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Approaches to synthetic platelet analogs

Authors :
Keith R. McCrae
Victor Pan
Christa L. Modery-Pawlowski
Lewis L. Tian
Anirban Sen Gupta
Samir Mitragotri
Source :
Biomaterials. 34:526-541
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2013.

Abstract

Platelet transfusion is routinely used for treating bleeding complications in patients with hematologic or oncologic clotting disorders, chemo/radiotherapy-induced myelosuppression, trauma and surgery. Currently, these transfusions mostly use allogeneic platelet concentrates, while products like lyophilized platelets, cold-stored platelets and infusible platelet membranes are under investigation. These natural platelet-based products pose considerable risks of contamination, resulting in short shelf-life (3-5 days). Recent advances in pathogen reduction technologies have increased shelf-life to ~7 days. Furthermore, natural platelets are short in supply and also cause several biological side effects. Hence, there is significant clinical interest in platelet-mimetic synthetic analogs that can allow long storage-life and minimum side effects. Accordingly, several designs have been studied which decorate synthetic particles with motifs that promote platelet-mimetic adhesion or aggregation. Recent refinement in this design involves combining the adhesion and aggregation functionalities on a single particle platform. Further refinement is being focused on constructing particles that also mimic natural platelet's shape, size and elasticity, to influence margination and wall-interaction. The optimum design of a synthetic platelet analog would require efficient integration of platelet's physico-mechanical properties and biological functionalities. We present a comprehensive review of these approaches and provide our opinion regarding the future directions of this research.

Details

ISSN :
01429612
Volume :
34
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biomaterials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2d8d5c914c9c29a8f2f44a4ec05c596c