| Literature DB >> 20637059 |
Darja Marolt1, Miomir Knezevic, Gordana Vunjak Novakovic.
Abstract
Treatment of extensive bone defects requires autologous bone grafting or implantation of bone substitute materials. An attractive alternative has been to engineer fully viable, biological bone grafts in vitro by culturing osteogenic cells within three-dimensional scaffolds, under conditions supporting bone formation. Such grafts could be used for implantation, but also as physiologically relevant models in basic and translational studies of bone development, disease and drug discovery. A source of human cells that can be derived in large numbers from a small initial harvest and predictably differentiated into bone forming cells is critically important for engineering human bone grafts. We discuss the characteristics and limitations of various types of human embryonic and adult stem cells, and their utility for bone tissue engineering.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20637059 PMCID: PMC2905086 DOI: 10.1186/scrt10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Figure 1Schematic representation of bone formation . Left: cells are growing attached to the scaffold surface, and sense microenvironmental signals. Middle: porous scaffolds offer support and a template for new tissue formation. Cell viability is maintained by medium perfusion through the scaffold interior. Right: dynamic culture in bioreactors enables control of medium flow and environmental parameters supporting in vitro osteogenesis.
Overview of clinical studies in which tissue engineered grafts were applied for bone regeneration
| Bone defect | Tissue-engineered graft preparation | Clinical evaluation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Segmental defects of long bones (3 patients) | Cultured bone marrow osteoprogenitors; seeding on hydroxyapatite scaffolds | Callus formation and integration 2 months after surgery | [ |
| Large calvarial defect (1 patient) | Adipose stem cells in fibrin glue, with autologous cancellous bone | New bone formation and calvarial continuity 3 months after surgery | [ |
| Maxillary sinus augmentation (2 patients) | Cultured mandibular periosteal cells; seeding and culture on polymer fleece under osteogenic conditions | Tight interface of bone and dental implant, new mineralized trabecular bone and remnants of biomaterial 4 months after surgery | [ |
| Maxillary sinus augmentation (27 patients) | Cultured mandibular periosteal cells; seeding and culture on polymer fleece in osteogenic conditions | 18 patients: presence of mineralized trabecular bone, remnants of biomaterial and no resorption 3 months after surgery | [ |
| Posterior mandible augmentation (1 patient) | Mandibular periosteal cells on polymer fleece | Enhanced transverse ridge dimensions, dense lamellar bone 6 months after surgery | [ |
| Maxillary sinus augmentation (13 patients) | Group 1: cultured mandibular periosteal cells; seeding and culture on collagen scaffold in osteogenic conditions (8 patients) | Group 1: vital woven and partially mature lamellar bone 6 months after surgery, little remaining biomaterial | [ |
| Group 2a: cultured maxillary osteoblasts; seeding and culture on natural bone mineral scaffold (2 patients) | Group 2a: new bone and remnants of biomaterial at former sinus floor 8 months after surgery, poorly vascularized connective tissue, remnants of biomaterial | ||
| Group 2b: natural bone mineral scaffold alone (3 patients) | Group 2b: new bone and remnants of biomaterial 8 months after surgery; significantly lower bone density than in groups 1 and 2a | ||
| Maxillary sinus augmentation (20 patients) | Group 1: autologous iliac crest bone (10 patients) | Group 1: 29% bone resorption rate 3 months after surgery | [ |
| Group 2: cultured mandibular periosteal cells; seeding and culture on polymer fleece in osteogenic conditions (10 patients) | Group 2: 90% graft resorption rate 3 months after surgery, graft density corresponding to connective tissue in all but one augmentation | ||
| Maxillary sinus augmentation (3 patients) | Cultured mandibular periosteal cells; seeding and culture on polymer fleece in osteogenic conditions; implanted with xenograft bone | New fibrous bone and remnants of xenograft bone 4 months after surgery; some maturation into lamellar bone; presence of osteoclasts 6 months after surgery; increased bone height 18 months after surgery | [ |
| Maxillary sinus augmentation (7 patients) | Cultured bone marrow stem cells seeding and 1-day culture on calcium phosphate ceramic scaffold | New bone formation and remnants of biomaterial 3 months after surgery; increased bone height 3 and 12 months after surgery | [ |
| Lumbar segmental fusion (24 patients) | Group 1: autologous iliac crest cancellous bone (11 patients) | Lower donor site morbidity in group 2; higher fusion rate in group 2 compared to group 1 in the period 3 to 9 months after surgery; comparable clinical and radiological results (80% fusion in group 1, 90% fusion in group 2) 12 months after surgery | [ |
Figure 2Examples of human osteogenic cells growing . (A) Primary explant culture of bone cells. (B) Bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells. (C) Adipose stem cells. (D) Human embryonic stem cells (line H13) growing on mouse embryonic fibroblasts. Original magnification: 100×.