Preprint / Version 2

Injectable peptide-glycosaminoglycan hydrogels for soft tissue repair: in vitro assessment for nucleus augmentation

##article.authors##

  • James Warren University of Leeds
  • Ruth Coe University of Leeds
  • Matthew Culbert University of Leeds
  • Andrew Dixon University of Leeds
  • Danielle Miles University of Leeds
  • Marlène Mengoni University of Leeds
  • Paul Beales University of Leeds
  • Ruth Wilcox University of Leeds

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31224/2931

Keywords:

self-assembled structures, hydrogel, Biomedical engineering, Medical Device, Biomedical materials

Abstract

We report the development of peptide-glycosaminoglycan hydrogels as injectable biomaterials for load-bearing soft tissue repair. The hydrogels are injectable as a liquid for clinical delivery, rapidly form a gel in situ, and mimic the osmotic swelling behaviour of natural tissue. We used a new in vitro model to demonstrate their application as a nucleus augmentation material for the treatment of intervertebral disc degeneration. Our study compared a complex lab gel preparation method to a simple clinical benchtop process. We showed pH differences did not significantly affect gel formation, and temperature variations had no impact on gel performance. Rheological results demonstrated consistency after benchtop mixing or needle injection. In our in vitro disc degeneration model, we established that peptide augmentation could restore the native biomechanical properties. This suggests the feasibility of minimally invasive peptide-GAG gel delivery, maintaining consistent properties across temperature and needle sizes while restoring disc height and stiffness in vitro.

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Posted

2023-04-07 — Updated on 2023-11-22

Versions

Version justification

Recent version based on alterations recommended by reviewers following a submission