Minimally Invasive Post-Traumatic Craniofacial Soft Tissue Regeneration: Validation of Safety and Efficacy of Staged Approach Using Autologous Fresh Fat Grafting Followed by Autologous Cryopreserved Fat Grafting
University of Pittsburgh
Summary
The goal of this clinical trial is to validate the safety and effectiveness of a two-stage approach for minimally invasive craniofacial soft tissue reconstruction using autologous fat grafting in wounded service members and veterans. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Will treating subjects with post-traumatic craniofacial deformities using fresh fat grafts, followed by a second treatment 3 months later with cryopreserved fat stored at -80°C, improve facial tissue regeneration and appearance? 2. How do volume retention and tissue health change between fresh and cryopreserved grafts in humans? 3. How do factors such as cellular composition of the graft, patient demographics, and medical conditions (including diabetes, tobacco use, medications, age, and BMI) affect fat graft volume retention and overall outcomes? Researchers will compare results from the second-stage cryopreserved fat grafting to fresh fat grafting to assess outcomes like volume retention, patient recovery, and cost reduction. Participants will: Undergo an initial fat grafting procedure. Have additional fat harvested and cryo-stored for use in a second-stage procedure. Receive the cryopreserved fat in a later stage without the need for a second fat harvest. Receive small test injections behind each ear for later analysis. Provide data on demographics and medical conditions for correlation with outcomes.
Description
Craniofacial injuries are common among wounded service members, with 22.7% to 39% of battle injuries affecting the cranio-maxillofacial region. Restoring appearance requires precise soft tissue reconstruction. This proposal aims to address that need using a minimally invasive approach that uses the patient's own tissue, building on previous successful DoD-funded clinical trials. Autologous fat grafting (AFG) is a common, minimally invasive procedure used in plastic surgery to restore facial volume. In a prior department of defense funded trial, the study investigators demonstrated its safety…
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18+ years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria: * Aged 18 years or older and able to provide informed consent, * Have suffered injury resulting in craniofacial volume defects which could be treated with a graft volume of between 3 and 150 cc of lipoaspirate (the patient's own fat, collected through liposuction). This may include patients who have not had craniofacial surgical procedures, as well as those who have undergone surgical procedures and have remaining deformities (post-surgical deformities). * Be at least 3 months post-injury or most recent surgery, so that acute edema (swelling) is resolved. * Volume defects…
Interventions
- ProcedureSerial Fat Grafting Fresh followed by Cryopreserved Fat
The therapeutic intervention is a two stage surgical procedure (with a third stage biopsy for research purposes in this trial) in which a primary traumatic or post-surgical craniofacial deformity is treated first with autologous fat grafting using freshly harvested adipose tissue. A second fat grafting procedure is performed at 3.0 months after the first procedure using autologous adipose tissue that had been cryopreserved during the first procedure.
Location
- University of PittsburghPittsburgh, Pennsylvania