Laboratory for Tissue Engineering and Organ Fabrication, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 55 Fruit Street, Boston, MA 02114, USA.
Traumatic amputation of a thumb with bone loss leaves a patient in severe disability. Reconstructive procedures are restricted by limited shape and have the disadvantage of severe donor-site morbidity. To overcome these limitations, we used a tissue engineering approach to create a distal thumb bone phalanx, combining magnetically sorted 133+ human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) suspended in successful tested hydrogels for bone formation and porous 3-dimensionally printed scaffolds (3DP) in the shape of a distal thumb bone phalanx. Collagen I and fibrin glue hydrogels with suspended hMSCs were first histologically evaluated in vitro for bone formation after 6 weeks. Then 3DP scaffolds, made from a mix of osteoinductive and -conductive beta-tricalciumphosphate (beta-TCP) and poly-epsilon-caprolactone (PCL), with hydrogels and suspended hMSCs, were implanted into nude mice subcutaneously for 15 weeks. Histologic evaluation, high-resolution volumetric CT (VCT) scanning, and biomechanical testing confirmed formation of bonelike tissue. Both hydrogels with CD 133+ hMSCs on 3DP scaffolds supported bone formation. Collagen I resulted in radiologically better bone formation. Bone tissue can be successfully tissue engineered with CD 133+ hMSCs, collagen I hydrogels, and porous 3DP beta-TCP/PCL scaffolds.