to standard procedure |
Paranyak et al., 2021 [78] | Prospective cohort study | 54 (no control group) | Hiatal | Coating | Infiltration with PRP led to positive results, including low recurrence rate and lower mean gastroesophageal reflux disease-health-related quality of life score |
James et al., 2023 [79] | Prospective cohort study | 12 (no control group) | Paraesophageal | Coating | PRP-treated patients presented good subjective reflux control, with no significant postoperative complications or hernia recurrence |
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Anestiadou, E.; Kotidis, E.; Abba Deka, I.; Tatsis, D.; Bekiari, C.; Loukousia, A.; Ioannidis, O.; Stamiris, S.; Zapsalis, K.; Xylas, C.; et al. Platelet-Rich Therapies in Hernia Repair: A Comprehensive Review of the Impact of Platelet Concentrates on Mesh Integration in Hernia Management. Biomolecules 2024, 14, 921. https://doi.org/10.3390/biom14080921
Anestiadou E, Kotidis E, Abba Deka I, Tatsis D, Bekiari C, Loukousia A, Ioannidis O, Stamiris S, Zapsalis K, Xylas C, et al. Platelet-Rich Therapies in Hernia Repair: A Comprehensive Review of the Impact of Platelet Concentrates on Mesh Integration in Hernia Management. Biomolecules. 2024; 14(8):921. https://doi.org/10.3390/biom14080921
Chicago/Turabian StyleAnestiadou, Elissavet, Efstathios Kotidis, Ioanna Abba Deka, Dimitrios Tatsis, Chryssa Bekiari, Antonia Loukousia, Orestis Ioannidis, Stavros Stamiris, Konstantinos Zapsalis, Christos Xylas, and et al. 2024. "Platelet-Rich Therapies in Hernia Repair: A Comprehensive Review of the Impact of Platelet Concentrates on Mesh Integration in Hernia Management" Biomolecules 14, no. 8: 921. https://doi.org/10.3390/biom14080921
APA StyleAnestiadou, E., Kotidis, E., Abba Deka, I., Tatsis, D., Bekiari, C., Loukousia, A., Ioannidis, O., Stamiris, S., Zapsalis, K., Xylas, C., Siozos, K., Chatzianestiadou, C., Angelopoulos, S., Papavramidis, T., & Cheva, A. (2024). Platelet-Rich Therapies in Hernia Repair: A Comprehensive Review of the Impact of Platelet Concentrates on Mesh Integration in Hernia Management. Biomolecules, 14(8), 921. https://doi.org/10.3390/biom14080921