MechAscan - A novel online mechanical assessment tool for manufacturing engineered tissues in regenerative medicine and drug discovery.

Lead Research Organisation: University of Birmingham
Department Name: Chemical Engineering

Abstract

The proportion of people around the world aged over 60 years is growing faster than any other age group, as a result of longer life expectancy. This population ageing can be seen as a success story for public health policies and for socioeconomic development, but it places a challenge on medicine and, within the UK, the NHS to maximize the health and functional capacity of older people. Regenerative Medicine is one potential solution for this longer life and healthy lifestyle, providing cell based therapies which can replace damaged or diseased tissues. Growing replacement tissues is bringing exciting novel solutions which now require new manufacturing methods and processes to enable the translation to the clinic. Bioreactors are mechanical devices that provide controlled growth environments for engineered tissues and mimic the physical forces cells and tissues experience in the body. Monitoring the maturation of tissue implants during culture, and prior to implantation into the patient, is important for defining optimum manufacturing criteria and for their clinical success. Key properties that tissue engineered implants must display include strength and durability. To infer material properties from imaging, new non-destructive, three-dimensional imaging techniques are needed, that can be used to provide accurate results efficiently at both the manufacturing site and the clinic. In this proposal, our partners have linked the imaging technique, optical coherence elastography, with a hydrostatic pressure bioreactor to create a novel imaging solution, MechAscan, which allows real-time mechanical characterisation and simultaneous physical stimulation of engineered tissue implants. MechAscan will provide a clear advantage over currently available traditional mechanical testing approaches and elastography techniques, which require direct contact of the mechanical load with the sample and are destructive. Additionally, MechAscan can be used for real-time monitoring of mechanical properties as the construct is grown in culture in a sterile growth environment. Our aim is to develop a novel technology platform allowing real-time and non-destructive monitoring of tissue engineered products in a sterile growth environment to avoid construct to construct variation during manufacturing and allow the translation of regenerative medicine constructs with known properties into the clinic. To facilitate uptake in use of the technology and translation to the clinic, we propose to fully test and validate the MechAscan technology in an interdisciplinary approach combining bioreactor technology, biomaterials science, physics and mathematics.

Planned Impact

Patients: Improvements in quality control of Regenerative Medicine Implant Manufacturing will directly benefit patients. Well characterised tissue implants will eliminate tissue to tissue variability and minimise patient risk. Furthermore, regular monitoring of implant maturation on line throughout manufacture will lead to an improved therapy which will impact on clinical outcomes and therefore improve quality of life.

NHS: Our technology will increase the efficiency of therapy and recovery and will yield to improved service and cost reduction for the NHS.

Industry: To maintain the development process for future treatments, industry is constantly in need of a pipeline of ideas, such as the MechAscan technology. Currently, there are no commercially available elastography techniques that maintain sterility and allow for simultaneous maturation of engineered implants. There are multiple potential commercial routes with companies such as Thorlabs, TA Instruments, and Cell Scale where the MechAscan will meet a need for imaging of their bioreactor instruments. We will exploit these commercialisation opportunities. Combining bioreactor technology with optical imaging modalities underpinned by mathematical modelling will provide the platform for the development of new characterisation equipment, produced and sold by UK companies. This will aid the establishment of Regenerative Medicine Manufacturing as a UK leading global industry.

Manufacturing and Regulatory: The "Comparability: Manufacturing, Characterisation and Controls Workshop" organised by the UKRMP-Pluripotent Stem Cell Platform has 'comparability' as a regulatory requirement for cell-based products. The European Medicine Agency (EMA) and the UK Medicine and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) regard this difficult for cell-based products as characterisation, standardisation and quality control of cell-therapy medicines remain key challenges. In order to translate engineered tissues into the clinic, the manufacture of tissue constructs need to be controlled, constructs need to be characterised and their manufacture standardised. This project will develop a new tool that will aid the identification and monitoring of quality control criteria for the performance of tissue constructs, aid the standardisation of their manufacture and characterise tissue implants and hence addresses translational challenges
 
Description The mechanical properties of tissues are fundamental to normal function and disease. We have developed a new technology called MECHASCAN which is capable of scanning tissues in culture outside the body and in the patient. This scan will tell us the mechanical properties of the tissues without us having to touch or remove the tissue. In addition, we can scan and get a picture of the different mechanical properties in different regions of the tissue. The new technology has been prototyped and the aim is to deliver this to labs for others to use.
Exploitation Route We have built a prototype which is being used for validation with partners working on liver and lung disease models through other funding bodies.
Sectors Healthcare,Pharmaceuticals and Medical Biotechnology

 
Description Turkish government PhD student funding
Amount £140,000 (GBP)
Organisation University of Edinburgh 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start 05/2021 
End 09/2024
 
Description Conference symposium "Advanced Imaging Technologies for Regenerative Medicine" and keynote talk (in the future - May 2020) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact Pierre Bagnaninchi and Yvonne Reinwald are co-organising a symposium for the TERMIS-EU conference in Manchester 2020 with Pierre to give the keynote speech.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
 
Description Poster presentation and rapid-fire talk at conference 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact TERMIS EU Conference in May 2020 - Poster presentation by Wendy Balestri
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
 
Description School Visit (Uttoxeter) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact 100 A Level students attended a career and scientific research awareness lecture at Denstone College. Subsequently, I have had contacts from students interested in information on further follow up research activities.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020