Materials Today Bio (Jun 2023)

Fabrication of a composite 3D-printed titanium alloy combined with controlled in situ drug release to prevent osteosarcoma recurrence

  • Daoyang Fan,
  • Chaoqi Zhang,
  • Hufei Wang,
  • Qingguang Wei,
  • Hong Cai,
  • Feng Wei,
  • Zhilei Bian,
  • Weifeng Liu,
  • Xing Wang,
  • Zhongjun Liu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20
p. 100683

Abstract

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Osteosarcoma is a malignant bone tumor occurring in adolescents. Surgery combined with adjuvant or neoadjuvant chemotherapy is the standard treatment. However, systemic chemotherapy is associated with serious side effects and a high risk of postoperative tumor recurrence, leading to a high amputation rate and mortality in cancer patients. Implant materials that can simultaneously repair large bone defects and prevent osteosarcoma recurrence are in urgent need. Herein, an intelligent system comprising 3D-printed titanium scaffold (TS) and pH-responsive PEGylated paclitaxel prodrugs was fabricated for bone defect reconstruction and recurrence prevention following osteosarcoma surgery. The drug-loaded implants exhibited excellent stability and biocompatibility for supporting the activity of bone stem cells under normal body fluid conditions and the rapid release of drugs in response to faintly acidic environments. An in vitro study demonstrated that five human osteosarcoma cell lines could be efficiently eradicated by paclitaxel released in an acidic microenvironment. Using mice models, we demonstrated that the drug-loaded TS can enable a pH-responsive treatment of postoperative tumors and effectively prevent osteosarcoma recurrence. Therefore, local implantation of this composite scaffold may be a promising topical therapeutic method to prevent osteosarcoma recurrence.

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