Physeal Allograft Transfer for Physeal Bars: A Safety and Feasibility Study in a Domestic Swine Model

  • J. V. Korpershoek*
  • , C. Chen
  • , C. V. Nagelli
  • , K. L. Lydon
  • , M. L. Floren
  • , D. B.F. Saris
  • , A. N. Larson
  • , T. A. Milbrandt
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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Abstract

Premature physeal closure occurs following trauma, cancer, or infection. Current treatments have poor success rates. With recent pediatric donor tissue availability, physeal allograft transfer (PAT) can now be considered. The purpose of this study was to study the safety and feasibility of PAT in a large animal model. The aim of this study is to gather foundational data to inform future studies into the efficacy of PAT. Physeal defects were created in the distal femur of nine female domestic swine and treated with PAT from two male donor pigs, cementation, or bone autograft. Viability was assessed. After 3 months, physes were visualized using CT and MRI. Integration, tissue composition, donor DNA presence, and microscopic appearance were evaluated. Physeal allografts demonstrated 93% viability after procurement and preservation. All animals reached the 3-months study endpoint without gross deformations. No physeal bars formed in any group. Cystic changes were seen in experimental and control femurs. All groups showed disorganized tissue architecture without growth plate recapitulation. High allografts viability and structural integrity after procurement support the potential of this treatment. Although no gross deformities were found, transferred physes demonstrate poor integration and incomplete repair. The lack of physeal bar formation in the control group limits the reliability of the animal model for studying physeal allograft transfer. Lastly, this study was designed as a feasibility study and lacks power to compare treatment effects statistically. The efficacy of PAT for preventing growth arrest remains undetermined.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere70133
JournalJournal of Orthopaedic Research
Volume44
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2026

Keywords

  • allograft
  • growth plate
  • in vivo
  • Physis
  • transfer

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