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Coagulopathy-independent, bioinspired hemostatic materials: A full research story from preclinical models to a human clinical trial

Authors :
Keumyeon Kim
Mi-Young Koh
Ji Hyun Ryu
Sung Pil Yun
Hyung Il Seo
Soomi Kim
Haeshin Lee
Jae Hun Kim
Chul Woo Jung
Moon Sue Lee
Joseph P. Park
Source :
Science Advances
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Mussel-inspired adhesion chemistry provides a useful alternative to the use of fibrin glues.<br />Since the first report of underwater adhesive proteins of marine mussels in 1981, numerous studies have reported mussel-inspired synthetic adhesive polymers. However, none of them have developed up to human-level translational studies. Here, we report a sticky polysaccharide that effectively promotes hemostasis from animal bleeding models to first-in-human hepatectomy. We found that the hemostatic material instantly generates a barrier layer that seals hemorrhaging sites. The barrier is created within a few seconds by in situ interactions with abundant plasma proteins. Therefore, as long as patient blood contains proper levels of plasma proteins, hemostasis should always occur even in coagulopathic conditions. To date, insufficient tools have been developed to arrest coagulopathic bleedings originated from genetic disorders, chronic diseases, or surgical settings such as organ transplantations. Mussel-inspired adhesion chemistry described here provides a useful alternative to the use of fibrin glues up to a human-level biomedical application.

Details

ISSN :
23752548
Volume :
7
Issue :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....69b075fb999e02b98f155fb967f033fe