4.4 Review

Diabetes Mellitus and Bone Regeneration: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Animal Studies

Journal

TISSUE ENGINEERING PART B-REVIEWS
Volume 23, Issue 5, Pages 471-479

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/ten.teb.2016.0370

Keywords

bone substitutes; bone transplantation; bone regeneration; bone formation; diabetes mellitus; animal studies

Funding

  1. CAPES Foundation, Ministry of Education of Brazil, Brasilia-DF [0888/14-1, 70040-020]

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Background: The regeneration of bone defects resulting from trauma, resection of tumors, infection, or congenital disease is a challenge, and bone grafts are utilized in a wide array of clinical settings to augment bone repair and regeneration. Diabetes mellitus (DM) is a chronic metabolic disease, which affects 8.3% of the world population, summing similar to 387 million individuals. The consequences of the disease, for example, hyperglycemia, have been associated to a reduced capacity to form bone and poor bone quality, influencing bone healing. Our aim was to systematically review the literature to the effect of diabetic condition on bone regeneration in animal models, when using bone substitute materials from different origins, and perform a meta-analysis to quantitatively study the effect of DM on bone regeneration. Methods: An extensive search strategy was carried out through PubMed and EMBASE to identify the potential relevant studies published from database inception until July 1, 2015. Initially, the title and abstract of 1409 studies were screened, after which inclusion criteria sorted 29 studies for full-text evaluation. After using exclusion criteria, a final number of seven studies could be included in the review. Results: The seven included studies that passed our inclusion/exclusion criteria were all type 1 diabetes, comprising a total of 189 animals and 14 intrastudy comparisons. These studies presented a consistent and reduced risk of bias and showed a significant average effect size of -6.87% of bone formation for diabetes type 1 versus healthy condition [95% confidence interval: -10.55 to -3.18; I-2 = 87.4%; p = 0.0003]. Interpretation: These findings prove that DM type 1 negatively influences bone formation compared with a healthy condition, irrespective of the bone substitute material used.

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