A Northwestern Engineering research team has developed a
Bone implantation surgery is never an easy process, but it is particularly painful and complicated for children. With both adults and children, often times bone is harvested from elsewhere in the body to replace the missing bone, which can lead to other complications and pain. Metallic implants are sometimes used, but this is not a permanent fix for growing children.
Ramille Shah
Shah and her team aim to change the nature of bone implants, and they particularly want to help pediatric patients. Shah is an assistant professor of materials science and engineering in Northwestern’s McCormick School of Engineering and of surgery in the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
The new study, evaluating the material with human stem cells and within animal models, was published online September 28 by the journal Science Translational Medicine. Adam E. Jakus, a postdoctoral fellow in Shah’s laboratory, is the paper’s first author.
Shah’s
«Porosity is huge when it comes to tissue regeneration, because you want cells and blood vessels to infiltrate the scaffold," Shah said. «Our
While hydroxyapatite has been proven to induce bone regeneration, it is also notoriously tricky to work with. Clinical products that use hydroxyapatite or other calcium phosphate ceramics are hard and brittle. To compensate for that, previous researchers created structures composed mostly of polymers, but this shields the activity of the bioceramic. Shah’s bone biomaterial, however, is 90 percent by weight percent hydroxyapatite and just 10 percent by weight percent polymer and still maintains its elasticity because of the way its structure is designed and printed. The high concentration of hydroxyapatite creates an environment that induces rapid bone regeneration.
Cross-section of a 3-D printed adult human femur.
That’s not to say that other substances couldn’t be combined into the ink. Because the
«We can incorporate antibiotics to reduce the possibility of infection after surgery," Shah said. «We also can combine the ink with different types of growth factors, if needed, to further enhance regeneration. It’s really a
One of the biggest advantages, however, is that the end product can be customized to the patient. In traditional bone transplant surgeries, the bone — after it’s taken from another part of the body — has to be shaped and molded to exactly fit the area where it is needed. Physicians would be able to scan the patient’s body and
Shah imagines that hospitals may one day have
«The turnaround time for an implant that’s specialized for a customer could be within 24 hours," Shah said. «That could change the world of craniofacial and orthopaedic surgery, and, I hope, will improve patient outcomes.»