| Literature DB >> 35837344 |
Emma Steijvers1, Armaan Ghei1, Zhidao Xia1.
Abstract
Bone grafts have traditionally come from four sources: the patients' own tissue (autograft), tissue from a living or cadaveric human donor (allograft), animal donors (xenograft) and synthetic artificial biomaterials (ceramics, cement, polymers, and metal). However, all of these have advantages and drawbacks. The most commercially successful bone grafts so far are allografts, which hold 57% of the current bone graft market; however, disease transmission and scarcity are still significant drawbacks limiting their use. Tissue-engineered grafts have great potential, in which human stem cells and synthetical biomaterials are combined to produce bone-like tissue in vitro, but this is yet to be approved for widespread clinical practice. It is hypothesised that artificial bone allografts can be mass-manufactured to replace conventional bone allografts through refined bone tissue engineering prior to decellularisation. This review article aims to review current literature on (1) conventional bone allograft preparation; (2) bone tissue engineering including the use of synthetic biomaterials as bone graft substitute scaffolds, combined with osteogenic stem cells in vitro; (3) potential artificial allograft manufacturing processes, including mass production of engineered bone tissue, osteogenic enhancement, decellularisation, sterilisation and safety assurance for regulatory approval. From these assessments, a practical route map for mass production of artificial allografts for clinical use is proposed.Entities:
Keywords: biomaterials; bone graft; decellularisation; stem cells; tissue engineering
Year: 2022 PMID: 35837344 PMCID: PMC9255790 DOI: 10.12336/biomatertransl.2022.01.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomater Transl ISSN: 2096-112X
Figure 1The conventional manufacturing processes and clinical applications of bone allografts. 3D: three-dimensional; UV: ultraviolet.
Allograft bone cleaning processes
| Bone clean | Methods/materials | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Physical process | Sonication | U.S. Patent No. 5,797,871 |
| Pressurised flow | U.S. Patent No 5,513,662 | |
| High pressure washing with agitation and liquid stream | U.S. Patent No. 5,333,625 | |
| Agitation/shaker | the University of Miami Tissue Bank | |
| Oscillating atmospheric pressure | U.S. Patent No. 6,652,818 | |
| Chemical process | Ethanol | KR101272958B1 |
| Polyoxyethylene-23 lauryl ether | Allowash XG® | |
| (n-Butyl) phosphate, betadyne, TritonX-100/TNBP | BioCleanse® | |
| 0.5% to 5% chlorhexidine gluconate | U.S. Patent No. 10,004,819 | |
| Sodium hypochlorite and hydrogen peroxide | U.S. Patent No. 7,507,254 | |
| Combinational | Sonication + detergent; water and alcohol | U.S. Patent application 20080188939 |
| Supercritical fluid | U.S. Patent No. 5,725,579 | |
| Explosive decompression | U.S. Patent No. 5,288,462 |
Decellularisation methods for bone grafts*
| Method | Advantages | Drawbacks | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chemical | SDS | Complete removal of cellular components | Damages ECM: |
| Triton TnBP | Good preservation of the ECM | Poor cell removal efficiency | |
| Enzymatic | DNAse | • Not damaging to the ECM | Difficult to wash off tissues. Works only in combination with treatment disrupting cell membranes |
| Trypsin | Efficient cell surface removal | Prolonged exposure can disrupt ECM | |
| EDTA | Disrupts cell adhesion to ECM | Inefficient alone, often combined with trypsin | |
| Mechanical | Freeze/thaw | Efficient disruption of cell membranes | Does not efficiently remove cellular components & can damage ECM |
| Pressure | Increases chemical exposure and debris removal in tissues | High pressures can affect ECM integrity |
Note: *Adapted from Blaudez et al.[26] DNAse: deoxyribonuclease; ECM: extracellular matrix; EDTA: ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid;
SDS: sodium dodecyl sulfate; TnBP: tri-n-butyl phosphate.
Commercial cellular bone matrices and their basic characteristics*
| Graft name | Vendor | Components | Cell count | Cell viability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trinity ELITE | Orthofix Medical | Cancellous bone containing viable cells and demineralised bone | ≥ 500000 cells/mL, of which > 100000 cells/mL are osteogenic cells | ≥ 70% |
| Vivigen | DePuy Synthes | Corticocancellous chips containing lineage-committed bone cells and demineralised bone particulate | > 16000 cells/mL | 96% |
| Cellentra | Zimmer-Biomet | Cancellous bone containing viable cells and demineralised cortical bone | ≥ 250000 cells/mL in the cancellous tissue | ≥ 70% |
| Osteocel Pro | NuVasive | Cryopreserved viable cancellous matrix and ground demineralised bone matrix | Average of 3 million cells/mL | > 85% on average |
| Bio4 | Stryker | A cryopreserved viable bone matrix product that contains native matrix, endogenous osteoblasts and mesenchymal stem cells, and osteoinductive and angiogenic growth factors | On average, ≥ 600000 cells/mL | ≥ 70% |
| Map3 | RTI Surgical | Cortical cancellous bone chips, demineralised bone matrix and multipotent adult progenitor cell-class cells | ≥ 50000 viable cells/mL of implant | Not available |
| Allostem | Allosource | Allogenic adult adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells combined with partially demineralised allograft bone. | 66255 viable cells/mL | Not available |
Note: *Adapted from Lin et al.[54] and Skovrlj et al.[55]
Commercial bone grafts and their basic characteristics*
| Brand Name | Composition | Manufacturer | Price | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HA, HA/TCP, TCP | Edbone | Implant synthetic bone - 75% hydroxyapatite & 25% β-tricalcium phosphate - Straumann/Megagen/Nobelbiocare/Dio | Ethoss Regeneration Ltd. | 0.5 g, £39.86 |
| BiceraTM | Composed of HAP (60%) and β-tricalcium phosphate (40%) bioceramic which is similar to bone mineral | Hannox International Corporation | n.a. | |
| MASTERGRAFT® | β-Tricalcium phosphate (85%) and hydroxyapatite (15%) | Medtronic Sofamor Danek USA, Inc. | n.a. | |
| Syntoss | Dental implant synthetic bone graft β-tricalcium phosphate material block | Dental solution Israel | £46.80 | |
| Kuraray | Bone graft materials (synthetic bone substitute, bioresorbable bone graft substitute β-tricalcium phosphate) | Biomaterial Department Japan | n.a. | |
| chronOS® | A synthetic β-tricalcium phosphate bone void filler which is radiopaque, resorbable and osteoconductive | DePuy Synthes | n.a | |
| G Graft | Bone graft material hydroxyapatite with collagen implant dental | Rohit Enterprises, India | £32.87/mL | |
| Ostoden | Synthetic calcium phosphate based bone graft device | Ammdent | £22.14 | |
| MBCP® | Synthetic bone graft substitute bioactive calcium phosphate | Biomatlante SAS, France | n.a | |
| Silicated calcium phosphate | Osteo3 | A synthetic bone graft substitute, silicated calcium phosphate | OssDsign | n.a. |
| ActifuseTM | Silicated calcium phosphate | ApaTech Limited | n.a | |
| Coral Corebone | Bio-active coral core bone graft sterile granules | Global Dental Transfer, Israel | n.a | |
| BoneMedik | A porous, interconnected coral structure which is compatible with human bone structure | Meta Biomed Co. Ltd. | n.a. | |
| Xenograft, Bovine | Zenoss | Bovine bone graft material in blocks | Dental solution Israel | £56.40 |
| OSTEONTM II | Bone void filler, synthetic bone graft + collagen type 1 (bovine) | Genoss | 0.25g/£57.28 | |
| Biotechmat | Dental bone graft - Xenograft (Bovine) - similar to Bioss | Technology in Biomaterials | £62.02 | |
| Natural | Bio-Oss | Dental Bio Oss collagen bone graft material, natural bone grafting materials | Geistlich UK | £154.51 |
Note: HAP: hydroxyapatite; n.a.: not applicable; TCP: β-tricalcium phosphate.
Figure 2The number of journal article publications with the keywords ‘mesenchymal stem cells’ in their titles between 2000-2021 in PubMed index.
Figure 4The number of clinical trials registered in the ClinicalTrials.gov with the keywords ‘mesenchymal stem cells’ in the title.
Figure 3The US patents granted with the keywords ‘mesenchymal stem cells’ in the title.
Mesenchymal stem cell products with regulatory approval
| Mesenchymal stem cell product (company) | Approval granted (year) | Indication | Product type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Queencell (Anterogen Co. Ltd.) | South Korea (2010) | Subcutaneous tissue defects | Autologous human AT-MSC |
| Cellgram-AMI (Pharmicell Co. Ltd.) | South Korea (2011) | Acute myocardial infarction | Autologous human BM-MSC |
| Cartistem (Medipost Co. Ltd.) | South Korea (2012) | Knee articular cartilage defects | Allogeneic human UC-MSC |
| Cupistem (Anterogen Co. Ltd.) | South Korea (2012) | Crohn’s fistula | Autologous human BM-MSC |
| Prochymal, remestemcel-L (Osiris Therapeutics Inc., Mesoblast Ltd.) | Canada (2012) New Zealand (2012) | Graft versus host disease | Allogeneic human BM-MSC |
| Neuronata-R (Corestem Inc.) | South Korea (2014) | Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis | Autologous human BM-MSC |
| Temcell HS (JCR Pharmaceuticals) | Japan (2015) | Graft versus host disease | Allogeneic human BM-MSC |
| Stempeucel (Stempeutics Research PVT) | India (2016) | Critical limb ischemia | Allogeneic human BM-MSC |
| Alofisel (TiGenix NV/Takeda) | Europe (2018) | Complex perianal fistulas in Crohn’s disease | Allogeneic human AT-MSC |
| Stemirac (Nipro Corp) | Japan (2018) | Spinal cord injury | Autologous human BM-MSC |
Note: Data are from Wright et al.,[62] Pereira Chilima et al.[63] and Levy et al.[64] AT-MSC: adipose tissue mesenchymal stem cells; BMMSC: bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells.
Figure 5The proposed manufacturing process. Scaffold is produced, then seeded with cells. When these cells osteogenically differentiate they will express growth factors such as BMP, which will remain on the scaffold after decellularisa-tion. 3D: three-dimensional; BMP: bone morphogenic proteins.