STERILE HUMAN PLACENTAL ALLOGRAFTS AND METHODS OF MAKING THEREOF
20240408147 ยท 2024-12-12
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61L27/3683
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L2300/412
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L27/3691
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L27/3604
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61P17/02
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K35/50
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A method of preparing sterile human placental allografts by providing a human placental tissue from a donor within 24 hours to 72 hours post-childbirth; removing any visible blood, blood clots, and/or blood components from the human placental tissue without scraping or scrubbing the human placental tissue to preserve structural integrity of the human placental tissue; washing the human placental tissue in an isotonic solution while maintaining the structural integrity of the human placental tissue; dehydrating the human placental tissue thereby forming the dehydrated human placental tissue; resizing the dehydrated human placental tissue into dehydrated human placental tissue portions having predetermined sizes; and sterilizing the dehydrated human placental tissue portions of step (e) thereby forming the sterile human placental allograft. Also disclosed is a sterile human placental allograft produced by the method.
Claims
1. A method of preparing a sterile human placental allograft comprising: (a) providing a human placental tissue from a donor within 24 hours to 72 hours post-childbirth; (b) removing any visible blood, blood clots, and/or blood components from the human placental tissue without scraping or scrubbing the human placental tissue to preserve structural integrity of the human placental tissue; (c) washing the human placental tissue in an isotonic solution while maintaining the structural integrity of the human placental tissue; (d) dehydrating the human placental tissue thereby forming the dehydrated human placental tissue; (e) resizing the dehydrated human placental tissue into dehydrated human placental tissue portions having predetermined sizes; and (f) sterilizing the dehydrated human placental tissue portions of step (e) thereby forming the sterile human placental allograft, wherein: the method further comprises either before step (a) or during step (a) disinfecting the human placental tissue with at least one of a bactericidal composition, a tuberculocidal composition, a fungicidal composition, a virucidal composition, or any combination thereof, wherein the at least one of a bactericidal composition, tuberculocidal composition, fungicidal composition, virucidal composition, or any combination thereof includes an isopropyl alcohol at a concentration of 70% to 100%; each wash step (c) is at a temperature ranging from 4 to 15 C. for a time-period of from 5 minutes to 15 minutes; the dehydrating step (d) is at a temperature ranging from 20 to 40 C. for a time-period of from 60 minutes to 4.5 hours; and the sterilizing step (f) comprises sterilizing with e-beam irradiation.
2. (canceled)
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein step (b) comprises manual hematopoietic reduction by manually removing any visible blood, blood clots, and/or blood components from the human placental tissue.
4. The method according to claim 1, wherein the isotonic solution comprises at least one of 1 phosphate buffered saline, isotonic saline, lactated ringers, Plasma-Lyte (NaCl 5.26 g/L, KCl 0.37 g/L, Magnesium Chloride hexahydrate 0.30 g/L, Sodium Acetate trihydrate 3.68 g/L, Sodium Gluconate 5.02 g/L at pH 7.4), Normosol (NaCl 5.26 g/L, KCl 0.37 g/L, Magnesium Chloride 0.30 g/L, Sodium Acetate anhydrous 2.22 g/L, Sodium Gluconate 5.02 g/L at pH 7.4), or any combination thereof.
5. The method according to claim 1, further comprising repeating step (c) for a predetermined number of times.
6. (canceled)
7. (canceled)
8. The method according to claim 1, wherein the predetermined sizes of the placental tissue portions comprise from 1 cm1 cm to 8 cm8 cm for rectangular and/or square shaped placental tissue portions and from 8 mm diameter to 50 mm diameter for circular shaped placental tissue portions.
9. The method according to claim 1, wherein the placental tissue portions comprise a predetermined shape.
10. (canceled)
11. The method according to claim 1, wherein step (f) comprises e-beam irradiating the dehydrated human placental tissue portions to a sterility assurance level (SAL) of 10-6, as determined by dose mapping, to form the sterile human placental allograft.
12. The method according to claim 1, wherein the human placental tissue comprises intact placental tissue.
13. The method according to claim 1, wherein the dehydrated human placental tissue of step (d) and the dehydrated human placental tissue portions having predetermined sizes of step (e) are intact in cross-section in which a human amnion layer and a human chorion layer have an intact human intermediate spongy layer positioned there between connecting the human amnion layer to the human chorion layer.
14. The method according to claim 1, wherein sterile human placental allografts of step (f) are intact in cross-section in which the human amnion layer and the human chorion layer have an intact human intermediate spongy layer positioned there between connecting the human amnion layer to the human chorion layer.
15. The method according to claim 1, wherein the sterile human placental allograft is configured for dental, cosmetic, and/or wound healing applications.
16. (canceled)
17. A sterile human placental allograft produced by the method of according to claim 1.
18. The sterile human placental allograft according to claim 17, wherein the sterile human placental allograft comprises at least two of the following: (a) interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) ranging from 200 to 7800 pg/cm2; (b) hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) ranging from 500 to 8500 pg/cm2; (c) vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 1 (VEGFR1) ranging from 800 to 2750 pg/cm2; (d) hyaluronic acid (HA) ranging from 5.0106 to 1.5108 pg/cm2; (e) platelet derived growth factor subunit B homodimer (PDGF-BB) ranging from 150 to 400 pg/cm2; (f) glycosaminoglycans (GAGs); (g) collagen; and (h) exosomes.
19. The sterile human placental allograft according to claim 17, wherein the sterile human placental allograft is intact in cross-section in which the human amnion layer and the human chorion layer have an intact human intermediate spongy layer positioned there between connecting the human amnion layer to the human chorion layer.
20. The sterile human placental allograft according to claim 17, wherein the sterile human placental allograft is configured for dental, cosmetic, and/or wound healing applications.
21. The sterile human placental allograft according to claim 17, wherein the sterile human placental allograft comprises a predetermined size of from 1 cm1 cm to 8 cm8 cm for rectangular and/or square shaped sterile human placental allografts and from 8 mm diameter to 50 mm diameter for circular shaped sterile human placental allografts.
22. The sterile human placental allograft according to claim 17, wherein the sterile human placental allograft comprises a circular shape, a square shape, a rectangular shape, an ovoid shape, a triangular shape, or any combination thereof.
23. The sterile human placental allograft according to claim 17, wherein an upper and/or lower surfaces of the sterile human placental allograft is planar.
24. The sterile human placental allograft according to claim 17, wherein the upper and lower surfaces of the sterile human placental allograft are planar.
25. The sterile human placental allograft according to claim 17, wherein the sterile human placental allograft consists essentially of the amnion membrane.
26. The sterile human placental allograft according to claim 17, wherein the sterile human placental allograft comprises at least two of the following: (a) interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) ranging from 150 to 1800 pg/cm2; (b) hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) ranging from 75 to 400 pg/cm2; (c) vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 1 (VEGFR1) ranging from 50 to 250 pg/cm2; (d) hyaluronic acid (HA) ranging from 1.1106 to 2.0107 pg/cm2; (e) platelet derived growth factor subunit B homodimer (PDGF-BB) ranging from 200 to 500 pg/cm2; (f) glycosaminoglycans (GAGs); (g) collagen, and (h) exosomes.
27. A kit comprising the sterile human placental allograft according to claim 17 or produced by the method of any one of claims 1-16 packaged in a sterile container.
28. A method of treating a wound in a human subject in need thereof comprising contacting the wound with the sterile human placental allograft according to claim 17 for a predetermined time period to facilitate wound healing in the human subject in need thereof.
29. The method according to claim 28, wherein the sterile human placental allograft is implanted in the subject in need thereof.
30. The method according to claim 28, wherein the wound is an internal wound within the subject in need thereof and/or a dental wound.
31. The method according to claim 28, wherein the sterile human placental allograft is topically applied to the wound in the human subject in need thereof.
32. The method according to claim 28, wherein the wound is a diabetic ulcer.
33. The method according to claim 32, wherein the wound is a diabetic foot ulcer.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0029] These and other features, aspects and advantages of the present invention are better understood when the following detailed description of the invention is read with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0045] The present invention will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings in which exemplary embodiments of the invention are shown. However, the invention may be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the representative embodiments set forth herein. The exemplary embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be both thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention and enable one of ordinary skill in the art to make, use and practice the invention.
[0046] It must be noted that, as used in the specification and the appended claims, the singular forms a, an, and the include plural referents unless the context clearly dictates otherwise.
[0047] Concentrations, amounts, and other numerical data may be expressed or presented herein in a range format. It is to be understood that such a range format is used merely for convenience and brevity and thus should be interpreted flexibly to include not only the numerical values explicitly recited as the limits of the range, but also to include all the individual numerical values or sub-ranges encompassed within the ranges as if each numerical value and sub-range is explicitly recited. As an illustration, a numerical range of about 1 to 5 should be interpreted to include not only the explicitly recited values of about 1 to about 5, but also include individual values and sub-ranges within the indicated range. Thus, included in this numerical range are individual values such as 2, 3, and 4 and sub-ranges such as from 1-3, from 2-4, and from 3-5, etc. as well as 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, individually. The same principle applies to ranges reciting only one numerical value as a minimum or a maximum. Furthermore, such an interpretation should apply regardless of the breadth of the range or the characteristics being described.
[0048] Standardization as referred to herein allows for an accurate determination of growth factors and components within the disclosed compositions for subsequent use and treatment(s) (e.g., wound healing treatments) in subjects in need thereof. Applicant has determined the range of delivered factors per cm2 as delivered to the patient (subject in need thereof). What this means is that the amount of IL-1ra, HGF, VEGFR1, HA, etc. delivered to the patient/subject in need thereof is measured as the amount eluted from 1 cm2 of the sterile human placental allograft. The quantification process used for standardization of the disclosed sterile human placental allograft is used to accurately reflect the relationship between human placental allograft and the growth factors and other chemical components therein. The standardization calculation is determined from the equation:
This is accomplished by taking a sample with a known cm2 (biopsy punch preferred). The sample/punch is placed in buffer for 48-72 hours, 37 C. The contents are collected and assayed for the desired components. The results are multiplied by the amount of buffer collected. This number is divided by the cm2 of the sample/punch. This can be utilized for any volume of eluate used and any sample size. The testing presented in this invention utilized a 10 mm biopsy punch (78.54 cm2) in a buffered solution (1PBS) at 370 C for 72 hours, mimicking the application of the sterile human placental allograft in a wound space, internal or external. The eluate was collected and analyzed, mimicking what was eluted from the sterile human placental allograft to the wound. This results in a controlled and relatable amount of the sterile human placental allograft that has been tested, yielding a controlled, relatable, and quantifiable amount of growth factors and stromal components.
[0049] The phrases human placental tissue and placental tissue are used interchangeably herein to indicate human placental tissue. Unless otherwise explicitly stated herein, human placental tissue and placental tissue refer to either the completely intact human placenta (having a human umbilical cord, human amnion, human chorion, and intact human intermediate spongy layer positioned between and connecting the human amnion layer and human chorion layer) or intact human placenta tissue (i.e., only including human amnion, human chorion, and intact human intermediate spongy layer) in cross-section in which a human amnion layer and a human chorion layer have an intact human intermediate spongy layer positioned there between connecting the human amnion layer to the human chorion layer. In certain explicitly stated instances herein, human placental tissue and/or placental tissue consists essentially of or only consist of the human amnion that is separated from all other placental tissues. Likewise, unless explicitly stated otherwise, sterile human placental allograft refers allografts having intact human placenta tissue in cross-section (i.e., only including human amnion, human chorion, and intact human intermediate spongy layer) in which a human amnion layer and a human chorion layer have an intact human intermediate spongy layer positioned there between connecting the human amnion layer to the human chorion layer. In the explicitly stated instances herein, sterile human placental allograft refers to an allograft consisting essentially of or only consist of the human amnion that is separated from all other placental tissues.
[0050] Disclosed herein are safe, biocompatible, growth factor-rich sterile human placental allografts and methods of preparing/producing the same. The allografts and methods disclosed herein achieve these biocompatible, growth factor-rich sterile human placental allografts grafts while maintaining a growth factor profile that mimics the human placenta in vivo and that is improved compared to conventional allografts thereby achieving better therapeutic outcomes for dental applications and wound healing.
Preparation of Sterilized Human Placental Allograft
[0051] As alluded to above, it is an object to prepare sterile human placental allografts that maintain a growth factor profile that mimics the human placenta in vivo. The methods disclosed herein utilize mild conditions to ensure that various endogenous growth factors in the human placental tissue including, but not limited to, IL-1ra, HGF, VEGFR1, HA, PDGF-BB, GAGs, and collagen are preserved (and/or loss thereof is minimized) in the end resulting sterile human placental allografts disclosed herein. As generally shown in
[0052] In view of
[0060] Donor pre-screening includes screening the donor's medical and social history, interviewing the donor, and physically examining the donor to eliminate high-risk donors from the potential donor pool. Either during pre-screening process or after concluding the pre-screening process, cultures of the donor's tissue and donor blood specimens are collected for comprehensive serological testing, which are subsequently performed in FDA registered and CLIA certified laboratories to further determine viability of the human donor's placental tissue for the method disclosed herein. Serological testing includes screening the donor and/or human placental tissue for the following transmissible diseases: [0061] Hepatitis: [0062] Hepatitis-B Surface Antigen [0063] Hepatitis-B Core Antibody [0064] Antibodies to the Hepatitis-C Virus [0065] Hepatitis-B Nucleic Acid Test [0066] Hepatitis-C Nucleic Acid Test [0067] Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV): [0068] Antibodies to HIV-1 [0069] Antibodies to HIV-2 [0070] HIV Nucleic Acid Test [0071] Syphilis-Rapid Plasma Reagin [0072] Leukemia/Lymphoma [0073] Antibodies to Human T-Lymphotropic Virus 1 [0074] Antibodies to Human T-Lymphotropic Virus 2 [0075] West Nile Virus
[0076] In addition to the above serological testing and before subjecting the human placental tissue to step (a) of
[0077]
[0078] After obtaining the human placental tissue from the donor, the human placental tissue is disinfected during step (a). In particular, the human placental tissue is placed into a bactericidal, tuberculocidal, fungicidal, and/or virucidal composition. In particular, the human placental tissue is placed into 250 ml to 1000 mL (500 ml preferred) of an alcohol solution to rinse away any extraneous non-placental components and/or any other potential contaminants. The alcohol solution preferably is isopropyl alcohol at a concentration of 70% to 100%. In preferred embodiments the alcohol concentration ranges from 70% to 75%, and in most preferred embodiments, the alcohol is 70% isopropyl alcohol. Isopropyl alcohol is preferred over other commercially available lab and/or pharmaceutical grade alcohols, such as ethanol, because isopropyl alcohol advantageously disinfects and cleans the human placental tissue without damaging (e.g., unduly dehydrating, initiating apoptotic processes, and/or necrotic processes) the placental tissue for 60 seconds to 120 seconds (90 seconds preferred) at 4 C. to 20 C. thereby reducing and/or eliminating the presence of microbes, fungi, and viruses (preferably any pathogenic microbes, fungi, and/or viruses if present) on the surface and/or within the human placental tissues. Step (a) uses minimally damaging bactericidal, tuberculocidal, fungicidal and virucidal disinfection in which the placental tissue is placed into an effective and minimally damaging disinfectant for the required time to gently reduce and/or eliminate any external contamination including, but not limited to, mycobacteria, fungi and many viruses, including herpes, HIV, Influenza, Hepatitis B and C, Ebola and SARS.
[0079] After step (a), the disinfected human placental tissue from step (a) undergoes step (b) in which the disinfected human placental tissue is visually inspected and any visible blood, blood clots, blood components, and/or undesirable debris are removed without scraping or scrubbing the human placental tissue in order to preserve structural integrity of the human placental tissue as well as the endogenous growth factors therein. In certain preferred aspects, step (b) of
[0080] After step (b), the human placental tissue is subjected to at least one cleaning/wash step as depicted in step (c) of
[0081] After step (c) and as further shown in
[0082] After step (d), the dehydrated human placental tissue is resized during step (e) into dehydrated human placental tissue portions having predetermined sizes and predetermined shapes. When resizing the dehydrated human placental tissue into the dehydrated human placental tissue portions, a die having predetermined size(s) and/or dimension(s) and/or shape(s) may be used to precisely resize the dehydrated human placental tissue into dehydrated human placental tissue portions into the desired shape thereby ensuring for optimal tissue size, shape, and quality for each end resulting sterile human placental allografts produced by the methods disclosed herein. In certain aspects, the dehydrated human placental tissue portions is resized into a circular shape, a square shape, a rectangular shape, a rhomboid shape, an ovoid shape, a triangular shape, or any combination thereof. Each of these shapes may have various different sizes and/or dimensions for varied end uses and/or applications. In certain aspects, the predetermined sizes of the dehydrated placental tissue portions range from 1 cm1 cm to 8 cm8 cm for the rectangular and/or square shaped dehydrated placental tissue portions in which any endpoints within any of these ranges may serve as endpoints for any additional ranges falling therein. In certain aspects, the predetermined sizes of the dehydrated placental tissue portions range from, 8 mm diameter to 50 mm diameter for circular shaped dehydrated placental tissue portions in which any endpoints within any of these ranges may serve as endpoints for any additional ranges falling therein. In certain aspects, the dehydrated human placental tissue portions may further include a planar upper or lower surface, or the human placental tissue portion includes both planar upper and lower surfaces.
[0083] After step (e), the dehydrated human placental tissue portions of step (e) (resized portions having the desired predetermined shape(s) and size(s)) are subsequently sterilized during step (f) thereby forming the sterile human placental allograft. In certain aspects, the sterilizing step (f) includes sterilizing the dehydrate human placental tissue portions with e-beam irradiation to a sterility assurance level (SAL) of 10-6, as determined by dose mapping by E-beam vendor, thereby forming the sterile human placental allograft in which the SAL, expressed as 10-N, is the expected probability of surviving organisms post treatment (e.g., expected probability of any surviving microorganism after sterilization is 10-6 or less). Before sterilization, the dehydrated human placental tissue portions of step (e) (resized portions having the desired predetermined shape(s) and size(s)) may be first placed into either into primary and/or secondary packaging and then subjected to low-dose E-beam irradiation to produce the sterile human placental allograft, which is ready for end use (after removal from the primary or secondary packaging). Alternatively, the dehydrated human placental tissue portions of step (e) (resized portions having the desired predetermined shape(s) and size(s)) may be first subjected to low-dose E-beam irradiation to produce the sterile human placental allograft and then may be subsequently placed into sterile packaging while maintaining sterility of the sterile human placental allograft for subsequent end use.
[0084] Low-dose E-beam irradiation is particularly preferred to other sterilization methods because these other methods require direct access to the human placental tissue and leave residual contaminants (e.g. ethylene oxide) on the end resulting allograft, which may result in an immunogenic response when the resulting allograft is used, or require exposure of the tissue to extended periods of higher dose irradiation (e.g. gamma irradiation), which unnecessarily degrades structural integrity and endogenous growth factors of the placental tissue.
[0085] As further shown in
[0086] Upon concluding step (f), all sterile human placental allografts are subjected to quality control(s) and lot control(s). All records from the human placental tissue processing from the above-mentioned methods are finally reviewed by Medical Director(s) and Site Quality Head to ensure a thorough quality assurance review and compliance of the resulting sterile human allografts with the applicable government rules, compliance, and procedures.
Sterilized Human Placental Allograft
[0087] The sterile human placental allografts disclosed herein can be produced by the methods disclosed herein. The allografts disclosed herein are safe, biocompatible, growth factor-rich sterile human placental allografts having much higher amounts of growth factors therein than conventional allografts in the field that better mimic the growth factor profile of human placenta in vivo than other conventional allografts, thereby achieving better therapeutic outcomes for dental applications and wound healing and/or better cosmetic/aesthetic outcomes depending on the application. The sterile human placental allografts disclosed herein are preferably non-immunogenic-resulting in little or no immune response post-implantation/transplantation into a human recipient and/or post-application to a wound in and/or on the subject in need thereof.
[0088] The sterile human placental allografts disclosed herein are particularly rich in interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra), hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 1 (VEGFR1), hyaluronic acid (HA), platelet derived growth factor subunit B homodimer (PDGF-BB), glycosaminoglycans (GAGs); and collagen when compared with conventional allografts. Moreover,
[0089] In certain aspects and as further shown in
[0090] In certain aspects and as further shown in
Kits And Methods of Use
[0091] Also disclosed herein are kits comprising the sterile human placental allograft packaged in a sterile container. Upon opening the sterile container, the sterile human placental allograft packaged therein is ready for the desired end use. The sterile human allografts are configured for specific dental, wound healing, and/or cosmetic purposes and are preferably implantable/transplantable in a subject in need thereof or may be applied to superficial wounds (e.g., diabetic ulcers). As alluded to above, the sterile human placental allografts disclosed herein are preferably non-immunogenic-resulting in little or no immune response post-implantation/transplantation into and/or topical application to a human recipient.
[0092] In certain aspects, further disclosed are methods of treating wounds in a human subject in need thereof comprising contacting the wound with a sterile human placental allograft for a predetermined time period to facilitate wound healing in the human subject in need thereof. The predetermined time period includes from 3 days to 30 days for implantation uses and from 1 day to 5 days for topical uses. In certain aspects, the sterile human placental allograft is implanted in the subject in need thereof in which the wound is an internal wound within the subject in need thereof and/or a dental wound, thereby facilitating wound healing by elution/diffusion of the growth factors from the sterile human placental allograft into the wound. Moreover, the sterile humane placental allograft remains in the subject in need thereof acting as a scaffold for cellular and tissue remodeling post-elution/diffusion of the growth factors from the sterile human placental allograft into the wound, and the allograft eventually is resorbed within the subject in need thereof. In certain other aspects, the sterile human placental allograft is topically applied to the wound in the human subject in need thereof. Topical applications of the sterile human placental allograft may be used to treat, for example, diabetic ulcers (e.g., diabetic foot ulcers) and/or other regular-shaped or irregular shaped topical wounds (to the epidermis, dermis, and/or hypodermis) in a human subject in need thereof. The sterile human placental allograft is placed topically on a wound in a subject in need thereof for a predetermined period of time, thereby facilitating wound healing by elution/diffusion of the growth factors from the sterile human placental allograft onto and into the wound.
[0093] In an embodiment, the method further comprises either before step (a) or during step (a) disinfecting the human placental tissue with at least one of a bactericidal composition, a tuberculocidal composition, a fungicidal composition, a virucidal composition, or any combination thereof, wherein the at least one of a bactericidal composition, tuberculocidal composition, fungicidal composition, virucidal composition, or any combination thereof includes an isopropyl alcohol at a concentration of 70% to 100%; and/or wherein each wash step (c) is at a temperature ranging from 4 to 15 C. for a time-period of from 5 minutes to 15 minutes; and/or wherein the dehydrating step (d) is at a temperature ranging from 20 to 40 C. for a time-period of from 60 minutes to 4.5 hours; and/or wherein the sterilizing step (f) comprises sterilizing with e-beam irradiation.
[0094] In an aspect, the present invention relates to a method of preparing a sterile human placental allograft comprising: [0095] (a) providing a human placental tissue from a donor within 24 hours to 72 hours post-childbirth, wherein either before step (a) or during step (a) disinfecting the human placental tissue with at least one of a bactericidal composition, a tuberculocidal composition, a fungicidal composition, a virucidal composition, or any combination thereof, wherein the at least one of a bactericidal composition, tuberculocidal composition, fungicidal composition, virucidal composition, or any combination thereof includes an isopropyl alcohol at a concentration of 70% to 100%; [0096] (b) removing any visible blood, blood clots, and/or blood components from the human placental tissue without scraping or scrubbing the human placental tissue to preserve structural integrity of the human placental tissue; [0097] (c) washing the human placental tissue in an isotonic solution while maintaining the structural integrity of the human placental tissue at a temperature ranging from 4 to 15 C. for a time-period of from 5 minutes to 15 minutes; [0098] (d) dehydrating the human placental tissue thereby forming the dehydrated human placental tissue at a temperature ranging from 20 to 40 C. for a time-period of from 60 minutes to 4.5 hours; [0099] (e) resizing the dehydrated human placental tissue into dehydrated human placental tissue portions having predetermined sizes; and [0100] (f) sterilizing the dehydrated human placental tissue portions of step (e) with e-beam irradiation thereby forming the sterile human placental allograft.
[0101] In an aspect, the present invention relates to a sterile human placental allograft (preferably according to the present invention) for use in the treatment of a wound.
[0102] In an aspect, the present invention relates to a sterile human placental allograft (preferably according to the present invention) for use in the treatment of a wound in a human subject in need thereof, the treatment comprising contacting the wound with said sterile human placental allograft for a predetermined time period to facilitate wound healing in the human subject in need thereof.
[0103] The sterile human placental allograft for use, wherein the sterile human placental allograft is implanted in the subject in need thereof. The sterile human placental allograft for use, wherein the wound is an internal wound within the subject in need thereof and/or a dental wound. The sterile human placental allograft for use, wherein the sterile human placental allograft is topically applied to the wound in the human subject in need thereof. The sterile human placental allograft for use, wherein the wound is a diabetic ulcer. The sterile human placental allograft for use, wherein the wound is a diabetic foot ulcer.
Working Examples
[0104] The following examples are put forth so as to provide those of ordinary skill in the art with a complete disclosure and description of how the compounds, compositions, and methods described and claimed herein are made and evaluated, and are intended to be purely exemplary and are not intended to limit the scope of what the inventors regard as their invention. Efforts have been made to ensure accuracy with respect to numbers (e.g., amounts, temperature, etc.) but some errors and deviations should be accounted for. Unless indicated otherwise, parts are parts by weight, temperature is in C. or is at ambient temperature if not listed, and pressure is at or near atmospheric. There are numerous variations and combinations of conditions, e.g., component concentrations, temperatures, pressures and other reaction ranges and conditions that can be used to optimize the product purity and yield obtained from the described process. Only reasonable and routine experimentation will be required to optimize such process conditions.
[0105]
[0106]
[0107] It should be noted that Comparative Example 1 is a commercially available sterile human placental allograft composition (NuShield by Organogenesis https://organogenesis.com/surgical-sports-medicine/nushield/(accessed Aug. 1, 2022)) that was prepared by the Tutoplast process (https://www.rtix.com/en_us/operational-excellence/patient-safety/tissue-biologics/tutoplast-tissue-sterilization-process (accessed Aug. 1, 2022)). The Tutoplast process uses numerous harsh wash processes to remove all lipids, bacteria and soluble proteins, and is terminally sterilized by gamma radiation resulting in an end product that is a structural graft depleted of various growth factors.
[0108] It should be noted that Comparative Example 2 is a commercially available sterile human allograft placental composition (EpiFix by Mimedx https://www.mimedx.com/products/epifix/(accessed Aug. 1, 2022)) prepared by the Purion process (https://www.mimedx.com/purion-process/(Accessed Aug. 1, 2022) and as further reported by Koob, et. al. 2013 and 2014), which separates the human amnion and human chorion layers, cleans them and then reattaches (laminates) the layers before dehydration.
[0109] As shown in
[0110]
[0111] As shown in
[0112] The foregoing description provides embodiments of the invention by way of example only. It is envisioned that other embodiments may perform similar functions and/or achieve similar results. Any and all such equivalent embodiments and examples are within the scope of the present invention and are intended to be covered by the appended claims.