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Medical Applications of Porous Biomaterials: Features of Porosity and Tissue-Specific Implications for Biocompatibility

Journal

ADVANCED HEALTHCARE MATERIALS
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/adhm.202102087

Keywords

biofilms; biomaterials; foreign body reaction; hemocompatibility; porosity

Funding

  1. NIH/NIAID [R01AI145483, R01AI150325]
  2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI)

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Porosity is an important material feature that is commonly used in medical devices. It promotes cell infiltration and drug diffusion, and is beneficial for tissue responses. However, it can also lead to negative effects such as biofilm formation and calcification. The host responses to porous biomaterials depend on tissue location and specific microenvironment.
Porosity is an important material feature commonly employed in implants and tissue scaffolds. The presence of material voids permits the infiltration of cells, mechanical compliance, and outward diffusion of pharmaceutical agents. Various studies have confirmed that porosity indeed promotes favorable tissue responses, including minimal fibrous encapsulation during the foreign body reaction (FBR). However, increased biofilm formation and calcification is also described to arise due to biomaterial porosity. Additionally, the relevance of host responses like the FBR, infection, calcification, and thrombosis are dependent on tissue location and specific tissue microenvironment. In this review, the features of porous materials and the implications of porosity in the context of medical devices is discussed. Common methods to create porous materials are also discussed, as well as the parameters that are used to tune pore features. Responses toward porous biomaterials are also reviewed, including the various stages of the FBR, hemocompatibility, biofilm formation, and calcification. Finally, these host responses are considered in tissue specific locations including the subcutis, bone, cardiovascular system, brain, eye, and female reproductive tract. The effects of porosity across the various tissues of the body is highlighted and the need to consider the tissue context when engineering biomaterials is emphasized.

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