| Literature DB >> 34046400 |
Marion Etchebarne1,2, Jean-Christophe Fricain1,3, Halima Kerdjoudj4,5, Roberta Di Pietro6,7, Susanne Wolbank8,9, Florelle Gindraux10,11, Mathilde Fenelon1,3.
Abstract
Thanks to their biological properties, amniotic membrane (AM), and its derivatives are considered as an attractive reservoir of stem cells and biological scaffolds for bone regenerative medicine. The objective of this systematic review was to assess the benefit of using AM and amniotic membrane-derived products for bone regeneration. An electronic search of the MEDLINE-Pubmed database and the Scopus database was carried out and the selection of articles was performed following PRISMA guidelines. This systematic review included 42 articles taking into consideration the studies in which AM, amniotic-derived epithelial cells (AECs), and amniotic mesenchymal stromal cells (AMSCs) show promising results for bone regeneration in animal models. Moreover, this review also presents some commercialized products derived from AM and discusses their application modalities. Finally, AM therapeutic benefit is highlighted in the reported clinical studies. This study is the first one to systematically review the therapeutic benefits of AM and amniotic membrane-derived products for bone defect healing. The AM is a promising alternative to the commercially available membranes used for guided bone regeneration. Additionally, AECs and AMSCs associated with an appropriate scaffold may also be ideal candidates for tissue engineering strategies applied to bone healing. Here, we summarized these findings and highlighted the relevance of these different products for bone regeneration.Entities:
Keywords: amniotic epithelial cells; amniotic membrane; amniotic mesenchymal stromal cells; bone; bone tissue engineering; natural scaffold; regenerative medicine
Year: 2021 PMID: 34046400 PMCID: PMC8144457 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2021.661332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Figure 1Flow diagram of the screened publications.
AM usage strategies to treat bone defects in preclinical and clinical studies.
| Gomes et al. ( | Human | Lyophilized | 2 | On the base and over the defect | Alone or combined with a bone substitute |
| Samandari et al. ( | Human | Cryopreserved | 1 | Over the defect | Alone |
| Li et al. ( | Human | Decellularized + Lyophilized | 8 | Over the defect | Covering a bone substitute |
| Fénelon et al. ( | Human | Fresh or Cryopreserved | 1 | Over the defect | Alone |
| Cryopreserved | 1 | Over the defect | Covering a bone substitute | ||
| Tang et al. ( | Human | De-epithelialized + Lyophilized | 1 | Over the defect | Alone |
| Ghanmi et al. ( | Human | Fresh | 1 | Over the defect | Alone |
| 3 | Into the defect | ||||
| Khalil and Melek ( | Human | Lyophilized | 1 | Into the defect | Alone |
| Koushaei et al. ( | Human | Cryopreserved | 1 | Over the defect | Alone |
| Fenelon et al. ( | Human | Fresh/or Cryopreserved/or Lyophilized/or Decellularized + Lyophilized | 1 | Over the defect | Alone |
| Moosavi et al. ( | Human | Fresh | 1 | Over the defect | Alone or covering a bone substitute |
| Li W. et al. ( | Human | Decellularized | 2 | Over the defect | Alone or combined with a polymer |
| Sar et al. ( | Human | Cryopreserved | 1 | Over the defect | Alone |
| Tsugawa et al. ( | Human | De-epithelialized | 1 | Over the defect | Alone or seeded with cells |
| Semyari et al. ( | Rabbit | Decellularized | 1 | Over the defect | Alone or seeded with cells |
| Amer et al. ( | Dog | Cryopreserved | 1 | Into the defect | Alone or seeded with cells |
| Wu et al. ( | Human | De-epithelialized | 1 | Into the defect | Alone or seeded with cells |
| Akazawa et al. ( | Human | Decellularized | 1 | Over the defect | Seeded with cells |
| Takizawa et al. ( | Human | De-epithelialized | 1 | Into the defect | Seeded with cells |
| Sabouri et al. ( | Human | Decellularized | 1 | Over the defect | Alone or seeded with cells |
| Dziedzic et al. ( | Human | Decellularized | 4 | Into the defect | Alone or seeded with cells |
| Kothiwale et al. ( | Human | Lyophilized | 1 | Over the defect | Covering a bone substitute |
| Kiany and Moloudi ( | Human | Lyophilized | 2 | Over the defect | Covering a bone substitute |
| Kumar et al. ( | Human | Lyophilized | 1 | Over the defect | Covering a bone substitute |
| Sali and Pauline George ( | Human | Lyophilized | 1 | Over the defect | Covering a bone substitute |
| Pajnigara et al. ( | Human | Lyophilized | 1 | Over the defect | Covering a bone substitute |
| Kaur and Bathla ( | Human | Lyophilized | 1 | Over the defect | Covering a PRF membrane |
| Akhlaghi et al. ( | Human | Decellularized + Lyophilized | 1 | Over the defect | Covering a bone substitute |
PRF, platelet-rich fibrin.
Pre-clinical studies using AM alone and/or combined with a bone substitute for bone regeneration.
| Laurent et al. ( | Mice (No. = 3) | Subcutaneous implantation (ectopic model) | Histology | No ectopic bone formation was observed in any of the tested conditions for both experimentations after 1, 2, 4, and 8 weeks. | |
| Samandari et al. ( | Dog (No. = 20) | Mucoperiosteal defect in jaw7 × 5 cm2 | 1) Orabase® dressing | Histology | AM significantly increased bone remodeling after 2, 8, and 12 weeks. |
| Tang et al. ( | Rat (No. = 15) | Femoral defect2.2 × 2.5 mm | 1) Empty defect | HistologyQuantitative real-time PCR | AM significantly increased bone formation after 15 and 30 days. |
| Koushaei et al. ( | Dog (No. = 6, No. = 5, and No. = 8) | Tibial defectDiameter: 16 mm | 1) Empty defect | Histology | AM significantly increased bone formation compared to the defect left empty after 6 and 12 weeks. No significant differences between collagen membrane and the defect left empty. |
| Ghanmi et al. ( | Rabbit (No. = 5) | Tibial segmental defect20 mm | 1) Empty defect (periosteum +) | 2D X-rays3D X-raysHistology | AM implanted over the defect group increased significantly bone regeneration compared to groups 1 and 4 after 4 and 8 weeks. Bone healing was even more promoted by the natural periosteum. |
| Khalil and Melek ( | Rabbit (No. = 6) | Femoral defect4 × 5 mm | 1) Empty defect | Histology | Woven bone was observed as early as the second week in the empty defect, whereas AM defect was filled by fibrous tissue and AM. |
| Sar et al. ( | Rat (No. = 7) | Tibial defectShaft fracture | 1) Fracture fixation | 2D X-raysHistology | AM increased significantly bone formation and callus diameters after 3rd and 6th weeks. |
| Fénelon et al. ( | Mice (No. = 8) | Calvarial defectDiameter: 3.3 mm | |||
| 2D X-raysHistology | Cryopreserved AM with mesenchymal side in contact with the defect increased significantly bone formation after 8 weeks. No significant differences between HA group, HA + AM group and HA + collagen membrane group after 6 weeks. | ||||
| Gomes et al. ( | Rabbit (No. = 3) | Calvarial defect10 × 5 mm | 1) AM | Histology | Newly formed bone was observed in both groups after 30 days. Mature bone tissue was observed in both groups after 120 days. |
| Li et al. ( | Rat (No. = 6) | Tibial defect2 × 2 × 2.5 mm | 1) No defect | 2D X-rays3D X-raysHistology | The gray level of the collagen and the AM groups were significantly higher than Bio-oss® group after 6 weeks. No significant differences were found between the AM group and the no defect group. |
| Moosavi et al. ( | Rabbit (No. = 10) | Radius segmental defect15 mm | 1) Empty defect | 2D X-raysHistology | Bone formation was observed when AM was implanted over the defect whereas group 1 and 2 showed no bone compared to the three other groups after 8 weeks. |
| Li W. et al. ( | Rat (No. = 5) | Cleft palate defect1.3 × 7 mm | 1) No surgery | Maxillary second molar widths3D X-raysHistology | AM improved significantly bone healing but AM-POC allowed a complete closure of palate cleft and a significantly better palate growth than AM alone after 2 months. |
| Fenelon et al. ( | Mice (No. = 6) | Femoral defectDiameter: 1.3 mm | 1) Empty defect | 3D X-raysHistology | Covering the defect with lyophilized or decellularized and lyophilized AM significantly enhanced early bone formation. One month after the surgery, the decellularized and lyophilized AM was the only membrane which significantly increased bone formation compared to the defect left empty. |
ADDM, autogenous demineralized dentin matrix; AM, amniotic membrane; Cryo, cryopreserved; DBM, demineralized bone matrix; EPI, epithelial side; HA, Hydro Hydroxyapatite; MBCP, synthetic biphasic calcium phosphate bone substitute; MES, Mesenchymal side; POC, poly(1,8-octamethylene-citrate).
Pre-clinical studies using AM seeded with stromal cells to promote bone regeneration.
| Tsugawa et al. ( | Mice (No. = 3, 4, 5, and 4) | Calvarial defect4.6 mm diameter | KUSA-A1 cell line ( | 1) Empty defect | Up to 20 h | 3D X-RayHistology | AM seeded with KUSA-A1 significantly increased bone formation compared to other conditions after 5 weeks. |
| Semyari et al. ( | Rabbit (No. = 1) | Calvarial defect8 mm diameter | Rabbit ADMSC ( | 1) AM | 6 h | Histology | All seeded scaffolds boosted significantly bone regeneration compared to scaffolds alone after 4 weeks whereas no significant difference was observed after 8 weeks. |
| Amer et al. ( | Dog (No. = 3) | Segmental femoral defectLength: 2 cm | Dog BMSC ( | 1) Empty defect | 1 week | 2D X-rayHistology | AM and AM-BMSCs increased bone healing compared to the empty defect after 6, 12, and 24 weeks. |
| Wu et al. ( | Rat (No. = 5) | Alveolar defectSize: 2.6 × 2.0 × 2.0 mm | Human ADSC ( | 1) Matrigel®- PBS | 5 days | 3D X-Ray | AM and seeded AM significantly induced more bone formation than the two other groups after 29 days without significant difference between AM and seeded AM. |
| Akazawa et al. ( | Mice (No. = 10) | Calvarial defect3.75 mm diameter | Human PDLSC and OB( | 1) AM-PDLSC | 5–18 h | Histology3D X-Ray | AM-PDLSC-OB significantly enhanced bone regeneration compared to AM seeded with one cell type after 2, 4, and 8 weeks. |
| Takizawa et al. ( | Mice (No.: NS) | Subcutaneous implantation | Human DPSCs ( | 1) AM-DPSCs in osteogenic medium | 4 weeks | Histology2D X-ray | AM-hDPSCs in osteogenic medium expressed more bone feature than hAM-hDPSCs in control medium on ectopic site after 4 weeks. |
| Takizawa et al. ( | Rat (No. = 3, 5, and 11) | Alveolar defectSize: NS | Human DPSCs ( | 1) Empty defect | 4 weeks | 3D X-Ray | Osteodifferentiated hDPSCs seeded on AM increased significantly alveolar bone formation after 4 weeks. |
| Sabouri et al. ( | Rat (No. = 4) | Calvarial defect6 mm diameter | Human ADSC ( | 1) Empty defect | NS | Histology3D X-Ray | Both seeded scaffolds significantly enhanced bone regeneration compared to scaffolds alone after 4 and 8 weeks. The best results were achieved by the MAM-seeded scaffold. |
| Dziedzic et al. ( | Rat (No. = 5) | Calvarial defect8 mm diameter | Rat ADSC ( | 1) Empty defect | 7 days | Histology3D X-Ray | AM-ADSC significantly enhanced bone regeneration compared to the empty defect after 12 weeks. No significant difference between AM and AM-ADSC. |
ADMSC, adipose-derived mesenchymal stromal cells; ADSC, adipose-derived stromal cells; AM, amniotic membrane; BMSC, bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells; DAM, decellularized amniotic membrane; DPSCs, dental pulp-derived cells; KUSA-A1, mouse bone marrow derived stromal cells; MAM, mineralized amniotic membrane; NS, not specified; OB, calvarial osteoblasts; PBS, phosphate-buffered saline; PDLSC, periodontal ligament stem cells; PLGA, poly lactic-co-glycolic acid.
Clinical studies using amniotic membrane to guide bone regeneration.
| Kothiwale et al. ( | No. = 10 | Periodontal furcation defect (Grade II) | 1) DFDBA + AM | Measurement of CAL and PPD | Significant improvement of parameters from baseline to 9 months in both groups without significant differences between groups. |
| Kiany and Moloudi ( | No. = 10 | Periodontal pockets | 1) Bio-oss®+ AM | Measurement of CAL, PPD, GR, and probing bone | Significant improvement of parameters from baseline to 6 months in both groups. No significant differences between the two groups after 6 months. |
| Kumar et al. ( | No. = 27 | Periodontal pockets | 1) G-graft® | Measurement of CAL, PPD, and inflammatory | AM significantly increased bone fill and CAL after 6 months. |
| Sali and Pauline George ( | No. = 10 | Periodontal pockets | 1) DFDBA | Measurement of CAL, PPD, and GR | Significant improvement of parameters from baseline to 12 months in both groups. No significant differences between the two groups at 12 months. |
| Pajnigara et al. ( | No. = 20 | Periodontal furcation defect (Grade II) | 1) DFDBA | Measurement of CAL, PPD, GR, and horizontal probing depth | AM increased significantly bone fill and CAL at 6 months. AM reduced significantly PPD and GR at 6 months. |
| Kaur and Bathla ( | No. = 15 | Periodontal furcation defect (Grade II) | 1) PRF | Measurement of CAL and PPD | AM significantly increased bone fill and CAL at 6 months. AM significantly reduced PPD at 6 months. |
| Akhlaghi et al. ( | No. = 9 | Jaw-bone defect | 1) NBBM+ bone autograft + AM | 3D RadiographyHistology | The mean increase in bone width was significantly greater in the AM + BFSCs group at 5 months. |
AM, amniotic membrane; BFSCs, buccal fat pad-derived stromal cells; CAL, clinical attachment level; DFDBA, demineralized freeze dried bone allograft; GR, gingival recession; NBBM, natural bovine bone mineral; PPD, probing pocket depth; PRF, platelet-rich fibrin.
Pre-clinical studies using amniotic membrane derivated stromal cells for bone regeneration.
| Mattioli et al. ( | Sheep (No. = 2) | Tibial defectDiameter: 3 mm | oAECs (2 × 106 cells) | Fibrin glue (Tissuecol) (no culture) | 1) Tissuecol | Histology | Bone deposition was only observed in oAECs-transplanted defects after 45 days. |
| Tsuno et al. ( | Rat (No. = 3) | Calvarial defectDiameter: 5 mm | hAMSCs (1 × 107 cells/mL) | β-TCP ( | 1) β-TCP | Histology | hAMSCs seeded scaffold showed immature bone deposition at 6 weeks and mature bone areas at 12 weeks. |
| Barboni et al. ( | Sheep (No. = 3) | Sinus augmentation | oAECs (1 × 106 cells) | HA/β-TCP ( | 1) HA/β-TCP | Micro-CTHistology | oAECs seeded scaffold displayed significant earlier bone formation and maturation at 45 days and induced significantly more bone deposition at 90 days. |
| Chen et al. ( | Mice (No. = 6) | Subcutaneous | hAMSCs (5 × 104 cells/mL) | CultiSpher S: Porcine gelatin microcarriers ( | 1) CultiSpher S+ hAMSCs (no perfusion) | Micro-CTHistology | Perfusion culture system increased mineralized matrix after 6 and 12 weeks Perfusion significantly enhanced vessel density. |
| Jiawen et al. ( | Rat (No. = 4) | Alveolar defectSize: NS | hAECs (1.5 × 106) | β-TCP ( | 1) β-TCP | Micro-CTHistology | hAECs seeded scaffold significantly increased bone formation at 4 and 8 weeks postoperatively. hAECs seeded scaffold showed a significantly delayed macrophage response. |
| Si et al. ( | Mice (No. = 3) | Subcutaneous | hAECs (1.5 × 106) | β-TCP ( | 1) β-TCP | HistologyImmunohisto-chemistry | No sign of mineralization in all groups 1 month after implantation. OPN and OCN were expressed at a higher level with the seeded scaffolds. |
| Rameshbabu et al. ( | Rabbit (No. = 5) | Osteochondral defectDiameter: 4 mmDeep: 5 mm | hAMSCs (NS) | PEMS (7 days) | 1) Empty defect | Histology | hAMSCs seeded scaffold seemed to induce higher bone formation and osteochondral regeneration 60 days post-implantation. |
| Jiang et al. ( | Rabbit (No. = 3) | Calvarial defectDiameter: 10 mm | hAMSCs (5 × 106 cells/mL) | Fibrinogen solution (NS) | 1) Fibrin gel | Micro-CTHistologySequential fluorescent labeling | Bone regeneration was significantly higher in groups 3 and 4 after 4 and 12weeks. Fluorescent labeling was significantly higher in group 4 after 3, 6, and 9 weeks. Vessels-like structure are significantly higher in presence of hAMSCs. |
| Li et al. ( | Rat (No. = 3) | Calvarial defectDiameter: 3 mm | hAMSCs (1 × 106 cells/mL) | Fibrin (NS) | 1) Fibrin | Micro-CTHistology | hAMSCs seeded scaffold induced significantly higher bone formation after 8 weeks. |
| Datta et al. ( | Rabbit (No. = NS) | Tibial defectDiameter: 2.5 mmDeep: 2 mm | hAMSCs (1 × 106 cells/mL) | Hydrogel hybride (DBM + chitosan) | 1) Empty defect | Micro-CTHistology | Bone regeneration was significantly higher using hydrogel + hAMSCs after 4 and 8 weeks. hAMSCs seeded scaffold showed more vascular structure after 4 weeks compared to the two other groups. |
β-TCP, β-tricalcium phosphate; DBM, demineralized bone matrix; HA, hydroxyapatite; hAECs, human amniotic epithelial cells; hAMSCs, human amniotic mesenchymal stromal cells; NS, Not specified; oAECs, ovine amniotic epithelial cells; OCN, osteocalcin; OPN, osteopontin; PEMS, Placenta-derived Extracellular Matrix Sponge.
Use of commercialized AM-derived products for bone regeneration.
| Starecki et al. ( | Rat (No. = 14) | Segmental femoral defect8 mm | Liquid suspension | 1) Empty defect | 2D X-Ray Histology | No significant differences in bone formation between bone graft alone and bone graft mixed with NuCel®after 6 weeks. |
| Konofaos et al. ( | Rat (No. = 5) | Calvarial defect10-mm diameter | Injectable gel | 1) DBM | Micro-CT Histology | Micro-CT: No significant differences in bone formation between both groups after 4 weeks. Histology: A significantly higher mean percent of new bone in the defect for the DBM group as compared with the DBM + AmnioMTM group after 4 weeks. |
| Nunley et al. ( | Human (No. = 72) | Lumbar interbody fusions | Liquid suspension | 1) Bone allograft mixed with NuCel® | 2D X-ray Micro-CT | Allograft + NuCel® demonstrated high fusion rates after a minimum of 12 months post-operation. |
| Burdette et al. ( | Rat (No. = 5) | Calvarial defect8-mm diameter | Liquid suspension | 1) Collagen sponge | Micro-CT Histology | No significant differences in bone volume formation between both groups. Secretome significantly enhanced angiogenesis after 4 weeks and bone density after 4 and 12 weeks. |
DBM, demineralized bone matrix.
Strategies suggestion to perform a study on AM or AM derived products in the field of bone regeneration.
| AM as a membrane for GBR procedure | Lyophilization or Decellularization + Lyophilization of AM | Over the defectOne layer | Alone or associated with a bone substitute | 1. Defect | - Orthotopic bone regeneration supported by quantitative analysis of 3D-Radiography and histological analysis |
| AM as a scaffold for bone tissue engineering construct | Decellularization of AM | Inside or over the defect | Seeded with human mesenchymal stromal cells | 1- Defect | |
| AM cells-based strategies (AECs or AMSCs) for bone tissue engineering construct | AM-cells cultured in basal or osteogenic medium | Inside the defect | Seeded on a bone substitute | 1- Defect |
hADSCs, human adipose stromal cells; hBMSCs, human bone marrow stromal cells; GBR, guided bone regeneration.