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General Orthopaedics

3D-PRINTED SCAFFOLDS LOADED WITH THERAPEUTICS FOR THE TREATMENT OF BONE METASTASES

The Canadian Orthopaedic Association (COA) and The International Combined Orthopaedic Research Societies (ICORS) Meeting, Montreal, Canada, June 2019. Part 2.



Abstract

The spine is one of the most common sites of bony metastasis, with 80% of prostate, lung, and breast cancers metastasizing to the vertebrae resulting in significant morbidity. Current treatment modalities are systemic chemotherapy, such as Doxorubicin (Dox), administered after resection to prevent cancer recurrence, and systemic antiresorptive medication, such as Zolendronate (Zol), to prevent tumor-induced bone destruction. The large systemic doses required to elicit an adequate effect in the spine often leads to significant side-effects by both drugs, limiting their prolonged use and effectiveness. Recently published work by our lab has shown that biocompatible 3D-printed porous polymer scaffolds are an effective way of delivering Dox locally over a sustained period while inhibiting tumor growth in vitro. Our lab has also generated promising results regarding antitumor properties of Zol in vitro. We aim to develop 3D-printed scaffolds to deliver a combination of Zol and Dox that can potentially allow for a synergistic antitumor activity while preventing concurrent bone loss locally at the site of a tumor, avoiding long systemic exposure to these drugs and decreasing side effects in the clinical setting.

The PORO Lay polymer filaments are 3D-printed into 5mm diameter disks, washed with deionized water and loaded with Dox or Zol in aqueous buffer over 7 days. Dox or Zol-containing supernatant was collected daily and the drug release was analyzed over time in a fluorescence plate reader. The polymer-drug (Dox or Zol) release was tested in vitro on prostate and lung cancer cell lines and on prostate- or lung-induced bone metastases cells. Alternatively, direct drug treatment was also carried out on the same cells in vitro. Following treatment, all cells were subject to proliferation assay (MTT and alamar blue), viability assay (LIVE/DEAD), migration assay (Boyden chamber) and invasion assay (3D gel matrix). 3D-printed scaffolds loaded with both Dox and Zol will also be tested on cells.

We have established an effective dose (EC50) for prostate and lung cancer cell lines and bone metastases cells with direct treatment with Zol or Dox. We have titrated the drug loading of scaffolds to allow for a release amount of Dox at the EC50 dose over 7 days. In ongoing experiments, we are testing the release of Zol. We have shown Dox releasing scaffolds inhibit cancer cell growth in a 2D culture over 7 days using the above cellular assays and testing the scaffolds with Zol is currently being analyzed.

3D-printed porous polymers like the PORO Lay series of products offer a novel and versatile opportunity for delivery of drugs in future clinical settings. They can decrease systemic exposure of drugs while at the same time concentrating the drugs effect at the site of tumors and consequently inhibit tumor proliferation. Their ability to be loaded with multiple drugs can allow for achieving multiple goals while taking advantage of synergistic effects of different drugs. The ability to 3D-print these polymers can allow for production of custom implants that offer better structural support for bone growth.


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