Biomedicines (Oct 2021)

Surface Modification of Porous Polyethylene Implants with an Albumin-Based Nanocarrier-Release System

  • Jonas Eckrich,
  • Niklas Hoormann,
  • Erik Kersten,
  • Keti Piradashvili,
  • Frederik R. Wurm,
  • Martin Heller,
  • Sven Becker,
  • Toni Anusic,
  • Juergen Brieger,
  • Sebastian Strieth

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines9101485
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 10
p. 1485

Abstract

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Background: Porous polyethylene (PPE) implants are used for the reconstruction of tissue defects but have a risk of rejection in case of insufficient ingrowth into the host tissue. Various growth factors can promote implant ingrowth, yet a long-term gradient is a prerequisite for the mediation of these effects. As modification of the implant surface with nanocarriers may facilitate a long-term gradient by sustained factor release, implants modified with crosslinked albumin nanocarriers were evaluated in vivo. Methods: Nanocarriers from murine serum albumin (MSA) were prepared by an inverse miniemulsion technique encapsulating either a low- or high-molar mass fluorescent cargo. PPE implants were subsequently coated with these nanocarriers. In control cohorts, the implant was coated with the homologue non-encapsulated cargo substance by dip coating. Implants were consequently analyzed in vivo using repetitive fluorescence microscopy utilizing the dorsal skinfold chamber in mice for ten days post implantation. Results: Implant-modification with MSA nanocarriers significantly prolonged the presence of the encapsulated small molecules while macromolecules were detectable during the investigated timeframe regardless of the form of application. Conclusions: Surface modification of PPE implants with MSA nanocarriers results in the alternation of release kinetics especially when small molecular substances are used and therefore allows a prolonged factor release for the promotion of implant integration.

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