4.7 Review

Recent Trends in the Development of Bone Regenerative Biomaterials

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.665813

Keywords

regenerative biomaterials; bone defect; tissue engineering; tissue scaffold; 3D printing

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51973226, 81871782]
  2. National Science Foundation for Postdoctoral Scientists of China [2020M683733]
  3. Shanghai Changning Committee of Science and Technology of China [CNKW2020Y01]
  4. Youth Innovation Promotion Association CAS [2019031]

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The goal of biomaterials is to support bone tissue regeneration at defect sites and eventually degrade in situ to be replaced by newly generated bone tissue. Challenges include engineering biomaterials to match the mechanical and biological context of bone tissue and support vascularization of large tissue constructs. New biofunctional biomaterials aim to recreate nanoscale cues from the extracellular environment for bone regeneration.
The goal of a biomaterial is to support the bone tissue regeneration process at the defect site and eventually degrade in situ and get replaced with the newly generated bone tissue. Biomaterials that enhance bone regeneration have a wealth of potential clinical applications from the treatment of non-union fractures to spinal fusion. The use of bone regenerative biomaterials from bioceramics and polymeric components to support bone cell and tissue growth is a longstanding area of interest. Recently, various forms of bone repair materials such as hydrogel, nanofiber scaffolds, and 3D printing composite scaffolds are emerging. Current challenges include the engineering of biomaterials that can match both the mechanical and biological context of bone tissue matrix and support the vascularization of large tissue constructs. Biomaterials with new levels of biofunctionality that attempt to recreate nanoscale topographical, biofactor, and gene delivery cues from the extracellular environment are emerging as interesting candidate bone regenerative biomaterials. This review has been sculptured around a case-by-case basis of current research that is being undertaken in the field of bone regeneration engineering. We will highlight the current progress in the development of physicochemical properties and applications of bone defect repair materials and their perspectives in bone regeneration.

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