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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 46 - 46
1 Jul 2020
Adoungotchodo A Lerouge S Alinejad Y Mwale F Grant M Epure L Antoniou J
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Intervertebral disc (IVD) degeneration plays a major role in low back pain which is the leading cause of disability. Current treatments in severe cases require surgical intervention often leading to adjacent segment degeneration. Injectable hydrogels have received much attention in recent years as scaffolds for seeding cells to replenish disc cellularity and restore disc properties and function. However, they generally present poor mechanical properties. In this study, we investigated several novel thermosensitive chitosan hydrogels for their ability to mimic the mechanical properties of the nucleus pulposus (NP) while being able to sustain the viability of NP cells, and retain proteoglycans.

CH hydrogels were prepared by mixing the acidic chitosan solution (2% w/v) with various combinations of three gelling agents: sodium hydrogen carbonate (SHC) and/or beta-glycerophosphate (BGP) and/or phosphate buffer (PB) (either BGP0.4M, SHC0.075M-BGP0.1M, SHC0.075M-PB0.02M or SHC0.075M-PB0.04M). The gelation speed was assessed by following rheological properties within 1h at 37°C (strain 5% and 1Hz). The mechanical properties were characterized and compared with that of human NP tissues. Elastic properties of the hydrogels were studied by evaluating the secant modulus in unconfined compression. Equilibrium modulus was also measured, using an incremental stress-relaxation test 24h after gelation in unconfined compression (5% strain at 5%/s followed by 5min relaxation, five steps). Cells from bovine IVD were encapsulated in CH-based gels and maintained in culture for 14 days. Cytocompatibility was assessed by measuring cell viability, metabolism and DNA content. Glycosaminoglycan (GAG) synthesis (retained in the gel and released) was determined using DMMB assay. Finally injectability was tested using human cadaveric discs.

Unconfined compression confirmed drastically enhanced mechanical properties compared to conventional CH-BGP hydrogels (secant Young modulus of 105 kPa for SHC0.075PB0.02 versus 3–6 kPa for BGP0.04). More importantly, SHC0.075PB0.02 and SHC0.075BGP0.1 hydrogels exhibited mechanical properties very similar to NP tissue. For instance, equilibrium modulus was 5.2±0.6 KPa for SHC0.075PB0.02 and 8±0.8 KPa for SHC0.075BGP0.1 compared to 6.1±1.7 KPa for human NP tissue. Rheological properties and gelation time (G′=G″ after less than 15 s at 37°C, and rapid increase of G') of these hydrogels also appear to be adapted to this application. Cell survival was greater than 80% in SHC0.075BGP0.1 and SHC0.075PB0.02 hydrogels. Cells encapsulated in the new formulations also showed significantly higher metabolic activity and DNA content after 14 days of incubation compared to cells encapsulated in BGP0.4 hydrogel. Cells encapsulated in SHC0.075BGP0.1 and SHC0.075PB0.02 produced significantly higher amounts of glycosaminoglycans (GAG) compared to cells encapsulated in SHC0.075PB0.04 and BGP0.4 hydrogels. The total amount of GAG was higher in SHC0.075BGP0.1 hydrogel compared to SHC0.075PB0.02. Interestingly, both the SHC0.075BGP0.1 and SHC0.075PB0.02 hydrogels retained similar amounts of GAG. Injectability through a 25G syringe, filling of nuclear clefts and good retention in human degenerated discs was demonstrated for SHC0.075PB0.02 hydrogel.

SHC0.075BGP0.1 appears to be a particularly promising injectable scaffold for IVD repair by providing suitable structural environment for cell survival, ECM production and mechanical properties very similar to that of NP tissue.