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. 2021 Mar 10;12(3):294. doi: 10.3390/mi12030294

Table 4.

An overview of tissue-engineered 3D skin models from human primary cells and their limitations (from Broek et al., 2017 [38]).

Model Commercially Available Advantages/Disadvantages Ref.
Reconstructed epidermis Yes: EpiDerm™, EpiSkin™, SkinEthic™, epiCS®
No: in house models
+: differentiated epidermis from keratinocytes
−: only keratinocytes, no dermal compartment present, or immune cells
[39,40]
Pigmented Reconstructed epidermis Yes: MelanoDerm
No: in house models
+: pigmented differentiated epidermis from keratinocytes and melanocytes
−: no living dermal compartment, immune cells, adipose tissue, appendages, or blood vessels present
[41,42]
Full-thickness skin models Yes: EpiDerm-FT, Phenion-FT, LabSkin
No: in house models
+: differentiated epidermis on the fibroblast-populated dermis
−: no immune cells, adipose tissue, appendages, or blood vessels
[43,44,45,46]
Three-layered skin model No: in house models +: differentiated epidermis on fibroblast-populated dermis on an adipocyte/ASC populated hypodermis
−: no immune cells or appendages
[47,48,49]
Full-thickness skin model containing EC No: in house models +: differentiated epidermis on fibroblast and endothelial cell (show vessel-like structures) populated dermis
−: no immune cells, adipose tissue, appendages, or perfused blood vessels
[50,51]
Skin equivalent with integrated Langerhans Cells No: in house model +: pigmented skin model containing functional MUTZ-3 derived Langerhans
−: no adipose tissue, appendages, or blood vessels
[52,53]