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Research

BONE TURNOVER MARKERS IN NONUNIONS TREATED WITH EXPANDED AUTOLOGOUS CELL THERAPY

European Orthopaedic Research Society (EORS) 24th Annual Meeting, 14–16 September 2016. Part 2.



Abstract

Delayed bone healing and nonunion are complications of long bone fractures, with prolonged pain and disability. Regenerative therapies employing mesenchymal stromal cells (MSC) and/or bone substitutes are increasingly applied to enhance bone consolidation. The REBORNE project entailed a multi-center orthopaedic clinical trial focused on the evaluation of efficacy of expanded autologous bone marrow (BM) derived MSC combined with a CaP-biomaterial, to enhance bone healing in patients with nonunion of diaphyseal fractures. To complement the clinical and radiological examination of patients, bone turnover markers (BTM) were assayed as potential predictors of bone healing or non-union.

Peripheral blood was collected from patients at fixed time-endpoints, that is at 6,12 and 24 weeks post-surgery for implantation of expanded autologus MSC and bone-like particles. Bone-specific alkaline phosphatase (BAP), C-terminal-propeptide type I-procollagen (PICP), osteocalcin (OC), β-Cross-Laps Collagen (CTX), soluble receptor activator of NFkB (RANKL), osteoprotegerin (OPG) were measured by ELISA assays in blood samples of 22 patients at BM collection and at follow-up visits.

A significant relationship with age was found only at 6 months, with an inverse correlation for CTX, RANKL and OC, and positive for OPG. BTM levels were not related to gender. As an effect of local regenerative process, some BTM showed significant changes in comparison to the baseline value. In particular, the time course of BAP, PICP and RANKL was different in patients with a successful healing in comparison to patients with a negative outcome. The BTM profile apparently indicated a remarkable bone formation activity 12 weeks after surgery. However, the paucity of failed patients in our case series did not allow to prove statistically the role of BTM as predictors of the final outcome.

Blood markers related to bone cell function are useful to measure the efficacy of a expanded MSC-regenerative approach applied to long bone non-unions. Changes of the markers may provide a support to radiological assessment of bone healing.