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  • Safety and Optimisation of Radiation Sterilization in Tissue Banking: Studies on Functional Properties of Irradiated Tissue Grafts

    Closed for proposals

    Project Type

    Coordinated Research Project

    Project Code

    E31006

    CRP

    1767

    Approved Date

    7 December 2009

    Status

    Closed

    Start Date

    18 March 2010

    Expected End Date

    31 December 2015

    Completed Date

    30 March 2017

    Description

    To assure safety of patients receiving tissue allografts during surgical treatment, several decontamination or sterilization procedures are implemented during the processing. Irradiation of tissue allografts is one of the developed and widely used methods for sterilization in the world. Gamma rays, X-rays, and electron beams have been used with doses ranging from 15 to 80 kGy. Controversies exist regarding the “optimal dose” for sterilisation since radiation can evoke numerous changes in tissues structure resulting in its change in functionality. The major aim in the project is to facilitate research to find the optimal radiation dose and processing methods for several tissues and disseminate the results in IAEA Member States. Therefore, radiation-induced effects on tissue grafts processed and preserved by different methods will be studied. The newly acquired knowledge established from harmonized research methodologies will be useful in providing high quality tissue allografts.

    Objectives

    To assure safety of patients receiving tissue allografts during surgical treatment, several decontamination or sterilization procedures are implemented during the processing. Irradiation of tissue allografts is one of the developed and widely used methods for sterilization in the world. Gamma rays, X-rays, and electron beams have been used with doses ranging from 15 to 80 kGy. Controversies exist regarding the “optimal dose” for sterilisation since radiation can evoke numerous changes in tissues structure resulting in its change in functionality. The major aim in the project is to facilitate research to find the optimal radiation dose and processing methods for several tissues and disseminate the results in IAEA Member States. Therefore, radiation-induced effects on tissue grafts processed and preserved by different methods will be studied. The newly acquired knowledge established from harmonized research methodologies will be useful in providing high quality tissue allografts.

    Specific objectives

    There are limited studies that have been published, however, they have not been standardized and thus comparability is difficult
    and, in some cases, not possible. As a result, controversies exist regarding the optimal dose for sterilisation since radiation can
    evoke numerous changes in tissue structure resulting in its change in functionality. Therefore, this research programme is to
    validate the optimal sterilization dose and processing methods for several tissues providing allograft sterility (SAL 10-6) without
    compromising tissue biological or structural function for clinical use. Important tissue allografts to be investigated are: bone,
    tendon, cartilage, skin, amniotic membrane, vascular grafts, and heart valves. For successful distribution of safe and good
    quality tissue allografts, it is important to understand: Interaction between processing methods and irradiation process, Dose
    response relationship and validation of relevant physical, chemical, biological and clinical end-points, Effect of irradiation
    conditions (temperature, oxygen, water content, dose rate, radio-protectants, etc.) on biological properties of tissue allografts, In
    order to improve tissue banking processing and preservation protocols the following questions need to be answered: What type
    of testing methods should be applied for tissue allografts? What is the optimum processing and preservation method to
    preserve functionality of tissue grafts? What is the maximum tolerated irradiation dose for different levels of damage in different
    tissue allografts (type of tissue, method of processing)? Which processing combinations have the highest potential reducing the
    radiation-induced tissue toxicity in specific tissues? Which processing combinations have the highest potential preserving
    functionality of irradiated tissues? Is there any relation of dose-rate on physical, chemical, biological properties of tissue
    allografts?

    Impact

    An overall assessment indicates that the participating institutes are more than capable of performing relevant research with regard to
    optimisation of the radiation sterilization dose for tissue allografts. All institutes perform well, or above, and have produced new data and show considerable research progress. Several institutes were able to receive new or extra funding from national authorities and expanding their research on radiation sterilization, tissue procurement and tissue processing.

    Relevance

    The CRP is very relevant to the Agency’s project and to Member States (in particular LMI-countries relying on radiation sterilization of tissue allografts as the only affordable sterilization method.

    CRP Publications

    Type

    Review

    Year

    2012

    Publication URL

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20714807

    Description

    Morales Pedraza, J., A. Lobo Gajiwala and M. E. Martinez Pardo (2012). "A review of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) international standards for tissue banks." Cell Tissue Bank 13(1): 15-25

    Country/Organization

    AUS, IND, MEX

    Type

    Research Paper

    Year

    2013

    Publication URL

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23912050

    Description

    Nguyen, H., A. I. Cassady, M. B. Bennett, E. Gineyts, A. Wu, D. A. Morgan and M. R. Forwood (2013). "Reducing the radiation sterilization dose improves mechanical and biological quality while retaining sterility assurance levels of bone allografts." Bone 57(1): 194-200

    Country/Organization

    AUL. FRA

    Type

    Methodological

    Year

    2012

    Publication URL

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21161412

    Description

    Morales Pedraza, J. and M. R. Herson (2012). "The importance of ethic in the field of human tissue banking." Cell Tissue Bank 13(1): 103-117

    Country/Organization

    AUL, AUS

    Type

    Research paper

    Year

    2011

    Publication URL

    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20570097

    Description

    Nguyen, H., D.A. Morgan, and M.R. Forwood, Validation of 11 kGy as a radiation sterilization dose for frozen bone allografts. J Arthroplasty, 2011. 26(2): p. 303-8.

    Country/Organization

    AUL/Griffith University; School of Medical Science

    Type

    Review

    Year

    2012

    Publication URL

    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22825386

    Description

    Myint, P., et al., An international survey of tissue banking, a preliminary report. Cell Tissue Bank, 2012.

    Country/Organization

    UK/Glyndwr University; Clwyd and Oswestry Research Tissue Bank

    Type

    Research Paper

    Year

    2011

    Publication URL

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21603957

    Description

    Nguyen, H., D. A. Morgan, S. Cull, M. Benkovich and M. R. Forwood (2011). "Sponge swabs increase sensitivity of sterility testing of processed bone and tendon allografts." J Ind Microbiol Biotechnol 38(8): 1127-1132

    Country/Organization

    AUL

    Type

    Review

    Year

    2014

    Publication URL

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23959505

    Description

    Zhang, Y. M., J. R. Wang, N. L. Zhang, X. M. Liu, M. Zhou, S. Y. Ma, T. Yang and B. X. Li (2014). "Rapid development of tissue bank achieved by International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Tissue Banking Programme in China." Cell Tissue Bank 15(3): 291-296

    Country/Organization

    CPR

    Type

    Methodological

    Year

    2011

    Publication URL

    http://apps.webofknowledge.com/InboundService.do?mode=FullRecord&customersID=Res…

    Description

    Pedraza, J. M. (2011). "The use of the Internet training course modality in the field of tissue banking: the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)/National University of Singapore (NUS) experience." Cell and Tissue Banking 12(3): 163-170

    Country/Organization

    AUS

    Type

    Research Paper

    Year

    2014

    Publication URL

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24254127

    Description

    Mrazova, H., J. Koller, G. Fujerikova and P. Babal (2014). "Structural changes of skin and amnion grafts for transplantation purposes following different doses of irradiation." Cell Tissue Bank 15(3): 429-433

    Country/Organization

    SLO

    Type

    Poster

    Year

    2014

    Publication URL

    http://www.radres.org/

    Description

    Oleg V. Belyakov, Jan Wondergem, and Eduardo Rosenblatt. Safety and optimisation of radiation sterilization in tissue banking: Studies on functional properties of irradiated tissue grafts (IAEA CRP E31006, 2010-2014), 60th annual Radiation Research Society meeting, Las Vegas, NV, USA, 20-24 September 2014.

    Country/Organization

    IAEA

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