Center for Dental, Oral and Craniofacial Tissue and Organ Regeneration awarded $30-million grant

The initiative aims to propel USC forward as the epicenter of tissue and organ regeneration research.

THE STUDIES SEEM LIKE something straight out of science fiction.

There’s one focused on using stem cells to regenerate skull bone for patients with skull defects. 

Another aims to develop a hydrogel patch that could reduce scarring and regenerate hair follicles and sweat glands in burn victims. 

Another looks to create a transdermal patch that could repair skin damaged during radiation therapy for survivors of cancer. 

Each is currently being developed at the Center for Dental, Oral and Craniofacial Tissue and Organ Regeneration (C-DOCTOR) as it enters Stage 3 of its endeavor, with a $30-million grant from the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR).

C-DOCTOR is a consortium of California academic institutions with a mission of becoming a sustainable, comprehensive national resource center that enables the clinical translation of innovative regenerative therapies to replace dental, oral and craniofacial tissues or organs lost to congenital disorders, traumatic injuries, diseases and medical procedures.

“This initiative isn’t about incremental progress,” said Ostrow Associate Dean of Research Yang Chai PhD ’91, DDS ’96. “What we’re really trying to do is create disruptive technologies that will fundamentally change the way we treat patients.”

Shark Tank Approach

 

The endeavor first began in 2016 when the NIDCR challenged institutions across the nation to develop safe and effective clinical strategies for dental, oral and craniofacial tissue regeneration.

During Stage 1, 10 groups were selected to put together comprehensive teams — clinicians, research scientists, biostatisticians, regulatory scientists and pre-clinical/clinical trial experts as well as leaders of industry — to support researchers and expedite innovative technologies and therapeutics to FDA clinical trials.

Only two centers moved forward into Stage 2, with several California schools coalescing into C-DOCTOR, a consortium of  academic institutions, including USC, UC San Francisco, UCLA, Stanford University, UC Berkeley, UC Davis, UC San Diego and the City of Hope. 

The other center — the Michigan-Pittsburgh-Wyss Regenerative Medicine Resource Center — is composed of the University of Michigan, the University of Pittsburgh and Harvard University’s Wyss Institute.

During Stage 2, the centers recruited interdisciplinary translational project (ITP) teams with innovative ideas and provided them all the resources necessary to bring their products to human trials.

“This program is a very clever, very well-designed process to foster the development of these ITP teams,” said Chai, who is a principal investigator of C-DOCTOR, alongside UC San Francisco’s Jeffrey Lotz.

Better Together

 

Currently, C-DOCTOR supports nine ITP teams.  One team from USC, led by Chai, and two from Stanford comprise the initial Stage 3 cohort. The other six teams will continue their efforts to move into Stage 3 as their projects mature.

They include technologies to regenerate bone, salivary glands and craniofacial musculature and provide relief for arthritis caused by TMJ. The PIs leading two of those teams are Alex Wong and Denis Evseenko of Keck School of Medicine of USC. 

“We feel such a great sense of responsibility and trust to be given this opportunity to work with a group of such talented people to help advance dental, oral and craniofacial tissue regeneration,” Chai said.

Mark Urata is a co-investigator on the study and, as the Chief of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at the Keck School of Medicine of USC and the Chief of Plastic and Maxillofacial Surgery at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, is likely to be using some of the innovative products coming out of this endeavor.

“As a craniofacial surgeon whose responsibility is the reconstruction of children born with facial differences, I have a longstanding commitment to put myself out of business through scientific research,” said Urata. “It is crucial to have scientists and clinicians, working side by side, as we do at USC, to define where the most substantial needs are and how we can best help these patients.”

Chai credits the continued success of C-DOCTOR to the team they’ve managed to put together. 

“We have discovered a lot of talent that we didn’t know about before,” he said. “Just by working with all these people and making these connections, we hope that C-DOCTOR becomes a breeding ground for future innovative research projects that will continue to propel us toward dental, oral and craniofacial tissue regeneration.”

He also credited the operations team, led at USC by project director Bridget Samuels, for managing the project on a daily basis. 

“This kind of grant is a collaborative agreement with the NIDCR to work together every step of the way to ensure the success of this program,” Chai said. “Bridget and her team have been instrumental in this endeavor — not only in maintaining continued communication with the NIDCR but also with our daily operations.”

Scott Fraser from USC is also a co-investigator on the C-DOCTOR grant and play an important role in clinical and translational aspects of the consortium.

Research reported in this publication was supported by the National Institute Of Dental & Craniofacial Research of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number U24DE029463. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.

 

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