TY - JOUR
T1 - Orthotopic Bone Regeneration within 3D Printed Bioceramic Scaffolds with Region-Dependent Porosity Gradients in an Equine Model
AU - Diloksumpan, Paweena
AU - Bolaños, Rafael Vindas
AU - Cokelaere, Stefan
AU - Pouran, Behdad
AU - de Grauw, Janny
AU - van Rijen, Mattie
AU - van Weeren, René
AU - Levato, Riccardo
AU - Malda, Jos
N1 - Funding Information:
P.D. and R.V.B. contributed equally to this work. P.D. acknowledges the funding from the Royal Thai Government scholarship (Thailand). P.D., S.C., M.vR., J.dG., R.vW., R.L., and J.M. acknowledge the Dutch Arthritis Society (CO‐14‐1‐001, LLP‐12 and LLP‐22), and the European Research Council (grant agreement #647426, 3DJOINT). The primary antibodies against collagen type II (II‐II6B3) developed by T. F. Linsenmayer and E. S. Engvall, respectively, were obtained from the DSHB developed under the auspices of the NICHD and maintained by the University of lowa, Department of Biology, lowa City, IA, USA.
Funding Information:
P.D. and R.V.B. contributed equally to this work. P.D. acknowledges the funding from the Royal Thai Government scholarship (Thailand). P.D., S.C., M.vR., J.dG., R.vW., R.L., and J.M. acknowledge the Dutch Arthritis Society (CO-14-1-001, LLP-12 and LLP-22), and the European Research Council (grant agreement #647426, 3DJOINT). The primary antibodies against collagen type II (II-II6B3) developed by T. F. Linsenmayer and E. S. Engvall, respectively, were obtained from the DSHB developed under the auspices of the NICHD and maintained by the University of lowa, Department of Biology, lowa City, IA, USA. After initial online publication, J.M. was made a corresponding author on May 20, 2020.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Authors. Published by WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
PY - 2020/5/1
Y1 - 2020/5/1
N2 - The clinical translation of three-dimensionally printed bioceramic scaffolds with tailored architectures holds great promise toward the regeneration of bone to heal critical-size defects. Herein, the long-term in vivo performance of printed hydrogel-ceramic composites made of methacrylated-oligocaprolactone-poloxamer and low-temperature self-setting calcium-phosphates is assessed in a large animal model. Scaffolds printed with different internal architectures, displaying either a designed porosity gradient or a constant pore distribution, are implanted in equine tuber coxae critical size defects. Bone ingrowth is challenged and facilitated only from one direction via encasing the bioceramic in a polycaprolactone shell. After 7 months, total new bone volume and scaffold degradation are significantly greater in structures with constant porosity. Interestingly, gradient scaffolds show lower extent of remodeling and regeneration even in areas having the same porosity as the constant scaffolds. Low regeneration in distal regions from the interface with native bone impairs ossification in proximal regions of the construct, suggesting that anisotropic architectures modulate the cross-talk between distant cells within critical-size defects. The study provides key information on how engineered architectural patterns impact osteoregeneration in vivo, and also indicates the equine tuber coxae as promising orthotopic model for studying materials stimulating bone formation.
AB - The clinical translation of three-dimensionally printed bioceramic scaffolds with tailored architectures holds great promise toward the regeneration of bone to heal critical-size defects. Herein, the long-term in vivo performance of printed hydrogel-ceramic composites made of methacrylated-oligocaprolactone-poloxamer and low-temperature self-setting calcium-phosphates is assessed in a large animal model. Scaffolds printed with different internal architectures, displaying either a designed porosity gradient or a constant pore distribution, are implanted in equine tuber coxae critical size defects. Bone ingrowth is challenged and facilitated only from one direction via encasing the bioceramic in a polycaprolactone shell. After 7 months, total new bone volume and scaffold degradation are significantly greater in structures with constant porosity. Interestingly, gradient scaffolds show lower extent of remodeling and regeneration even in areas having the same porosity as the constant scaffolds. Low regeneration in distal regions from the interface with native bone impairs ossification in proximal regions of the construct, suggesting that anisotropic architectures modulate the cross-talk between distant cells within critical-size defects. The study provides key information on how engineered architectural patterns impact osteoregeneration in vivo, and also indicates the equine tuber coxae as promising orthotopic model for studying materials stimulating bone formation.
KW - biofabrication
KW - bone regeneration
KW - equine models
KW - low-temperature setting calcium phosphate
KW - porous architectures
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85083849607&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/adhm.201901807
DO - 10.1002/adhm.201901807
M3 - Article
C2 - 32324336
AN - SCOPUS:85083849607
SN - 2192-2640
VL - 9
SP - 1
EP - 11
JO - Advanced Healthcare Materials
JF - Advanced Healthcare Materials
IS - 10
M1 - 1901807
ER -