Abstract

Despite the growing success of OCA transplantation in treating large articular cartilage lesions in multiple joints, revisions and failures still occur. While preimplantation subchondral drilling is intended to directly decrease allograft bioburden and has been associated with significant improvements in outcomes after OCA transplantation, the effects of size, number, and spacing of subchondral bone drill sites have not been fully evaluated. This study aimed to investigate the effects of drill size with or without pulse-lavage of OCA subchondral bone by quantifying remnant marrow elements using histomorphometry.With IRB and ACUC approvals, human and canine OCAs were acquired for research purposes. Portions of human tibial plateau OCAs acquired from AATB-certified tissue banks that would otherwise be discarded were recovered and sectioned into lateral and medial hemiplateaus (n=2 each) with a thickness of 7 mm. Canine femoral condyles and tibial plateaus were split into lateral and medial components with a thickness of 7 mm (n=8). Using our clinical preimplantation preparation protocol, holes were drilled into the subchondral bone of each condyle and hemiplateau OCA using either 1.6 mm OD or 3.2 mm OD drill bits from the cut surface to the cortical subchondral bone plate. One femoral condyle and one hemiplateau per drill bit size were pulse-lavaged while the corresponding OCAs were not. The mean total %-fill remaining marrow elements for each treatment group was calculated.Little to no quantifiable bone marrow element retention was noted to remain within the subchondral bone of human or canine OCA specimens after subchondral drilling of allograft bone with either drill bit size evaluated and with or without pulse-lavage. The %-fill was consistent across zones, ranging from 1-5%.This project was designed to provide a preliminary histologic evaluation of the effects of drill size on OCA preimplantation preparation efficacy based on amount of remaining bone marrow elements in human and canine femoral condyle and tibial plateau specimens. Based on these initial findings, choice of drill bit size for OCA subchondral drilling may need to be based on the associated biomechanical effects rather than effects on donor bone marrow element removal.

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