Osteoimmunomodulation by bone implant materials: harnessing physicochemical properties and chemical composition

Publication date

2025-06-07

Authors

Sanati, Mehdi
Pieterman, Ines
Levy, Natacha
Akbari, Tayebeh
Tavakoli, Mohamadreza
Najafabadi, Alireza Hassani
Yavari, Saber Amin

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Chronic inflammation at bone defect sites can impede regenerative processes, but local immune responses can be adjusted to promote healing. Regulating the osteoimmune microenvironment, particularly through macrophage polarization, has become a key focus in bone regeneration research. While bone implants are crucial for addressing significant bone defects, they are often recognized by the immune system as foreign, triggering inflammation that leads to bone resorption and implant issues like fibrous encapsulation and aseptic loosening. Developing osteoimmunomodulatory implants offers a promising approach to transforming destructive inflammation into healing processes, enhancing implant integration and bone regeneration. This review explores strategies based on tuning the physicochemical attributes and chemical composition of materials in engineering osteoimmunomodulatory and pro-regenerative bone implants.

Keywords

Biphasic calcium-phosphate, Foreign-body response, Immune-response, In-vitro, Inflammatory response, Macrophage polarization, Murine macrophages, Protein adsorption, Regulatory t-cells, Tnf-alpha, Biomedical Engineering, General Materials Science

Citation

Sanati, M, Pieterman, I, Levy, N, Akbari, T, Tavakoli, M, Najafabadi, A H & Yavari, S A 2025, 'Osteoimmunomodulation by bone implant materials : harnessing physicochemical properties and chemical composition', Biomaterials Science, vol. 13, no. 11, pp. 2836-2870. https://doi.org/10.1039/d5bm00357a