This is truly amazing.....
Until the next time, cheers.
The Telegraph, Monday, 11 June 2012
Human bones grown from fat in laboratory
Scientists have grown human bone from stem cells in a laboratory.
Scientists have grown human bone from stem cells in a laboratory.
The development opens the way for patients to have broken bones repaired or
even replaced with entire new ones grown outside the body from a patient's
own cells.
The researchers started with stem cells taken from fat tissue. It took around
a month to grow them into sections of fully-formed living human bone up to a
couple of inches long.
The first trial in patients is on course to be conducted later this year, by
an Israeli biotechnology company that has been working with academics on the
technology.
Professor Avinoam Kadouri, head of the scientific advisory board for Bonus
BioGroup, said: "There is a need for artificial bones for injuries and
in operations.
"We use three dimensional structures to fabricate the bone in the right
shape and geometry. We can grow these bones outside the body and then
transplant it to the patient at the right time.
"By scanning the damaged bone area, the implant should fit perfectly and
merge with the surrounding tissue. There are no problems with rejection as
the cells come from the patient's own body."
The technology, which has been developed along with researchers at the
Technion Institute of Research in Israel, uses three dimensional scans of
the damaged bone to build a gel-like scaffold that matches the shape.
Stem cells, known as mesenchymal stem cells, which have the capacity to
develop into many other types of cell in the body, are obtained from the
patient's fat using liposuction.
These are then grown into living bone on the scaffold inside a "bioreactor"
– an automated machine that provides the right conditions to encourage the
cells to develop into bone.
Already animals have
successfully received bone transplants. The scientists were able to
insert almost an inch of laboratory-grown human bone into the middle section
of a rat's leg bone, where it successfully merged with the remaining animal
bone.
The technique could ultimately allow doctors to replace bones that have been
smashed in accidents, fill in defects where bone is missing such as cleft
palate, or carry out reconstructive plastic surgery.
Professor Kadouri said work was also under way to grow the soft cartilage at
the ends of bones, which is needed if entire bones are to be produced in a
laboratory.
Bone grafts currently involve taking bits of bone from elsewhere in the
patients body and transplanting them to the area which is damaged to
encourage healing.
More than 250,000 bone grafts are performed in the UK each year, including
repairs to damaged jaws and the replacement of bone lost in operations to
remove tumours.
This technique requires the patient to undergo two traumatic operations. In
other cases bone is obtained from donations, but can be rejected by the
body.
As the new technique uses cells from the patient's own body, it reduces the
chance of the new bone being rejected.
Dr Shai Meretzki, chief executive of Bonus BioGroup, added that they hoped to
develop the technology in the future to provide replacements for damaged
joints such as hips.
He said: "It is the same type of technology, but the equipment would be
different for bigger bones."
A number of research teams around the world are developing techniques for
regrowing bone using stem cells, but most have used a different kind of stem
cell and injected them into the patient rather than growing them into bones
outside the body for transplant.
Professor Alicia El Haj, head of the regenerative medicine group at Keele
University, has been involved in clinical trial using cells taken from
cartilage and has treated 450 patients with the technique. Her team has
started conducting trials to repair gaps in patient's bones using cells from
bone marrow.
She said: "Adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells are much less common
when used medically, but are easier to obtain.
"There are a lot of people coming up with cells that can be used to
repair bone but there are not many progressing to produce tissues that can
be grown outside of the body and used clinically.
"If a company is starting to do this, then it is an important step."
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