Title: Kyle%20F.%20Dickson,%20M.D.%20M.B.A.
1Kyle F. Dickson, M.D. M.B.A.
Professor Baylor College of Medicine Southwest
Orthopaedic Group, Houston, Texas
2Nonunions
- Kyle Dickson MD, MBA
- Professor of Orthopaedics Baylor College of
Medicine - Southwest Orthopaedic Group
3LECTURE GOALS
- Understand the factors that lead to nonunion
- Be able to avoid these factors in fracture
treatment - Understand how to apply the principles of
nonunion surgery
4G.R.75 y.o. male with L subtroch femur fracture
5G.R.
6G.R.
7G.R.
8Nonunion
- A fracture that has lost the potential to heal ,
typically 6-9 mos from injury (FDA 9 months) - no progress in healing documented on serial
radiographs - typically healing stalled at soft callus phase
9Delayed Unions and Nonunions in Open Tibia
Fractures with Angiogram Proven Single or Double
Vessel Injury
-Delayed union 4 months with two month of no
clinical or radiographic healing -Nonunions 6
months with 3 months without healing
10CM-11-30-00
Instant nonunion
11Major bone defects
- Stability
- Restore integrity
- cancellous grafting
- free vascularized bone transplant
- transport or lengthening (Ilizarov)
- BMPs ?
12CM-4-11-02
13CM-4-11-02
14CM-11-7-02
15- ETIOLOGY
- MECHANICS
- Inadequate stability
- Patient cooperation
- BIOLOGY
- ? Blood supply either traumatic or surgical
- Infection
- Patient factors e.g. Nutrition,smoking,NSAID
- Combination
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21Krettek, JBJS 1991
- External fixation with lag screws 2x the
refracture rate and bone graft rate versus
external fixation alone
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24 BR 5-17-01
25 BR 1-3-02
26 BR 1-3-02
27 BR 1-17-02
28 BR 1-17-02
29- fracture manipulated with bone-holding forceps or
levers - negative biologic impact
Choke Kill
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36INFECTED NONUNION
- Diagnosis culture all nonunions
- Debridement
- 1 or 2 stage
- Bone reconstruction
- Bone graft timing
- Soft tissue reconstruction
- Antibiotics
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38TECHNIQUE OF ABX ROD
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42Etiology
- Patient factors (systemic)
- Extremity factors
- Surgeon factors
43Etiology
- Obesity
- Infection
- Anemia
- Smoking
- Diabetes
- Old age
- Malnutrition
- Steroids
- NSAIDS
- Radiation
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45NONUNION-RISK FACTORS
- INJURY
- SURGEON
- PATIENT/HOST
- LIFE STYLE
- SMOKING, NICOTINE
- NONCOMPLIANT WITH WEIGHT BEARING STATUS
46Etiology Extremity Factors
- High energy trauma
- Open fractures
47Etiology Surgeon Factors
- Wrong surgery
- Wrong implants
- Poor technique
- Bad decisions
48Fracture healingWhat does nature do with a
broken bone?
- It will heal by callus formation, if there is
motion between fragments!
Indirect healing
49Fracture healing
- Inflammation
- 2. Soft callus
- 3. Hard callus
- 4. Remodeling
Hematoma Mesenchymal cells Granulation
tissue Intramembranous bone formation Enchondral
ossification
bony bridging
Excessive motion(gt10)
Failure in bridging
Nonunion
50HYPERTROPHIC NONUNION
- MECHANICAL INSTABILITY
- VASCULARITY PRESERVED
- HORSES HOOF OR ELEPHANT FOOT (ABUNDANT CALLUS)
51Hypertrophic Nonunion
52ATROPHIC NONUNION
- BIOLOGICAL CAUSE
- NO CALLUS
53Oligotrophic Nonunion
54- Pseudoarthrosis
- Formation of a false joint where a
fibro-cartilaginous cavity is lined with synovial
membrane
55Classification
- Location
- Diaphyseal, metaphyseal, intra-articular
- Etiology
- Mechanical (hypertrophic), biological (atrophic)
- Infection
- Currently infected, previously infected, never
infected
56DIAGNOSIS OF NONUNION
- Symptoms
- Pain
- Swelling
- Instability
- Deformity
- Loss of function
57DIAGNOSIS OF NONUNION
- Signs
- Swelling
- Local tenderness
- Pain on stressing the fracture site
- Instability
- Deformity
58DIAGNOSIS OF NONUNION
- Imaging
- Plain radiographs
- CT scan
59DIAGNOSIS OF NONUNION
- Blood work
- CBC and differential
- ESR and CRP
- Aspiration of nonunion site rarely necessary
60Principles of Treatment
- Deformity correction (reduction)(plate ilizarov
vs nail) - Adequate stabilization (fixation)
- Preserve/stimulate the biology of fracture repair
- Early ROM rehabilitation
61DECISION PROCESS
- IS THERE INFECTION ?
- WHAT HARDWARE PRESENT ?
- HYPERTROPHIC vs ATROPHIC ?
62General Treatment
- Hypertrophic
- correct deformity and stabilization
- Atrophic
- biological and mechanical
- Infection
- debridement, bone reconstruction, soft tissue
reconstruction, antibiotics
63MANAGEMENT
- PREOPERATIVE PLANNING IS MANDATORY (surgical
tactic, template, equipment) - positioning
- skin incisions
- deformity correction
- fixation
- grafting
- soft tissue coverage
64- MANAGEMENT
- OPTIMIZE MECHANICS (ALIGNMENT AND STABILITY)
- PRESERVE /- ENHANCE BIOLOGY
- COMBINATION
65Surgical Technique
- Prevention (no gaps tibia or humerus)
- Maintain vascularity
- Optimize the mechanical environment
66Operative protocol
- Remove hardware
- Create bleeding bone on both sides of the
nonunion - Correct deformity
- Perform stable fixation
- Addition of autologus bone graft bmp
What not to do!
67Bone Preparation
- Maintain vascularity limited stripping and
fracture take down - Sclerotic bone ends removed
- Bleeding ends vs. soft tissue bleeding
68Nonunions
69IM nailing
- advantages
- load sharing vs. load bearing ? less stress on
implant less risk of implant failure - insertion friendlier on soft tissues
- reinjures nonunion site ? reinitiates healing
cascade - reaming stimulates increased periosteal blood
flow
70AH-12/13/02
71AH-12/13/02
72AH-12/15/02
73AH-12/15/02
74AH-5/22/03
75AH-5/22/03
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80JP-3/28/02
81JP-3/28/02
82JP-4/17/03
83JP-4/17/03
84JP-4/17/03
85Plate Fixation
- advantages
- fixation rigid ? compression
- malalignment associated with nonunion can be
addressed - access for bone grafting
- can be used for most long bones regardless of
location
86 BR 1-17-02
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88External Fixation
- can be used for stabilization
- osteogenesis occurs during distraction
- half pin frame
- ring fixator
- over a nail
89JC
- 58 yo male
- Shotgun blast to distal left femur 1975
90JC (cont.)
- Initially treated with casting, braces, and
intramedullary rodding - Presented with broken rod, nonunion, and 13 cm
shortening - 21 year nonunion with 17 previous surgeries
91JC (cont.)
- Ilizarov placement 10/17/96 no corticotomy
- EUA healed fracture and began lengthening 3/6/97
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100Healing Characteristics Role of BMPs
Matrix Osteoconductive void fillers/DBM
Structure Cement, Support Fixation
GROWTH FACTORS Osteoinductive (BMPs)
Cells Osteopromotive/ Osteogenic factors (BMA,
platelets, osteoblasts, etc.)
101OSTEOINDUCTION
- The ability of a substance to stimulate new bone
formation by recruitment of pluripotential
mesenchymal cells from the host bed
102OSTEOCONDUCTION
- The ability of a substance to act as a passive
scaffold for the ingrowth of perivascular tissue
and the orderly proliferation of osteoprogenitor
cells
103OSTEOGENIC
- Cellular elements which survive transplantation
and synthesize new bone at the recipient site.
104BIOLOGIC STIMULUS
- Ideal Bone Graft Substitute
- Biocompatable
- Bioresorbable
- Osteoconductive
- Osteoinductive
- Structural
- Easy to use
- Cost effective
105AUTOGENOUS BONE GRAFT
- GOLD STANDARD
- Osteoconductive
- Hydroxyapatite ,
Collagen - Osteoinductive
- BMP, TGF-B, ect
- Osteogenic
- Osteoprogenitor cells
106Purpose of Graft
- Heal fractures
- Maintain reduction (calcium phosphates)
- Fill defects (prevent fractures)
107Alternatives to Bone Grafting
- Allograft (DBMs)
- Biomaterials
- Bone marrow
- Growth factors (bmps)
108DBM Competitive Landscape
- Examples
- Grafton/DBM (Osteotech)
- Optium (Depuy)
- DBX (Synthes)
- Dynagraft II (GenSci)
- Orthoblast II (GenSci)
- Accell II (GenSci)
- Regenafil (RTI)
- Allomatrix (Wright Medical)
- Ignite (Wright Medical)
- Collagraft (Zimmer)
109Cocktail
- DBM - Whats in there?
- 1 part per 100 million OP-1?
- 1 part per million BMP-3?
- BMP-3 shown to inhibit bone formation
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease 3 cases in Britain
(central body) prions
ORS-1998 Anaheim, CA
110BMP-7 in DBM
Bae, H., Inter and Intravariability of BMPs in
Commercially Available Demineralized Bone
Matrice, NASS 2003
111Han 2003
- Acid extraction of cadaveric human bone leaving
collagen, noncollagenous proteins, and BMPs - Growth factor activity is variable between tissue
banks and between donors - Some products terminally sterilized which may
further decrease BMP availability
112Carriers
- DBX synthetic neutral hyaluronic acid
- Grafton glycerol (doesnt stay around)
- AlloMatrix CaSO4 timed release (?drainage)
- Osteofil porcelline gel (?immune reaction)
- Accell no carrier, Ortholast reverse thermal
synthetic carrier (?DBMs activity at body
temperature), Dynagraft synthetic pluronic acid
(?immune reaction)
113Medicare Advisory MeetingSeptember 2005
- DBM is not directly cleared for use in nonunion
fractures - 54 and 75 healing (Ziran 2004, Coupe 2003)
- 34 deep infection rate (Ziran 2004)
- 498 studies 0 comparing prospective human
defects or nonunions
114Allograft
- Osteoconductive
- Clinical data (bulk allograft)
- Disease transmission low
- Plenty available
115Problems with Allografts
- 3 - 7mm incorporation
- Minimally osteoinductive
- No osteogenic capabilities
- Cost
116Allograft Use
- Graft extender
- Not used for articular reductions
117Titanium Cage Reconstruction
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121Technique Titanium Cage
122Technique Titanium Cage
- Cancellous bone packed posteriorly and around
proximal distal bone-cage junctions
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124Osteoconductive Biomaterials
- Interpore, collagraft, hydroxyapatite cement,
grafton, jax (calcium sulfate), bonesource
(calcium phosphate), norian
125Biomaterials
- Calcium sulfate (synthetic biomaterials) quickly
resorbable ?abx - Calcium phosphate (hydroxyapatite cement and
tricalcium phosphates)
126Trauma Uses
- Bone defects under articular impactions
- Fracture fixation stability (osteoporosis)
127Problems
- Not osteoinductive
- Not osteogenic
- Resorption
128Problems (cont.)
- No weight bearing
- Success?
- Required?
129Injectable Calcium Phosphate
- Stronger than cancellous bone (croutons
nonconforming to articular reduction) - Maintain articular reductions
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150Bone Source Hydroxyapatite Cement (HAC) for
Traumatic Metaphyseal Bone Void Filling
151Osteogenics Bonesource HAC
- Tetracalcium Phosphate Dicalcium Phosphate
- (TTCP) (DCPA)
- Ca4(PO4)2O CaHPO4
- Water ? H2O
- HYDROXYAPATITE
- Ca5(PO4)3OH
152Materials Methods
- 28 patients (29 defects) 85 follow-up
- 13 Bonesource group 15 (16) autograft
Dickson 2002
153Results
- Maintenance of Reduction
- 10/12 (83) bone source
- 10/15 (68) autograft
154Defects
- Maintain reduction (distal radius, tibial
plateau, actabulum, tibial plafonds, etc)
155Bone Marrow Aspirations
- Osteogenic
- Minimally osteoinductive
- Small donor site
- ? Mixed with osteoconductive
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157Proteins for Enhanced Bony Healing
- Osteoinductive
- No shortage
158Problems with Proteins
- Which protein to use?
- Required?
- Expensive
- Carrier (localize and immunogenicity)
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160Osteogenic Proteins
- OP - 1 (BMP 7)
- BMP - 2 (BMP 2A)
- BMP - 4 (BMP 2B)
- ?PDGF
161Fibula Defect Study
162Commercially Approved
Infuse (BMP-2) OP-1 (BMP-7)
INFUSE Bone Graft is indicated for treating acute, open tibial shaft fractures that have been stabilized with IM nail fixation after appropriate wound management. INFUSE Bone Graft must be applied within 14 days after the initial fracture. Prospective patients should be skeletally mature. OP-1 Implant is indicated for use as an alternative to autograft in recalcitrant long bone nonunions where use of autograft is unfeasible and alternative treatments have failed.
163INDICATION
OP-1 Implant (BMP-7) is indicated for use as an
alternative to autograft in recalcitrant long
bone non-unions where use of autograft is
unfeasible and alternative treatments have
failed. H01002, 10/17/01
164BMP 7 vs. BMP - 2
- Similar mechanisms except VEGF
- Similar cell line culture bone stimulation
- Less published literature on dosing and acute
fractures
- Compressibility of sponge poor fusions
- Less difficult cases tested - nonunions
- Better dosing studies
- Carriers binding bone vs tendon
165 Tibial Nonunion Study (TNS)
OP-1 (BMP-7) in the Treatment of Tibial
Nonunions Friedlaender et al., JBJS, 2001
Objective Establish safety and efficacy of OP-1
in a challenging tibial nonunion
model. Methods
- 122 patients with 124 recalcitrant nonunions were
enrolled between 1992 and 1996. Each patient was
treated with an intramedullary rod and OP-1
Implant or fresh bone autograft. - Assessment criteria included
- the severity of pain at the fracture site
- the ability to walk with full weight-bearing
- the need for surgical retreatment
- radiographic success in ¾ views
- Physician assessment of clinical outcome
Friedlaender, G.E. et al. Osteogenic Protein-1
(Bone Morphogenetic Protein-7) in the Treatment
of Tibial Nonunions. JBJS. 2001 Apr 83-A S1-151.
166Tibial Nonunion Study
- Controlled, randomized prospective human clinical
trial, initiated in 1991 - Treatment of nonunions which have persisted for a
minimum of 9 months - 122 Patients, 18 US sites
- Autograft and OP-1 are Equivalent
Friedlaender et. al, JBJS, Vol. 83-A, No. 4,
April, 2001.
167 TNS Clinical Success
Clinical Success
Friedlaender et. al, JBJS, Vol. 83-A, No. 4,
April 2001.
168 TNS Patient Demographics
Patient Demographics
OP-1 IMPLANT
AUTOGRAFT
P VALUE
Duration (mean)
17 months
0.858
17 months
Atrophic Nonunion
41
25
0.048
Grade III (a-c)
0.480
30
36
0.876
56
67
Comminuted Fracture
0.177
31
43
Failed Prior Autograft
0.280
44
54
Failed Prior IM Rod
0.057
57
74
Tobacco Use
statistically significant
169Summary of Safety
Friedlaender et. al, JBJS, Vol. 83-A, No. 4,
April 2001.
170D.L. 5 months post-op
171Preliminary Data 2002
- 98 cases 95 nonunions
- 90 unions
- 5 failures 2 OP-1 alone, 3 OP-1 with autologus
bone graft
172Data cont.
- Tibia 53
- Femur 17
- Humerus 9
- Fibula 5
- Acetabulum 4
- Forearm 4
- Pelvis 3
- THA - 3
173Data cont.
- 67 cases with autograft
- 25 OP-1 alone
- 6 with aspiration
174Indications for OP-1
- Failed ICBG
- Failed prior bone graft substitutes
- ICBG impractical
- Diabetes
- Morbid obesity
- Poor nutrition
- osteopenia
175Indications cont.
- ? Segmental defects
- ? Hip revisions
- ? Acute fractures
176Problems
- Carrier (physiologic release of bmp vs. 10
minutes) - Limited dosage studies
- Antibodies (38) pregnancy (transient and
towards bmp or collagen carrier) - Cost
- BMP preferentially stimulate periosteum vs bone
marrow cells
177Bone Stimulators Electricity, Pulse
Electromagnetic Field (PEMF), and Ultrasound
Its Effects on Fracture Healing
178Types of Electricity
- PEMF (inductive coupling)
- Capacitive coupled electrical stimulation
- Direct current (20 µA 1.0V)
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180May have limited use in atrophic nonunions
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184Sharrard, JBJS Br 1990
- Double blind, placebo controlled randomized, cast
treatment - 45 unions vs. 14
185Indications for PEMF
- Delayed unions with medical comorbidites
- My bone grafting and stabilization has failed
- Infected nonunions (unable to bone graft
initially i.e. Ilizarov)
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187Indications
- None
- Tibia and radius treated in cast
- Bones close to the skin treated without internal
fixation
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189G.R.
190G.R.
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195Summary
- DBMs allograft as as graft extender
- Ca Biomaterials CaPh under articular reductions
(plafond, plateau, acetabulum, distal radius) - Bmps and ICBG- nonunions
- Biophysical- PEMF rarely nonunions
196SUMMARY
- Etiology
- Mechanical and biological
- Principles of treatment
- Correct the deformity reduction
- Stabilize the nonunion fixation
- Preserve and enhance the biology
- Early functional rehabilitation
197- Nature has her own doctor in every limb
therefore every surgeon should know that it is
not he, but Nature, who heals - Paracelsus (1493-1541)