Polycaprolactone-based scaffold plus recombinant human bone morphogenic protein rhBMP-2) in a sheep thoracic spine fusion model


Autoria(s): Yong, Mostyn; Adam, Clayton J.; Askin, Geoffrey N.; Labrom, Robert D.; Domingos, Marco; Bartolo, Paulo J.; Melchels, Ferry P.W.; Hutmacher, Dietmar
Contribuinte(s)

Feichtinger, Hans Georg

Pirraco, Rogerio P.

Mirmalek-Sani, Sayed-Hadi

Zhiyong, Zhang

Data(s)

05/09/2012

Resumo

Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis is a complex three dimensional deformity affecting 2-3% of the general population. The resulting spinal deformity consists of coronal curvature, hypokyphosis of the thoracic spine and vertebral rotation in the axial plane with posterior elements turned into the curve concavity. The potential for curve progression is heightened during the adolescent growth spurt. Success of scoliosis deformity correction depends on solid bony fusion between adjacent vertebrae after the intervertebral (IV) discs have been surgically cleared and the disc spaces filled with graft material. Recently a bioactive and resorbable scaffold fabricated from medical grade polycaprolactone has been developed for bone regeneration at load bearing sites. Combined with rhBMP-2, this has been shown to be successful in acting as a bone graft substitute in a porcine lumbar interbody fusion model when compared to autologous bone graft alone. The study aimed to establish a large animal thoracic spine interbody fusion model, develop spine biodegradable scaffolds (PCL) in combination with biologics (rhBMP-2) and to establish a platform for research into spine tissue engineering constructs. Preliminary results demonstrate higher grades of radiologically evident bony fusion across all levels when comparing fusion scores between the 3 and 6 month postop groups at the PCL CaP coated scaffold level, which is observed to be a similar grade to autograft, while no fusion is seen at the scaffold only level. Results to date suggest that the combination of rhBMP-2 and scaffold engineering actively promotes bone formation, laying the basis of a viable tissue engineered constructs.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/57379/

Publicador

3rd Termis World Congress Conference Programme

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/57379/1/ePrints_Termis_2012_abstract.pdf

Yong, Mostyn, Adam, Clayton J., Askin, Geoffrey N., Labrom, Robert D., Domingos, Marco, Bartolo, Paulo J., Melchels, Ferry P.W., & Hutmacher, Dietmar (2012) Polycaprolactone-based scaffold plus recombinant human bone morphogenic protein rhBMP-2) in a sheep thoracic spine fusion model. In Feichtinger, Hans Georg, Pirraco, Rogerio P., Mirmalek-Sani, Sayed-Hadi, & Zhiyong, Zhang (Eds.) 3rd Termis World Congress 2012, 5-8 September 2012, Vienna, Austria. (Unpublished)

Direitos

Copyright 2012 The Authors

Fonte

School of Chemistry, Physics & Mechanical Engineering; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #090302 Biomechanical Engineering #090304 Medical Devices #Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis #interbody fusion #anterior scoliosis surgery #ovine thoracic spine #large animal model #resorbable scaffold #BMP-2
Tipo

Conference Item