Allograft Types & Properties - Bone's Best Buds
Allografts: Bone tissue transplanted from one individual to another of the same species (genetically non-identical).
-
Allograft Comparison: Key Properties
Type Osteoconduction Osteoinduction Osteogenesis Immunogenicity Strength Fresh/ Fresh-Frozen Yes High Yes (cells) High High Freeze-Dried (FDBA) Yes Minimal No Reduced Moderate Demineralized (DFDBA) Yes Good (BMPs) No Low Low Structural Variable Variable No Variable High -
Pros: Readily available in various forms/sizes, avoids donor site morbidity.
-
Cons: Potential immunogenicity, disease transmission risk (low but critical), slower incorporation than autograft, resorption.
⭐ DFDBA's superior osteoinductivity vs. FDBA is due to exposed Bone Morphogenetic Proteins (BMPs) post-demineralization.

Allograft Processing & Storage - Clean & Keep
- Procurement & Screening:
- Strict donor selection (age, medical history, no malignancy/infection).
- Mandatory serological testing: HIV, HBV, HCV, Syphilis.
- Processing Steps:
- Sterilization Methods:
- Gamma Irradiation: Dose 2.5 - 3.5 Mrad.
- Pros: Highly effective.
- Cons: ↓ Biomechanical strength.
- Ethylene Oxide (EtO):
- Pros: Less damage to graft strength.
- Cons: Potential toxic residues; aeration needed.
- Chemical Sterilants: (e.g., peracetic acid).
- Variable effects on graft.
- Gamma Irradiation: Dose 2.5 - 3.5 Mrad.
- Storage Techniques:
- Fresh: Rare; use within 24-72 hrs. Highest immunogenicity.
- Frozen (Deep-Freeze): -70°C to -80°C. Preserves biomechanics well. Shelf life: up to 5 years.
⭐ Deep freezing at -70°C to -80°C is the most common method for structural allografts, maintaining good biomechanical properties for up to 5 years.
- Freeze-dried (Lyophilized): Room temperature storage. Long shelf life. ↓ Immunogenicity, but weaker; requires rehydration.
oka
Allograft Clinical Applications - Ortho Fixes
📌 Mnemonic "JoiST-B": Joint, Spine, Trauma, Bone defects.
- Joint Reconstruction:
- Osteochondral allografts: Articular cartilage defects (e.g., femoral condyle, talus).
- Massive/segmental allografts: Limb salvage (tumors), severe bone loss in revision arthroplasty (e.g., Allograft-Prosthetic Composites - APCs).
- Spinal Surgery:
- Structural allografts (femoral rings, fibular struts): Interbody fusion (e.g., ALIF, PLIF).
- Morselized/crushed cancellous allograft: Graft extender.
- Trauma & Nonunions:
- Strut allografts: Periprosthetic fractures, nonunions needing structural support.
- Cancellous chips/cubes: Filling bone voids (comminuted fractures).
- Bone Defect Filling:
- Post-tumor curettage (e.g., GCT, ABC).
- Osteonecrosis.
⭐ Massive osteoarticular allografts are crucial for limb salvage after bone tumor resection, providing a biological reconstruction option.
Allograft Immunology & Complications - Host vs Graft
- Host Immune Response (HVGR):
- T-cell & B-cell mediated against donor HLA antigens.
- Fresh/frozen allografts most immunogenic; processing (freezing, irradiation) ↓ immunogenicity.
- Complications:
Type Prevention Management Rejection Processing (reduces immunogenicity). Graft removal if symptomatic. Disease Transmission Donor screening, serology, sterilization (gamma irradiation 25-35 kGy). Treat infection, graft removal. Graft Failure Stable fixation, good host bed, proper graft selection. Revision surgery. Delayed Incorporation Optimize host factors, appropriate graft choice. Bone stimulation.

⭐ Gamma irradiation (25-35 kGy) is a common method for sterilizing allografts and reducing immunogenicity, but can affect biomechanical properties.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Allografts: Bone from genetically non-identical donors (same species), requiring careful processing.
- Processing (freezing, freeze-drying, irradiation) aims to ↓ immunogenicity and ensure sterility.
- Fresh allografts offer viable cells but carry high immunogenicity; thus, rarely used.
- FDBA (Freeze-Dried Bone Allograft) is primarily osteoconductive, providing a structural scaffold.
- DFDBA (Demineralized FDBA) is osteoinductive due to exposed BMPs, actively promoting bone formation.
- Applications: Filling large bone defects, spinal fusion, revision arthroplasty.
- Risks: Disease transmission (low), immune response, delayed incorporation via creeping substitution.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app