Abstract
Objective:
Fat grafting is widely applied for various purposes, including volume restoration, improving tissue quality, and promoting wound healing, but it has poor long-term graft survival predictability. Alpha-1-antitrypsin (AAT) administration is hypothesized to improve fat graft outcomes by expediting inflammatory resolution and graft vascularity and reducing necrosis.
Approach:
Mice heterozygote to human AAT was grafted fat under the scalp alongside 400 µg/graft AAT or albumin (ALB) on days 0 and 3. Graft volume was determined by micro-magnetic resonance imaging, and explants were assessed for viability, histology, immunohistochemistry, and expression of selected genes. AAT expression was examined in hypoxia-exposed adipose-derived stem cells (ADSCs).
Results:
After 90 days, AAT-treated grafts maintained higher volumes (70.06% vs. 34.54%, n = 8, p = 0.02) and displayed improved tissue quality. On day 10 after grafting, grafts exhibited more blood vessels (mean 1.94/mm2 vs. 0.33/mm2) and 6.25-fold more adiponectin transcript levels (n = 12, p = 0.02). Although day-3 interleukin (IL)-1β expression was 5-fold greater in AAT-treated grafts (n = 6, p = 0.4), day-10 IL-1β expression was 2-fold lower compared to ALB-treated grafts (n = 22, p = 0.01). In the Methoxynitrosulfophenyl-tetrazolium carboxanilide (XTT) assay, day-3 AAT-treated grafts were 1.56-fold more metabolically functional (n = 6, p = 0.04) and exhibited greater perilipin-positive regions (18.5% versus 3.1%). Hypoxia-exposed ADSC expressed 9-fold higher AAT transcript levels (p = 0.04).
Innovation:
Fat grafting outcomes improved by early AAT treatment, probably by accelerating inflammatory resolution. Due to its marked safety profile, the study’s findings are for adjunct clinical-grade AAT therapy.
Conclusion:
AAT has a promising potential to be utilized as a fat graft outcome enhancer in terms of volume retention predictability and tissue quality.
Dor Halpern
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References
Supplementary Material
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