Agent-based modeling of porous scaffold degradation and vascularization: Optimal scaffold design based on architecture and degradation dynamics
Authored by Hamidreza Mehdizadeh, Ali Cinar, Elif S Bayrak, Chenlin Lu, Sami I Somo, Banu Akar, Eric M Brey
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2015.09.011
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
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Abstract
A multi-layer agent-based model (ABM) of biomaterial scaffold
vascularization is extended to consider the effects of scaffold
degradation kinetics on blood vessel formation. A degradation model
describing the bulk disintegration of porous hydrogels is incorporated
into the ABM. The combined degradation-angiogenesis model is used to
investigate growing blood vessel networks in the presence of a
degradable scaffold structure. Simulation results indicate that higher
porosity, larger mean pore size, and rapid degradation allow faster
vascularization when not considering the structural support of the
scaffold. However, premature loss of structural support results in
failure for the material. A strategy using multi-layer scaffold with
different degradation rates in each layer was investigated as a way to
address this issue. Vascularization was improved with the multi-layered
scaffold model compared to the single-layer model. The ABM developed
provides insight into the characteristics that influence the selection
of optimal geometric parameters and degradation behavior of scaffolds, and enables easy refinement of the model as new knowledge about the
underlying biological phenomena becomes available.
Statement of significance
This paper proposes a multi-layer agent-based model (ABM) of biomaterial
scaffold vascularization integrated with a structural-kinetic model
describing bulk degradation of porous hydrogels to consider the effects
of scaffold degradation kinetics on blood vessel formation. This enables
the assessment of scaffold characteristics and in particular the
disintegration characteristics of the scaffold on angiognesis.
Simulation results indicate that higher porosity, larger mean pore size, and rapid degradation allow faster vascularization when not considering
the structural support of the scaffold. However, premature loss of
structural support by scaffold disintegration results in failure of the
material and disruption of angiogenesis. A strategy using multi-layer
scaffold with different degradation rates in each layer was investigated
as away to address this issue. Vascularization was improved with the
multi-layered scaffold model compared to the single-layer model.
The ABM developed provides insight into the characteristics that
influence the selection of optimal geometric and degradation
characteristics of tissue engineering scaffolds. (C) 2015 Acta
Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Tags
In-vitro
Endothelial-cells
B-pla hydrogel
Tumor-induced angiogenesis
Statistical kinetic-model
Sprouting angiogenesis
Mechanical-properties
3-dimensional
scaffolds
Bulk degradation
Peg hydrogels