Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to determine if recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2 (rhBMP-2) enhances bone ingrowth into porous-coated implants and gap healing around the implants. In the presence of a 3-mm gap between the implant and host bone, porous-coated implants were placed bilaterally for four weeks in the proximal humeri of skeletally mature, adult male dogs. In three treatment groups, the test implant was treated with HA/TCP and rhBMP-2 in buffer at a dose of 100 μg/implant ( n=5), 400 μg/implant ( n=6), or 800 μg/implant ( n=5) and placed in the left humerus. In these same animals, an internal control implant was treated only with HA/TCP and buffer and placed in the right humerus. These groups were compared with a previously reported external control group of seven animals in which no growth factor was delivered [J. Orthop. Res. 19 (2001) 85]. The BMP treated implants in the two lower dose groups had significantly more bone ingrowth than the external controls with the greatest effect in the 100 g/implant group (a 3.5-fold increase over the external control, p=0.008). All three dose groups had significantly more bone formation in the 3-mm gap surrounding the BMP treated implants than the external controls with the greatest effect in the 800 μg group (2.9-fold increase, p<0.001). Thus, application of rhBMP-2 to a porous-coated implant stimulated local bone ingrowth and gap healing. The enhancement of bone formation within the implant (bone ingrowth) was inversely related to dose.

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