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Assessment of an improved bone washing protocol for deceased donor human bone

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Abstract

NHSBT Tissue Services issues bone to surgeons in the UK in two formats, fresh–frozen unprocessed bone from living donors and processed bone from deceased donors. Processed bone may be frozen or freeze dried and all processed bone is currently subjected to a washing protocol to remove blood and bone marrow. In this study we have improved the current bone washing protocol for cancellous bone and assessed the success of the protocol by measuring the removal of the bone marrow components: soluble protein, DNA and haemoglobin at each step in the process, and residual components in the bone at the end of the process. The bone washing protocol is a combination of sonication, warm water washes, centrifugation and chemical (ethanol and hydrogen peroxide) treatments. We report that the bone washing protocol is capable of removing up to 99.85 % soluble protein, 99.95 % DNA and 100 % of haemoglobin from bone. The new bone washing protocol does not render any bone cytotoxic as shown by contact cytotoxicity assays. No microbiological cell growth was detected in any of the wash steps. This process is now in use for processed cancellous bone issued by NHSBT.

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Acknowledgments

We acknowledge support of this work from the NHSBT.

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Correspondence to M. J. Eagle.

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Eagle, M.J., Man, J., Rooney, P. et al. Assessment of an improved bone washing protocol for deceased donor human bone. Cell Tissue Bank 16, 83–90 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10561-014-9443-z

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10561-014-9443-z

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