Materials Today Bio (Jun 2021)

3D-printed scaffold combined to 2D osteoinductive coatings to repair a critical-size mandibular bone defect

  • M. Bouyer,
  • C. Garot,
  • P. Machillot,
  • J. Vollaire,
  • V. Fitzpatrick,
  • S. Morand,
  • J. Boutonnat,
  • V. Josserand,
  • G. Bettega,
  • C. Picart

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11
p. 100113

Abstract

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The reconstruction of large bone defects (12 cm3) remains a challenge for clinicians. We developed a new critical-size mandibular bone defect model on a minipig, close to human clinical issues. We analyzed the bone reconstruction obtained by a 3D-printed scaffold made of clinical-grade polylactic acid (PLA), coated with a polyelectrolyte film delivering an osteogenic bioactive molecule (BMP-2). We compared the results (computed tomography scans, microcomputed tomography scans, histology) to the gold standard solution, bone autograft. We demonstrated that the dose of BMP-2 delivered from the scaffold significantly influenced the amount of regenerated bone and the repair kinetics, with a clear BMP-2 dose-dependence. Bone was homogeneously formed inside the scaffold without ectopic bone formation. The bone repair was as good as for the bone autograft. The BMP-2 doses applied in our study were reduced 20- to 75-fold compared to the commercial collagen sponges used in the current clinical applications, without any adverse effects. Three-dimensional printed PLA scaffolds loaded with reduced doses of BMP-2 may be a safe and simple solution for large bone defects faced in the clinic.

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