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Research

DESIGNING A COMMERCIAL BIOMATERIAL FOR A SPECIFIC UNMET CLINICAL NEED: AN ADHESIVE ODYSSEY

The European Orthopaedic Research Society (EORS) 2018 Meeting, PART 1, Galway, Ireland, September 2018.



Abstract

There are clinical situations in fracture repair, e.g. osteochondral fragments, where current implant hardware is insufficient. The proposition of an adhesive enabling fixation and healing has been considered but no successful candidate has emerged thus far. The many preclinical and few clinical attempts include fibrin glue, mussel adhesive and even “Kryptonite” (US bone void filler). The most promising recent attempts are based on phosphorylating amino acids, part of a common cellular adhesion mechanism linking mussels, caddis fly larvae, and mammals. Rapid high bond strength development in the wetted fatty environment of fractured bone, that is sustained during biological healing, is challenging to prove both safety and efficacy. Additionally, there are no “predicate” preclinical animal and human models which led the authors to develop novel evaluations for an adhesive candidate “OsStictm” based on calcium salts and amino acids. Adhesive formulations were evaluated in both soft (6/12 weeks) and hard tissue (3,7,10,14 & 42 days) safety studies in murine models. The feasibility of a novel adhesiveness test, initially proven in murine cadaver femoral bone, is being assessed in-vivo (3,7,10,14 & 42 days) in bilateral implantations with a standard tissue glue as the control. In parallel an ex-vivo human bone model using freshly harvested human donor bone is under development to underwrite the eventual clinical application of such an adhesive. This is part of a risk mitigation project bridging between laboratory biomaterial characterisation and a commercial biomaterial development where safety and effectiveness have to meet today´s new medical device requirements.


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