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Personalized medicine for reconstruction of critical-size bone defects - a translational approach with customizable vascularized bone tissue.

Annika Kengelbach-WeigandCarolina ThielenTobias BäuerleRebekka GötzlThomas GerberCarolin KörnerJustus P BeierRaymund E HorchAnja M Boos
Published in: NPJ Regenerative medicine (2021)
Tissue engineering principles allow the generation of functional tissues for biomedical applications. Reconstruction of large-scale bone defects with tissue-engineered bone has still not entered the clinical routine. In the present study, a bone substitute in combination with mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) and endothelial progenitor cells (EPC) with or without growth factors BMP-2 and VEGF-A was prevascularized by an arteriovenous (AV) loop and transplanted into a critical-size tibia defect in the sheep model. With 3D imaging and immunohistochemistry, we could show that this approach is a feasible and simple alternative to the current clinical therapeutic option. This study serves as proof of concept for using large-scale transplantable, vascularized, and customizable bone, generated in a living organism for the reconstruction of load-bearing bone defects, individually tailored to the patient's needs. With this approach in personalized medicine for the reconstruction of critical-size bone defects, regeneration of parts of the human body will become possible in the near future.
Keyphrases
  • bone mineral density
  • bone regeneration
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • bone loss
  • endothelial cells
  • stem cells
  • high resolution
  • tissue engineering
  • bone marrow
  • case report
  • induced pluripotent stem cells