| Literature DB >> 24628910 |
Ahmad Oryan, Soodeh Alidadi, Ali Moshiri1, Nicola Maffulli.
Abstract
This review analyzes the literature of bone grafts and introduces tissue engineering as a strategy in this field of orthopedic surgery. We evaluated articles concerning bone grafts; analyzed characteristics, advantages, and limitations of the grafts; and provided explanations about bone-tissue engineering technologies. Many bone grafting materials are available to enhance bone healing and regeneration, from bone autografts to graft substitutes; they can be used alone or in combination. Autografts are the gold standard for this purpose, since they provide osteogenic cells, osteoinductive growth factors, and an osteoconductive scaffold, all essential for new bone growth. Autografts carry the limitations of morbidity at the harvesting site and limited availability. Allografts and xenografts carry the risk of disease transmission and rejection. Tissue engineering is a new and developing option that had been introduced to reduce limitations of bone grafts and improve the healing processes of the bone fractures and defects. The combined use of scaffolds, healing promoting factors, together with gene therapy, and, more recently, three-dimensional printing of tissue-engineered constructs may open new insights in the near future.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24628910 PMCID: PMC3995444 DOI: 10.1186/1749-799X-9-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Surg Res ISSN: 1749-799X Impact factor: 2.359
Figure 1SEM ultramicrographs of microstructure of natural bone grafts. (A) Trabecular or cancellous bone graft. Note the porous honey comb-like microstructure of cancellous bone graft. (B) Cortico-cancellous bone graft. (C) Cortical or compact bone graft (scalebars (A-C) 100 μm).
Figure 2Types of bone grafts. (A) Autograft: The surgeon harvests bone from another site of the patient's skeleton, often from the iliac crest, and implants it into the bone defect site. This type of bone grafts leads to two surgeries, thus, two scars, more pain, and additional infection risk. (B, C) Allograft and xenograft: Here the bone graft is obtained from a human donor or animal model, respectively. These types of bone grafts, particularly xenografts, carry the risk of immunologic response and transmission of viral and bacterial disease and with xenografts, zoonotic disease. (D) Synthetic bone graft substitute: There are different types of synthetic grafts. These biomaterials are safe and need no second surgery site.
Some advantages and disadvantages of the most commonly used three types of bone grafts
| Autografts | Optimal osteogenic, osteoinductive, and osteoconductive properties; gold standard for bone grafting; without the risks of immunogenicity and disease transmission | Pain and morbidity in the donor site, limited quantity and availability, need for further surgery, hematoma, infection, the need for general sedation or anesthesia, longer operative time, and blood loss |
| Allografts | Osteoinductive and osteoconductive properties, without donor site morbidity, possible with local anesthesia, high availability, easy handling | Lack of osteogenic properties, potential antigenic response and disease transmission, variable osteoinductivity, limited supply, loss of biologic and mechanical properties due to its processing, non-availability worldwide due to religious and financial concerns and increased cost |
| Xenografts | Osteoinductive and osteoconductive properties, low cost, high availability | Lack of osteogenic properties, the risk of immunogenicity and transmission of infectious and zoonotic diseases, poor outcome |
Advantages and disadvantages of some sources of harvesting bone grafts
| Iliac crest | Large bone volume, rich source of progenitor cells and growth factors, easy access, providing both cancellous and cortical bones | Nerve, arterial, and urethral injury, increased blood loss, hematoma, infection, chronic post-operative donor site pain, high patient morbidity, high recovery time, large scar, hip subluxation, pelvic fractures, costly, local infection |
| Distal radius | Lower bone turn-over than iliac crest, lower post-operative pain than the iliac crest, easy to harvest, small incision is needed | Superficial radial nerve injury, fracture, infection |
| Tibia | Easy to access, less operative time, and less gait disturbance than the iliac crest | Fracture, less bone volume than iliac crest, infection |
Comparison of various bone grafts in several experimental and clinical studies
| Emami et al. [ | Radial bone defect | Iliac crest autograft and bone marrow plus the autograft | Experimental study in15 rabbits | Bone marrow plus the autograft caused high tolerance to maximum load and bending stiffness |
| Keskin et al. [ | Ulnar bone defect | Autograft, bovine xenograft, and xenograft-autogenous bone marrow | Experimental study in 80 rabbits | Xenograft achieved the worst results. Combination of xenograft with autogenous bone marrow led to promising outcome |
| Pereira-Junior et al. [ | Radial bone defect | Cancellous bone autograft vs. granular polyurethanes containing castor oil | Experimental study in 20 rabbits | Autograft showed higher and faster bone regeneration than castor oil-based polyurethane containing biocompatible and osteointegrative properties |
| Bigham et al. [ | Radial bone defect | Fresh autogenous cortical bone vs. xenogenic bovine DBM | Experimental study in 20 rabbits | Fast healing without complications with xenogenic bovine DBM similar to autograft, but autograft group was superior to DBM only radiographically |
| Bigham et al. [ | Radial bone defect | Xenogenic bovine DBM vs. xenogenic bovine fetal growth plate | Experimental study in 20 rabbits | With both grafting groups, healing was faster, despite the fetal growth plate which was radiographically superior to DBM |
| Shafiei et al. [ | Radial bone defect | Fresh cortical autograft vs. fresh cortical allograft | Experimental study in 20 rabbits | Autograft was radiographically but not biomechanically and histopathologically superior to allograft |
| Athanasiou et al. [ | Femoral condyle defect | Autogenous, allograft-DBM, bovine cancellous bone xenograft and calcium phosphate hydroxyapatite and calcium phosphate substitutes | Experimental study in 90 rabbits | The best results obtained with the use of autograft, followed by bovine xenografts, allograft, and ultimately, the other substitutes had similar results |
| Bansal et al. [ | Tibial plateau fracture | Bovine cancellous xenograft | Clinical study, 19 patients | Obtained promising outcome, reduced operative time and bleeding good effects on bone healing |
| Putzier et al. [ | Lumbar segmental spondylodesis | Autogenous vs. allogenic iliac crest cancellous bone graft | Clinical study, 40 patients | Both grafts attained equivalent fusion rate without implant complications and accordingly similar clinical outcome |
| Keles et al. [ | Intraosseous periodontal defect | Combined autogenous cortical bone (ACB) and guided tissue regeneration (GTR) vs. ACB alone | Clinical study, 12 patients | Both the two groups resulted in improvement in clinical and radiological characteristics |
| Thuaksuban et al. [ | Alveolar cleft defect | Autogenous bone alone vs. autogenous bone with deproteinized bovine bone (DBB) | Clinical study, 30 patients | Duration of hospital stay, the average operation time, intraoperative blood loss, and post-operative pain were less; recovery was faster in patients receiving DBB with autogenous cancellous bone graft |
| Faldini et al. [ | Aseptic forearm non-union | Bone allograft with plate | Clinical study, 14 patients | High forearm alignment rate and improved forearm function led to bone healing |
| Scaglione et al. [ | Long bone non-union | Autologous concentrated bone marrow-derived cells combined with dried bone allograft (DBM) | Clinical study, 19 patients | Complete healing in 15 patients (78.9%) |
Advantages and disadvantages of some of the biologic and synthetic tissue-engineered polymers
| Collagen | Major component of ECM, high availability, easy to purify from living organisms, non-antigenic, biodegradable, biocompatible and bioreabsorbable, non-toxic, biological plastic due to high tensile strength, formulated in a number of different forms | High cost of pure type I collagen, variability of isolated collagen, hydrophilicity leading to swelling and more rapid release, side effects such as bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSF) and mineralization, low cell differentiation and inadequate ability to form bone |
| Chitosan | High biodegradability, biocompatibility, adsorption properties, ability to support cell differentiation, promotion of growth and differentiation of osteoblasts in cell culture, porous structure, flexible, good mechanical properties, and suitability for cell ingrowth | Not osteoconductive, inadequate bone formation ability, allergic reactions, and low solubility |
| Alginate | Easy to mix, manipulate, and use; non-toxic; biodegradable nature; less expensive; with quick setting time | Less accurate reproduction of detail, poor dimensional stability, messy to work with it, low mechanical stability (microparticles prepared only with calcium alginate) |
| Calcium phosphate | Excellent biocompatibility, bioactivity, optimal bone implant contact, easy preparation during surgery, minimal bone cavity, complete adaptation to the bone cavity, good setting | Low mechanical resistance, brittleness and low flexural/tensile strength |
Figure 3SEM images. Alginate (A), alginate-chitosan (B), chitosan (C), chitosan-collagen (D), mesenchymal stem cells cultured on the scaffold collagen (C)-dl-lactic acid-glycolic acid (PLGA) (P) medium (E), and synthesized porous HA scaffold (F). The scaffolds used for bone tissue engineering must be porous (scalebars (A-D, F) 100 μm, (E) 500 μm).
Commercially available bone graft substitutes: part 1
| AlloSource | AlloFuse™ | Heat-sensitive copolymer with DBM | Injectable gel and putty | Osteoconduction | Case reports | 510(k) cleared |
| Biodegradable | Animal studies | |||||
| Osteoinduction | Cell culture | |||||
| Biomet Osteobiologics | ProOsteon® 500R | Coralline-derived hydroxyapatite/calcium carbonate (HA/CC) composite | Granular or block | Osteoconduction | Human studies | 510(k) cleared |
| Biodegradable | Case reports | |||||
| Animal studies | ||||||
| InterGro® | DBM in a lecithin carrier | Paste, putty, and mix with HA/CC composite granules | Osteoconduction | Case reports | 510(k) cleared | |
| Biodegradable | Animal studies | |||||
| Osteoinduction | Every lot tested for osteoinduction | |||||
| BonePlast® | Calcium sulfate with or without HA/CC composite granules | Various volumes of powder and setting solution | Osteoconduction | Case reports | 510(k) cleared | |
| Biodegradable | Animal studies | |||||
| DePuy Spine | HEALOS® Bone Graft Replacement | Mineralized collagen matrix | Variety of strip sizes | Osteoconduction | Peer-reviewed, published human studies | 510(k) cleared |
| Creeping substitution | Case reports | |||||
| Osteoinduction | Animal studies | |||||
| Osteogenesis when mixed with bone marrow aspirate | ||||||
| CONDUIT® TCP Granules | 100% β-TCP | Granules | Osteoconduction | Case reports | 510(k) cleared | |
| Biodegradable | Animal studies | |||||
| Exactech | Opteform® | DBM and cortical cancellous chips suspended in gelatin carrier | Formable putty or dry powder ready to be hydrated with autologous diluents or saline | Osteoconduction | Human studies | 510(k) cleared |
| Biodegradable | Case reports | |||||
| Osteoinduction | Animal studies | |||||
| Osteogenesis when mixed with autogenous bone graft | Every lot tested | |||||
| Optefil® | DBM suspended in gelatin carrier | Injectable bone paste; dry powder ready to be hydrated with blood or saline | Osteoconduction | Human studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Biodegradable | Case reports | |||||
| Osteoinduction | Animal studies | |||||
| Osteogenesis when mixed with autogenous bone graft | Every lot tested | |||||
| Optecure® | DBM suspended in a hydrogel carrier | Dry mix kit delivered with or buffered saline mix with patient's autogenous bone graft or autologous diluents | Osteoconduction | Human studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Biodegradable | Case reports | |||||
| Osteoinduction | Animal studies | |||||
| Osteogenesis when mixed with autogenous bone graft | Every lot tested | |||||
| Optecure® + CCC | DBM and CCC suspended in a hydrogel carrier | Dry mix kit delivered with buffered saline or mix with patient's autogenous bone graft or autologous diluents | Osteoconduction | Animal studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Biodegradable | Every lot tested | |||||
| Osteoinduction | ||||||
| Osteogenesis when mixed with autogenous bone graft | ||||||
| OpteMx™ | HA/TCP biphasic combination | Granules, sticks, rounded wedges, wedges, and cylinders in several sizes | Osteoconduction | Human studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Biodegradable | Case reports | |||||
| Compressive strength of 400 psi | Animal studies | |||||
| Osteogenesis and limited osteoinduction when mixed with bone marrow aspirate |
Data were extracted based on the reports of FDA, American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons, and information provided by the manufacturers.
Commercially available bone graft substitutes: part 2
| Integra Orthobiologics/(IsoTis OrthoBiologics) | Accell 100™ | DBM putty | Injectable putty | Osteoconduction | Human studies | 510(k) cleared |
| Bioresorbable | Case reports | |||||
| Osteoinduction | Animal studies | |||||
| Every DBM lot tested for osteoinduction | ||||||
| Accell Connexus® | DBM plus reverse phase medium | Injectable putty | Osteoconduction | Human studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable | Case reports | |||||
| Osteoinduction | Animal studies | |||||
| Every DBM lot tested for osteoinduction | ||||||
| Accell TBM™ | Total bone matrix, 100% preformed | Various-sized strips | Osteoconduction | Human studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable | Case reports | |||||
| Osteoinduction | Animal studies | |||||
| Every DBM lot tested for osteoinduction | ||||||
| Integra Mozaik™ | 80% highly purified B-TCP | Strip and putty | Osteoconduction | Animal studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| 20% highly purified type-1 collagen | Bioresorbable | Case reports | ||||
| LifeNet Health | Optium DBM® | DBM combined with glycerol carrier | Formable putty (bone fibers) and injectable gel (bone particles) | Osteoconduction | Human studies | 510(k) cleared |
| Bioresorbable | Case reports | |||||
| Osteoinduction | Animal studies | |||||
| IC Graft Chamber® | DBM particles and cancellous chips | Lyophilized and packaged in various sizes within a delivery chamber | Osteoconduction | Animal studies | Regulated under CFR 1270 and 1271 as a human tissue and 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable | Case reports | |||||
| Osteoinduction | ||||||
| Designed to be used with blood, PRP, or bone marrow to enhance DBM activity | ||||||
| Cellect DBM® | DBM fibers and cancellous chips | Provided in a specialized cartridge | Osteoconduction | Animal studies | Regulated under CFR 1270 and 1271 as a human tissue and 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable | Case reports | |||||
| Osteoinduction | ||||||
| Designed for the retention of osteoprogenitor cells | ||||||
| Medtronic Spinal & Biologics | INFUSE® Bone Graft | rhBMP-2 protein on an absorbable collagen sponge | Multiple kit sizes | Bioresorbable carrier | Human studies (level I and level III data) | PMA approved for fusion with spinal cage |
| Osteoinduction | Case reports | PMA approved for open tibia fractures with IM nail | ||||
| Chemotaxis of stem cells; indirect osteogenesis | Animal studies | |||||
| MasterGraft® Granules | Biphasic calcium phosphate | Granules | Osteoconduction | Animal studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable | ||||||
| MasterGraft® Matrix | Calcium phosphate and collagen | Compression resistant block | Osteoconduction | Animal studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable | ||||||
| MasterGraft® Putty | Calcium phosphate and collagen | Moldable putty | Osteoconduction | Animal studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable |
Data were extracted based on the reports of FDA, American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons, and information provided by the manufacturers.
Commercially available bone graft substitutes: part 3
| Medtronic Spinal & Biologics | Progenix™ DBM Putty | DBM in type1 bovine collagen and sodium alginate | Ready to use injectable putty | Osteoconduction | Animal studies | 510(k) cleared |
| Bioresorbable | ||||||
| Osteoinduction | ||||||
| Osteofil® DBM | DBM in porcine gelatin | Injectable paste and moldable strips | Osteoconduction | Animal studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable | Case reports | |||||
| Osteoinduction | ||||||
| MTF/Synthes | DBX® | DBM in sodium hyaluronate carrier | Paste, putty mix, and strip | Osteoconduction | Human studies | 510(k) cleared |
| Bioresorbable | Case reports | |||||
| Osteoinduction | Animal studies | |||||
| NovaBone/ MTF | NovaBone® | Bioactive silicate | Particulate and putty | Osteoconduction | Case reports | 510(k) cleared |
| Bioresorbable | Animal studies | |||||
| Osteostimulation | ||||||
| Orthovita | Vitoss® | 100% β-TCP and 80% β-TCP/20% collagen | Putty, strip, flow, morsels, and shapes | Osteoconduction | Published human studies | 510(k) cleared |
| Bioresorbable | Case reports | |||||
| Animal studies | ||||||
| Osteotech | Grafton® | DBM combined with glycerol | Formable putty, injectable gel, putty mixed with chips, flexible sheets, and matrix | Osteoconduction | Published human studies | 510(k) cleared |
| Bioresorbable | Case reports | |||||
| Osteoinduction | Animal studies | |||||
| Graft on Plus® | DBM combined with a starch carrier | Paste | Osteoconduction | Case reports | 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable | Animal studies | |||||
| Osteoinduction | ||||||
| Regeneration Technologies | BioSet™ | DBM combined with natural gelatin carrier | Injectable paste, injectable putty, strips, and blocks with cortical cancellous chips | Osteoconduction | Human studies | 510(k) cleared |
| Bioresorbable | Case reports | |||||
| Osteoinduction | Animal studies | |||||
| Every lot tested | ||||||
| Smith & Nephew | VIAGRAF | DBM combined with glycerol | Putty, paste, gel, crunch, and flex | Osteoconduction | Animal studies | 510(k) cleared |
| Bioresorbable | ||||||
| Osteoinduction | ||||||
| Stryker Biotech | OP-1® Implant | rhBMP-7 with type 1 bone collagen | Lyophilized powder reconstituted to form wet sand | Bioresorbable scaffold | Human studies (level I data) | HDE approval for long bone non-unions |
| Osteoinduction | Case reports | |||||
| Animal studies | ||||||
| OP-1® Putty | rhBMP-7 with type 1 bone collagen | Lyophilized powder reconstituted to form putty | Bioresorbable scaffold | Human studies (level I data) | HDE approval for revision posterolateral fusion | |
| Osteoinduction | Case reports | |||||
| Animal studies | ||||||
| Calstrux™ | Tricalcium phosphate with carboxymethylcellulose | Moldable putty | Osteoconduction | Animal studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable |
Data were extracted based on the reports of FDA, American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons, and information provided by the manufacturers.
Commercially available bone graft substitutes: part 4
| Synthes | Norian® SRS® Fast Set Putty | Calcium phosphate | Moldable putty | Osteoconduction | Human studies | 510(k) cleared |
| Bioresorbable | Case reports | |||||
| Animal studies | ||||||
| chronOS® | β-tricalcium phosphate | Granules, blocks, and wedges | Osteoconduction | Animal studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable | ||||||
| Calceon® 6 | Calcium sulfate | Pellets | Osteoconduction | Animal studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable | ||||||
| OSTEOSET® | Surgical grade calcium sulfate | Various sized pellets | Osteoconduction | Human studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable | Case reports | |||||
| Animal studies | ||||||
| Wright Medical Technology | MIIG® X3 | High strength surgical grade calcium sulfate | Minimally invasive injectable graft for compression fractures | Osteoconduction | Human studies | 510(k) cleared |
| Bioresorbable | Case reports | |||||
| Animal studies | ||||||
| CELLPLEX® | Tricalcium phosphate | Various sized granules | Osteoconduction | Case reports | 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable | Animal studies | |||||
| ALLOMATRIX® | DBM with/without CBM in surgical grade calcium sulfate powder | Various volumes of injectable/ formable putty | Osteoconduction | Human studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable | Case reports | |||||
| Osteoinduction | Animal studies | |||||
| Cell culture | ||||||
| ALLOMATRIX® RCS | DBM with CACIPLEXTM Technology in surgical grade calcium sulfate powder | Various volumes of formable putty | Osteoconduction | Animal studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable | ||||||
| Osteoinduction | ||||||
| IGNITE® | DBM in surgical grade calcium sulfate powder to be mixed with bone marrow aspirate | Percutaneous graft for problem fractures | Osteoconduction | Human studies | 510(k) cleared | |
| Bioresorbable | Case reports | |||||
| Osteoinduction | Animal studies | |||||
| Cell culture | ||||||
| Zimmer | CopiOs® Bone Void Filler | Dibasic calcium phosphate and Type I collagen | Sponge and paste | Osteoconduction | Case reports | 510(k) cleared |
| Bioresorbable | Animal studies | |||||
| Osteogenesis and osteoinduction when mixed with bone marrow aspirate | ||||||
| CopiOs® Cancellous Bone Graft | Bovine bone | Cancellous chips, cancellous cubes and wedges | Osteoconduction | Case reports | 510(k) cleared | |
| Animal studies | ||||||
| Puros® Demineralized Bone Matrix | DBM putty | Putty | Osteoconduction | Every lot tested | 100% derived from allograft tissue | |
| Bioresorbable | FDA clearance not required | |||||
| Osteoinduction |
Data were extracted based on the reports of FDA, American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons, and information provided by the manufacturers.