2016 Cell and tissue banking

Homologous transplantation with fresh frozen bone for dental implant placement can induce HLA sensitization: a preliminary study.

, , , , ,

Cell and tissue banking Vol. 17 (3) : 465-72 • Sep 2016

It has been related in orthopedic surgeries the HLA sensitization. Thus, we evaluate if the use of fresh-frozen homologous bone (FFHB) for dental implant placement induce anti-HLA sensitization. Six patients were treated with FFHB corticocancellous block grafts. After 6 months, bone biopsies were harvested during implant placement to allow histomorphometric analysis. Vital mineralized tissue (VMT), non-vital mineralized tissue (NVMT) and non-mineralized tissue (NMT) were quantified histomorphometrically. Peripheral blood was collected from the patients before FFHB placement and 6 months after the surgery for anti-HLA analysis. The histomorphometric analysis showed the presence of VMT, NVMT and NMT in 45.56 +/- 15.72 %, 14.16 +/- 13.39 % and 40.29 +/- 12.60 %, respectively. The baseline and 6 months postoperative CTs revealed bone thickness in the order of 5.66 +/- 0.67 mm and 8.71 +/- 1.52 mm (3.05 +/- 1.39 mm). The anti-HLA analysis revealed that two of the six patients (33.3 %) became sensitized, however this was not associated with any FFHB incorporation loss (p > 0.05). A total of 24 implants were placed all of which were osseointegrated after 6 months. Although FFHB-related HLA sensitization does not appear to affect bone incorporation when treating insufficient bone thickness for implant placement, further follow-up is required to determine whether there is an association between HLA sensitization and long-term graft survival.

No clinical trial protocols linked to this paper

Clinical trials are automatically linked when NCT numbers are found in the paper's title or abstract.
PICO Elements

No PICO elements extracted yet. Click "Extract PICO" to analyze this paper.

Paper Details
MeSH Terms
Associated Data

No associated datasets or code repositories found for this paper.

Related Papers

Related paper suggestions will be available in future updates.