Functionalization of deproteinized bovine bone with a coating-incorporated depot of BMP-2 renders the material efficienctly osteoinductive and suppresses foreign-body reactivity

Authors
Publication date 2011
Journal Bone
Volume | Issue number 49 | 6
Pages (from-to) 1323-1330
Organisations
  • Faculty of Dentistry (ACTA)
Abstract
The repair of critical-sized bony defects remains a challenge in the fields of implantology, maxillofacial surgery and orthopaedics. As an alternative bone-defect filler to autologous bone grafts, deproteinized bovine bone (DBB) is highly osteoconductive and clinically now widely used. However, this product suffers from the disadvantage of not being intrinsically osteoinductive. In the present study, this property was conferred by coating DBB with a layer of calcium phosphate into which bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP-2) was incorporated. Granules of DBB bearing a coating-incorporated depot of BMP-2 — together with the appropriate controls (DBB bearing a coating but no BMP-2; uncoated DBB bearing adsorbed BMP-2; uncoated DBB bearing no BMP-2) — were implanted subcutaneously in rats. Five weeks later, the implants were withdrawn for a histomorphometric analysis of the volume densities of (i) bone, (ii) bone marrow, (iii) foreign-body giant cells and (iv) fibrous capsular tissue. Parameters (i) and (ii) were highest, whilst parameters (iii) and (iv) were lowest in association with DBB bearing a coating-incorporated depot of BMP-2. Hence, this mode of functionalization not only confers DBB with the property of osteoinductivity but also improves its biocompatibility — thus dually enhancing its clinical potential in the repair of bony defects.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bone.2011.09.046
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