Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4096228 The Spine Journal 2015 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Background ContextThe combination of potent osteoinductive growth factor, functional osteoblastic cells, and osteoconductive materials to induce bone formation is a well-established concept in bone tissue engineering. However, supraphysiological dose of growth factor, such as recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein 2 (rhBMP-2), which is necessary in contemporary clinical application, have been reported to result in severe side effects.PurposeWe hypothesize that the synergistic osteoinductive capacity of low-dose bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP-2) combined with undifferentiated bone marrow-derived stromal cells (BMSCs) is comparable to that of osteogenically differentiated BMSCs when used in a rodent model of posterolateral spinal fusion.Study Design/SettingA prospective study using a rodent model of posterolateral spinal fusion was carried out.Patient SampleThirty-six syngeneic Fischer rats comprised the patient sample.MethodsSix groups of implants were evaluated as follows (n=6): (1) 10 µg BMP-2 with undifferentiated BMSCs; (2) 10 µg BMP-2 with osteogenic-differentiated BMSCs; (3) 2.5 µg BMP-2 with undifferentiated BMSCs; (4) 2.5 µg BMP-2 with osteogenic-differentiated BMSCs; (5) 0.5 µg BMP-2 with undifferentiated BMSCs; and (6) 0.5 µg BMP-2 with osteogenic-differentiated BMSCs. Optimal in vitro osteogenic differentiation of BMSCs was determined by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) gene analysis whereas in vivo bone formation capacity was evaluated by manual palpation, micro-computed tomography, and histology.ResultsRat BMSCs cultured in fibrin matrix that was loaded into the pores of medical-grade poly epsilon caprolactone tricalcium phosphate scaffolds differentiated toward osteogenic lineage by expressing osterix, runt-related transcription factor 2, and osteocalcium mRNA when supplemented with dexamethasone, ascorbic acid, and β-glycerophosphate. Whereas qRT-PCR revealed optimal increase in osteogenic genes expression after 7 days of in vitro culture, in vivo transplantation study showed that pre-differentiation of BMSCs before transplantation failed to promote posterolateral spinal fusion when co-delivered with low-dose BMP-2 (1/6 or 17% fusion rate). In contrast, combined delivery of undifferentiated BMSCs with low-dose BMP-2 (2.5 µg) demonstrated significantly higher fusion rate (4/6 or 67%) as well as significantly increased volume of new bone formation (p<.05).ConclusionIn summary, this study supports the combination of undifferentiated BMSCs and low-dose rhBMP-2 for bone tissue engineering construct.

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