A promising new method for regenerating bones using the body's own stem cells may possibly eliminate the need for bone grafts.
When a fracture will not heal, people are typically left with two options.
One is bone grafting, the other is surgery.
Researchers led by a team from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, tested the therapy on laboratory animals and found that it triggered bones to regrow their own tissue.
If it is found safe in humans, the process could replace bone grafting as the gold standard treatment.
A stem cell solution
The new method involves implanting a collagen matrix made up of bone-inducing genes into stem cells.
“Our method relies on the body’s own repair cells [stem cells],” Gadi Pelled, senior author, and an assistant professor of surgery at Cedars-Sinai, told Healthline. “We recruit them to the injury site and then activate them to regenerate bone in an efficient way.”
“The uniqueness of our method is that it is injectable and minimally invasive,” Pelled said.
“We showed that our method was equivalent, in terms of fracture healing, to the use of an autograft [bone graft obtained from the patient’s own body], which is the gold standard today,” Gazit said. “Our method does not require the harvest of bone, which often leads to prolonged pain and hospitalization and risk of infection, and that is our advantage.”
Stem cell concerns?
Because the process uses stem cells from the patient’s body without external manipulation, it may not face many of the hurdles that other stem cell treatments come up against.
“But obviously we will need to show that our method is not toxic and is safe to use in people before it is approved for use in the clinic,” added Zulma Gazit, PhD, co-director of the Skeletal Regeneration and Stem Cell Therapy Program in the Department of Surgery and the Cedars-Sinai Board of Governors Regenerative Medicine Institute.
Moving forward
In cases where there are large gaps or fractures unable to heal, the method can be repeated to grow more bone.
David Forsh, an assistant professor of orthopedics at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and chief of orthopedic trauma at Mount Sinai St. Luke’s, said the breakthrough needs to be reproduced before it goes mainstream.
Similar research has been conducted in the past, but the way this was done is something new, according to his knowledge.
“It sounds good,” Forsh told Healthline. “It’s very promising that they were able to achieve this.”
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