Long term outcomes of biomaterial-mediated repair of focal cartilage defects in a large animal model
Autor/a
Semino, Carlos
Sennett, M. L.
Friedman, J. M.
Ashley, B. S.
Stoeckl, B. D.
Patel, J. M.
Alini, M.
Cucchiarini, M.
Eglin, D.
Madry, H.
Mata, A.
Stoddart, M. J.
Johnstone, B.
Moutos, Franklin T.
Estes, B. T.
Guilak, Farshid
Mauck, R. L.
Dodge, G. R.
Otros/as autores/as
Universitat Ramon Llull. IQS
Fecha de publicación
2021-01-07ISSN
1473-2262
Resumen
The repair of focal cartilage defects remains one of the foremost issues in the field of orthopaedics. Chondral defects may arise from a variety of joint pathologies and left untreated, will likely progress to osteoarthritis. Current repair techniques, such as microfracture, result in short-term clinical improvements but have poor long-term outcomes. Emerging scaffold-based repair strategies have reported superior outcomes compared to microfracture and motivate the development of new biomaterials for this purpose. In this study, unique composite implants consisting of a base porous reinforcing component (woven poly(ε-caprolactone)) infiltrated with 1 of 2 hydrogels (self-assembling peptide or thermo-gelling hyaluronan) or bone marrow aspirate were evaluated. The objective was to evaluate cartilage repair with composite scaffold treatment compared to the current standard of care (microfracture) in a translationally relevant large animal model, the Yucatan minipig. While many cartilage-repair studies have shown some success in vivo, most are short term and not clinically relevant. Informed by promising 6-week findings, a 12-month study was carried out and those results are presented here. To aid in comparisons across platforms, several structural and functionally relevant outcome measures were performed. Despite positive early findings, the long-term results indicated less than optimal structural and mechanical results with respect to cartilage repair, with all treatment groups performing worse than the standard of care. This study is important in that it brings much needed attention to the importance of performing translationally relevant long-term studies in an appropriate animal model when developing new clinical cartilage repair approaches.
Tipo de documento
Artículo
Versión del documento
Versión publicada
Materias (CDU)
611 - Anatomía
612 - Fisiología
Palabras clave
Cartilage defects
Large animal models
Biomaterials
Scaffolds
Long-term outcomes
Cartilage biomechanics
Tissue engineering
Orthopaedics
Articular cartilage repair
Cartílags
Cartílags articulars
Enginyeria de teixits
Ortopèdia
Páginas
12 p.
Publicado por
Forum Multimedia Publishing
Publicado en
European Cells & Materials Journal
Número del acuerdo de la subvención
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/AO Foundation/RX/RRD VA/I01 RX001213
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/Medical Research Council/MRC/R015651
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/NIH/P30 AR069619
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/NIH/P30 AR074992
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