Since 2010, there has been a sharp decline in the use of metal-on-metal joint replacement devices due to adverse responses associated with the release of metal wear particles and ions in patients. Surface engineered coatings offer an innovative solution to this problem by covering metal implant surfaces with biocompatible and wear resistant materials. The present study tests the hypothesis whether surface engineered coatings can reduce the overall biological impact of a device by investigating recently introduced silicon nitride coatings for joint replacements. Biological responses of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMNCs) to Si3N4 model particles, SiNx coating wear particles and CoCr wear particles were evaluated by testing cytotoxicity, inflammatory cytokine release, oxidative stress and genotoxicity. Clinically relevant wear particles were generated from SiNx-on-SiNx and CoCr-on-CoCr bearing combinations using a multidirectional pin-on-plate tribometer. All particles were heat treated at 180°C for 4 h to destroy endotoxin contamination. Whole peripheral blood was collected from healthy donors (ethics approval BIOSCI 10–108, University of Leeds). The PBMNCs were isolated using Lymphoprep (Stemcell) and incubated with particles at various volumetric concentrations (0.5 to 100 µm3 particles/cell) for 24 h in 5% (v/v) CO2 at 37°C. After incubation, cell viability was measured using the ATPlite assay (Perkin Elmer); TNF-alpha release was measured by ELISA (Invitrogen); oxidative stress was measured using H2DCFDA (Abcam); and DNA damage was measured by comet assay (Tevigen). The results were expressed as mean ± 95% confidence limits and the data was analysed using one-way ANOVA and Tukey-Kramer post-hoc analysis. No evidence of cytotoxicity, oxidative stress, TNF-alpha release, or DNA damage was observed for the silicon nitride particles at any of the doses. However, CoCr wear particles caused cytotoxicity, oxidative stress, TNF-alpha release and DNA damage in PBMNCs at high doses (50 µm3 particles per cell). This study has demonstrated the in-vitro biocompatibility of SiNx coatings with primary human monocytic cells. Therefore, surface engineered coatings have potential to significantly reduce the biological impact of metal components in future orthopaedic devices.