| Literature DB >> 25780341 |
Chuan Silvia Li1, Christopher Vannabouathong2, Sheila Sprague1, Mohit Bhandari1.
Abstract
Carbon-fiber-reinforced polyetheretherketone (CFR-PEEK) has been successfully used in orthopedic implants. The aim of this systematic review is to investigate the properties, technical data, and safety of CFR-PEEK biomaterial and to evaluate its potential for new innovation in the design of articulating medical devices. A comprehensive search in PubMed and EMBASE was conducted to identify articles relevant to the outcomes of CFR-PEEK orthopedic implants. The search was also expanded by reviewing the reference sections of selected papers and references and benchmark reports provided by content experts. A total of 23 articles were included in this review. There is limited literature available assessing the performance of CFR-PEEK, specifically as an implant material for arthroplasty systems. Nevertheless, available studies strongly support CFR-PEEK as a promising and suitable material for orthopedic implants because of its biocompatibility, material characteristics, and mechanical durability. Future studies should continue to investigate CFR-PEEK's potential benefits.Entities:
Keywords: CFR-PEEK; carbon-fiber-reinforced polyetheretherketone; implants; orthopedics; review
Year: 2015 PMID: 25780341 PMCID: PMC4344123 DOI: 10.4137/CMAMD.S20354
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Med Insights Arthritis Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1179-5441
EMBASE and MEDLINE search strategy results.
| SEARCH STRATEGY | MEDLINE | EMBASE |
|---|---|---|
| CFR-PEEK AND implants | 12 | 13 |
| Carbon-fiber-reinforced-poly-etheretherketone AND implants | 23 | 0 |
| CFR-PEEK AND orthopedics | 4 | 3 |
| Carbon-fiber-reinforced-poly-etheretherketone AND orthopedics | 9 | 2 |
| Total Number of Articles | 48 | 18 |
Figure 1Literature search results.
Study characteristics.
| CHARACTERISTIC | N (%) |
|---|---|
| North America | 9 (39.1) |
| United Kingdom | 7 (30.4) |
| Germany | 2 (8.7) |
| Japan | 2 (8.7) |
| France | 1 (4.3) |
| Italy | 1 (4.3) |
| Israel | 1 (4.3) |
| 1990 | 1 (4.3) |
| 1991 | 0 (0.0) |
| 1992 | 1 (4.3) |
| 1993 | 1 (4.3) |
| 1994 | 1 (4.3) |
| 1995 | 0 (0.0) |
| 1996 | 0 (0.0) |
| 1997 | 0 (0.0) |
| 1998 | 0 (0.0) |
| 1999 | 1 (4.3) |
| 2000 | 0 (0.0) |
| 2001 | 0 (0.0) |
| 2002 | 0 (0.0) |
| 2003 | 0 (0.0) |
| 2004 | 0 (0.0) |
| 2005 | 0 (0.0) |
| 2006 | 0 (0.0) |
| 2007 | 2 (8.7) |
| 2008 | 3 (13.0) |
| 2009 | 2 (8.7) |
| 2010 | 2 (12.5) |
| 2011 | 1 (4.3) |
| 2012 | 4 (17.4) |
| 2013 | 4 (17.4) |
| Peer-review literature | 20 (87.0%) |
| Science-based reports | 3 (13.0%) |
(A) Biomechanical studies and (B) clinical studies that examined CFR-PEEK as an implant material.
| (A) FIRST AUTHOR (YEAR) | LOCATION | MATERIALS ASSESSED | TESTS USED | RESULTS OF THE TEST (TECHNICAL DATA) | SAFETY (CONCLUSION) | OUTCOME |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brown, SA (1990) | North America | CFR-PEEK PAN thermoplastic for fracture fixation devices, compared to polysulphone and polybutylene terephthalate. | Flexion tests | CFR-PEEK material showed no degradation in mechanical properties after contouring and saline soaking. | The CFR-PEEK PAN composite was easiest to contour and had the best mechanical properties. | (+) |
| Jockish, KA (1992) | North America | CFR-PEEK fracture fixation plate, compared to UHMWPE and PEEK. | Muscle implant testing | Normal muscle tissue with no signs of infection or an adverse tissue response. | Animal subjects remained very active and the plates did not fail mechanically. | (+) |
| Scholes, SC (2007) | United Kingdom | (Pin material + Plate material) | Multidirectional pin-on-plate machine | The BioLox Delta plates seem to wear slightly less than the BioLox Forte plates when artic ulating against the same CFR-PEEK-OPTIMA® pin material. The difference is statistically significant for both the PAN and pitch pins ( | CFR-PEEK-OPTIMA® articulating against ceramic has been found to give low wear factors | (+) |
| Latif, AMH (2008) | United Kingdom | CFR-PEEK acetabular cup | Finite Element Analysis | Results show that CFR-PEEK cups are comparable to the current standard. | The design will provide the benefits previously seen with the current standard, with improve long-term component wear and stability. | (+) |
| Scholes, SC (2008) | United Kingdom | CFR-PEEK acetabular cup, compared to UHMWPE | Wear testing | Wear rates for the CFR-PEEK joints were considerably lower than UHMWPE joints. | The results show that this novel joint couple may potentially be an alternative solution for the reduction of osteolysis. | (+) |
| Scholes, SC (2009) | United Kingdom | (Pin material + Plate material) | Pin-on-plate wear tests | Volumetric wear: PEEK LC CoCrMo-high wear rates with no running-in wear phase | CFR-PEEK against CoCrMo (HC/LC) provided low wear rates. | (+) |
| Scholes, SC (2009) | United Kingdom | Oxford® Partial Knee [CoCrMo tibial component and femoral component between a mobile pitch-based CFR-PEEK OPTIMA® meniscal bearing] | Wear test: Durham six-station knee wear simulator | Wear tests: | CFR PEEK unicondylar knee joints performed well in these wear tests (lower volumetric wear than conventional metal-on-ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene prostheses) | (+) |
| Brockett, CL (2012) | United Kingdom | 36 mm diameter Biolox Delta ceramic and cobalt chrome heads paired with CFR-PEEK Pitch cups. | Friction wear test using a single station pendulum friction stimulator. | The friction for both the CFR-PEEK bearings was significantly higher than the friction for the cross-linked UHMWPE. | CoCFR-PEEK bearings are a promising alternative bearing option for total hip replacement. | (+) |
| Dickinson, AS (2012) | United Kingdom | Composite hemi-pelvis implanted with acetabular cups made of either: | Surface strain measurement using Digital Image Correlation | CoCr and CFR-PEEK cups generated increased tensile and compressive cortex strains superior to the acetabular rim, whereas UHMWPE cup generated a global reduction in cortex strain. | The MOTIS CFR-PEEK composite acetabular cup produced the closest bone strain to the intact pelvis in the main load path compared to CoCr metal and UHMWPE. | (+) |
| Nakahara, I (2013) | Japan | CFR-PEEK composite | Ovine model-unilateral hip replacement was performed using either a cementless or cemented prosthesis. | All animals recovered from surgery uneventfully. | Reported stable | (+) |
| Steinberg, EL (2012) | Israel | Piccolo composite | Four-point bending, static torsion of the nail and bending fatigue; debris generated at the connection between the CF-PEEK plate and titanium alloy screws | 4-point bending stress of the tibial nail and dynamic and distal radius plates met acceptance criteria (similar to other commercially used nails). | CFR-PEEK OPTIMA passed the tests meeting the acceptable criteria and behaving similar to other commercial nails and plates | (+) |
| Maharaj, G (1994) | North America | CFR-PEEK in the femoral component of a total hip arthroplasty | Wear debris characterization | Amount of debris generated is relatively small compared to UHMWPE. | Indicates a stable, well-fixed interface. | (+/−) |
| Bruner, HJ (2010) | North America - | Titanium 6 x 45-mm pedicle screws (EXPEDIUM, DePuy Spine) couple with 5.5-mm rods made of either titanium, PEEK, or CFR-PEEK. | Biomechanical loading: | No statistically significant differences between constructs. | CFR-PEEK rods have similar stiffness to PEEK and titanium alloy constructs in single-cycle, | (+/−) |
| Grupp, TM (2010) | Germany | Univariation F fixed bearing unicom-partmental knee design compared to experimental gliding surfaces made of CFR-PEEK pitch and CFR-PEEK PAN. | CFR-PEEK Pitch instead of polyethylene led to a significant reduction of cumulative wear but not substantially different from the wear rate of the clinical reference. | CFR-PEEK-PAN is unsuitable as a bearing material for fixed bearing knee articulations with low congruency. | (+/−) | |
| Wang, A (1999) | North America | CFR-PEEK as bearing surfaces for total joint replacements (hip and knee) | Wear tests | Knee: CFR-PEEK composites exhibited significant higher wear rates than UHMWPE. | CFR-PEEK composites offer a far superior wear resistance over UHMWPE in the hip joint, but it not recommended for total knee replacements. | Hip (+) |
| Brantigan, JW (1993) | North America | CFR-PEEK implant cage | Clinical and radiographic assessment | Successful radiographic fusion in all cases. | The clinical and fusion results represent the justification for a larger formal study of the safety and efficacy of the device. | (+) |
| Rousseau, MA (2007) | France | CFR-PEEK interbody cage at the lumbar spine | Physical examination using the classification of Brantigan and Steffee | Clinical outcomes were excellent or good in 49 of 57 patients. | Lumbar circumferential arthrodesis using CFR-PEEK cages provided good clinical results and fusion rate, but lordosis correction was not maintained at follow-up. | (+) |
| Nakahara, I (2012) | Japan | CFR-PEEK hip stem | Radiographic and histologic assessment | CFR-PEEK stems remained intact without any evidence of delamination, microfracture, or particulate migration in appearance | The lower stiffness of the CFR-PEEK has a positive effect on suppression of the bone resorption due to stress shielding. | (+) |
| Pace, N (2008) | Italy | CFR-PEEK acetabular cup | Clinical assessment | Mean preoperative HHS improved from 52 to 90 points. | The presented findings show the short-term efficacy of the implant, but longer follow-ups and a larger number of patients are needed. | (+) |
| Heary, RF (2011) | North America | CFR-PEEK cage (DePuy Spine) | Clinical examination (Odom criteria) and plain radiographs. | 39 (97.5%) of patients had solid fusions at a mean follow-up of 43 months. | CFR-PEEK cages are effective for achieving thoracolumbar fusion. | (+) |
Reports that evaluated CFR-PEEK as an implant material.
| FIRST AUTHOR (YEAR) | LOCATION | MATERIALS ASSESSED | TESTS USED | RESULTS OF THE TEST (TECHNICAL DATA) | SAFETY (CONCLUSION) | OUTCOME |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lowe, D (2013) | North America | 1. Femoral Socket | PEEK Absorber module evaluated under displacement controlled static loading conditions to failure | Absorber Strength: PASS: All strengths were almost an order of magnitude more than 60 lbf. | All applicable acceptance criteria have been met as demonstrated by testing static loading to failure. | (+) |
| Lowe, D (2013) | North America | 1. PEEK Absorber Piston | In vitro fatigue durability of the absorber portion of the KineSpring PEEK System was assessed under displacement controlled, uniaxial dynamic loading conditions | Durability: PASS: No evidence of fracture, permanent deformation, or loss in absorber functionality was identified. | All applicable acceptance criteria have been met, as demonstrated by testing to 11,391,551 cycles with a target maximum compression of 4.5 mm | (+) |
| Arthrex Medizinische Instrumente GmbH (2013) | Germany | 1. PEEKPower HTO Plate | Preclinical and dynamic compression bending tests | The titanium plates demonstrated an early functional failure by fracturing of the plate at the superior screw hole close to the resection line while the PEEK-carbon composite plate specimens failed due to distal screw back outs. | The results of this study specified the need for an appropriate ratio between rigidity and load bearing over a defined number of cycles for a long-term functioning implant | (+) |