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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXIX | Pages 204 - 204
1 Sep 2012
Smith J Dawson J Aarvold A Jones A Ridgway J Curran S Dunlop D Oreffo R
Full Access

Background

Replacing bone lost as a consequence of trauma or disease is a major challenge in the treatment of musculoskeletal disorders. Tissue engineering strategies seek to harness the potential of stem cells to regenerate lost or damaged tissue. Bone marrow aspirate (BMA) provides a promising autologous source of skeletal stem cells (SSCs) however, previous studies have demonstrated that the concentration of SSCs required for robust tissue regeneration is below levels present in iliac crest BMA, emphasising the need for cell enrichment strategies prior to clinical application.

Aims

To develop a novel strategy to enrich skeletal stem cells (SSCs) from human BMA, clinically applicable for intra-operative orthopaedic use.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVI | Pages 7 - 7
1 Aug 2012
Smith J Dawson J Aarvold A Jones A Ridgway J Curran S Dunlop D Oreffo R
Full Access

Recent approaches have sought to harness the potential of stem cells to regenerate bone lost as a consequence of trauma or disease. Bone marrow aspirate (BMA) provides an autologous source of skeletal stem cells (SSCs) for such applications, however previous studies have demonstrated that the concentration of SSCs present in iliac crest BMA is below that required for robust bone regeneration. Here we present a novel acoustic-facilitated filtration strategy to concentrate BMA for SSCs, clinically applicable for intra-operative orthopaedic use.

The aim of this study was to demonstrate the efficacy of this strategy in concentrating SSCs from iliac crest bone marrow, as well as femoral canal BMA from older patients.

Iliac crest BMA (Lonza, Rockville, MD, USA) and femoral canal BMA was obtained with informed consent from older patients during total hip replacement. 5 to 40ml of BMA was processed via the acoustically-aided exclusion filtration process to obtain 2-8 fold volume reductions. SSC concentration and function was assessed by flow-cytometry, assays for fibroblastic colony-forming units (CFU-F) and multi-lineage differentiation along chondrogenic, osteogenic and adipogenic pathways examined. Seeding efficiency of enriched and unprocessed BMA (normalised to cell number) onto allograft was assessed.

Iliac crest BMA from 15 patients was enriched for SSCs in a processing time of only 15 minutes. Femoral BMA from 15 patients in the elderly cohort was concentrated up to 5-fold with a corresponding enrichment of viable and functional SSCs, confirmed by flow cytometry and assays for CFU-F. Enhanced osteogenic (P<0.05) and chondrogenic (P<0.001) differentiation was observed using concentrated aspirate, as evidenced by biochemical assay and semi-quantitative histological analysis. Furthermore, enhanced cell seeding efficiency onto allograft was seen as an effect of SSC concentration per ml of aspirate (P<0.001), confirming the utility of this approach for application to bone regeneration.

The ability to rapidly enrich BMA demonstrates potential for intra-operative application to enhance bone healing and offers immediate capacity for clinical application to treat many scenarios associated with local bone stock loss. Further in vivo analysis is ongoing prior to clinical tests.