Abstract
Vascularized composite allotransplantation (VCA) enables functional reconstruction for patients with extensive tissue defects, but has obstacles such as immune rejection, lifelong immunosuppression, and systems-level barriers that limit widespread adoption. VCA has rapidly evolved through novel surgical, immunologic, and bioengineering technologies. This systematic review synthesizes the current landscape of emerging VCA technologies, identifies literature gaps, and emphasizes opportunities for future research. We conducted a systematic literature review of PubMed and Embase with supplemental manual reference review. English-language experimental studies reporting novel VCA technologies and innovations published after 2004 were included. Case reports, reviews, studies without technological innovation, and non-English publications were excluded. Seventy-two studies fit the inclusion criteria. Novel immunomodulation strategies including belatacept, phototherapy, siRNA therapeutics, and tolerance induction via regulatory T-cells show potential to reduce systemic immunosuppression, while mesenchymal stem cell approaches may increase graft tolerance. On another front, advanced surgical techniques with real-time monitoring and nerve regeneration protocols are looking to promote functional recovery. Digital innovations like 3D modeling and virtual surgical planning allow for patient-specific preoperative planning and intra-operative assistance. In parallel, machine perfusion and cryopreservation extend tolerable ischemia times and may also enable early rejection detection. Similarly, biomarkers and imaging provide early and noninvasive rejection prediction. On a bigger scale, patient selection incorporating evidence-backed psychosocial factors and communication training work to address systems-level barriers to expand access. Ongoing research to translate these innovations into clinical practice will be important in realizing the potential of VCA.