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Regenerative medicine 2.0: extracellular vesicle–based therapeutics for musculoskeletal tissue regeneration

Katherine B. Williams, Nicole Ehrhart

2022Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In recent years, extracellular vesicles (EVs) have emerged as prominent mediators of the homeostasis, repair, and regeneration of musculoskeletal tissues including bone, skeletal muscle, and cartilage. Accordingly, the therapeutic potential of EVs for regenerative medicine applications has not gone unnoticed. The use of EVs for the treatment of musculoskeletal injury and disease in veterinary species is a nascent but rapidly expanding area of research. Recent studies in this area have demonstrated the safety and feasibility of EV products in dogs and horses. While early clinical responses to EV-based therapeutics in companion animals have been favorable, more rigorously designed, sufficiently powered, and placebo-controlled clinical trials are required to fully elucidate the clinical benefits and best-use scenarios for EV therapeutics in veterinary medicine. Additionally, clinical translation of EV-based therapeutics will require Good Manufacturing Practice-compliant methods to scale up and purify EV products. Despite these challenges, EVs hold great promise in the regenerative medicine landscape, particularly in the treatment of musculoskeletal injury and disease in companion animals.

Topics & Concepts

Regenerative medicineRegeneration (biology)MedicineClinical trialClinical PracticeMusculoskeletal injuryIntensive care medicinePathologyPhysical therapyBiologyAlternative medicineStem cellCell biologyExtracellular vesicles in diseaseTissue Engineering and Regenerative MedicineMesenchymal stem cell research
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