Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Vancomycin-loaded methylcellulose aerogel scaffolds for advanced bone tissue engineering

44

Citations

42

References

2023

Year

Abstract

Scaffolds grafting combined with local delivery of antibiotics at the injury site may promote bone regeneration along with prevention of infections. In this work, a processing strategy combining the 3D-printing of polysaccharide-based inks with supercritical (sc)CO<sub>2</sub> technology was employed to manufacture drug-loaded, nanostructured, and personalized-to-patient aerogels for the first time. Methylcellulose (MC) was employed as graft matrix endowed with nanohydroxyapatite (nHA) to confer bioactivity as required in bone tissue engineering (BTE). MC-nHA aerogels were obtained through the 3D-printing of hydrogel-based scaffolds followed by scCO<sub>2</sub> drying. Aerogels were loaded with vancomycin (VAN), an antibiotic employed in the management of bone infections. Textural properties and printing fidelity of scaffolds were studied as well as VAN release, long-term bioactivity, and pre-osteoblasts mineralization. In vitro cell studies and in vivo Artemia salina tests were carried out to evaluate the potential toxicity of the antibiotic-loaded aerogels. Aerogels efficacy in inhibiting bacterial growth was assessed by antimicrobial tests with Staphylococcus aureus. Textural stability of the aerogels after 7 months of storage was also evaluated. Obtained results showed that the scaffolds promoted the intended two-in-one effect (bone repair and infection management simultaneously) in a personalized way, regulating formulation design, drug dose, and porosity.

References

YearCitations

2017

373

2020

253

2008

228

2019

222

2007

210

2021

192

2018

187

2014

160

2019

145

2019

133

Page 1