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Short-term immunosuppression and surgical neoangiogenesis with host vessels maintains long-term viability of vascularized bone allografts

✍ Scribed by Michael Pelzer; Mikko Larsen; Yang-Guk Chung; Teruyasu Ohno; Jeffrey L. Platt; Patricia F. Friedrich; Allen T. Bishop


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
168 KB
Volume
25
Category
Article
ISSN
0736-0266

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Currently available methods to reconstruct large skeletal defects have limitations. These include nonunion and stress fractures in structural allografts, and inability to match the size, shape, and/or strength of most recipient sites using vascularized fibular autografts. Prosthetic diaphyseal replacements may loosen or produce periprosthetic fractures. Transplantation of living allogenic bone would enable matching donor bone to the recipient site, combined with the desirable healing and remodeling properties of living bone. We propose a novel method by which the transplantation of such tissue might be done without the risks of life‐long immunosuppression, using surgical neoangiogenesis to develop a new host‐derived osseous blood supply. We performed vascularized femoral allografts from 86 female Dark Agouti donor rats to male Piebald Virol Glaxo recipients across a major histocompatibility (MHC) barrier. In addition to microvascular reconstruction of the nutrient vessel, we surgically implanted a host arteriovenous (AV) bundle into the medullary canal to promote host vessel neoangiogenesis. Independent variables included patency of the implanted AV bundle, and use of 2 weeks' FK‐506 immunosuppression. After 18 weeks, bone blood flow was measured, and neoangiogenic capillary density quantified. Bone blood flow and capillary density were significantly greater in transiently immunosuppressed recipients with a patent AV pedicle. We conclude that neoangiogenesis from implanted host‐derived AV‐bundles, combined with short‐term immunosuppression maintains blood flow in vascularized bone allografts, and offers potential for clinical application. © 2006 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res 2007


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## Abstract The purpose of this study was to demonstrate that living bone allotransplants can incorporate, remodel, and maintain mechanical properties without long‐term immunosuppression in a fashion comparable to living autotransplants. For this, viability is maintained by repair of nutrient vesse