Repair of a proximal femoral bone defect in dogs using a porous surfaced prosthesis in combination with recombinant BMP-2 and a synthetic polymer carrier.

Journal: Biomaterials
Published:
Abstract

Total hip arthroplasty (THA) has become an almost standard procedure for the treatment of various hip lesions. However, one of the limitations has been the mechanical loosening of the prosthesis, a condition termed peri-prosthetic osteolysis. Consequently, at revision surgery, various grades of bone defect are often noted. Alternative approaches aimed at overcoming this problem have included a special design of the revision prosthesis and allo- or autogeneic bone grafting in combination with or without biomaterials. In a further attempt to address the loosening of the prosthesis, we have combined human bone morphogenetic protein-2, produced by DNA recombination (rhBMP-2) with a new synthetic biodegradable polymer (poly-D,L-lactic-acid-para-dioxanone-polyethyleneglycol block co-polymer; PLA-DX-PEG). We present data on the efficacy of the rhBMP-2 laden prosthesis to reconstruct a bone defect in a canine model. In this model, medial half of the proximal femur was surgically resected to create a bone defect that was repaired with the rhBMP-2/PLA-DX-PEG composite. Twelve weeks after implantation, the original bone defects in the rhBMP-2 treatment groups had been repaired. Thus, this type of 'hybrid' prosthesis may provide a new modality to repair bone defects or restore lost bone mass encountered in revision arthroplasty.

Authors
Narumichi Murakami, Naoto Saito, Jun Takahashi, Hiroshi Ota, Hiroshi Horiuchi, Masashi Nawata, Takao Okada, Kazutoshi Nozaki, Kunio Takaoka