The present application is directed to compositions including polylactides and calcium phosphate composites and methods for making the same. More particularly, the synthesis methods and resulting composites include polylactides and apatite that have been modified when combined.
Bioresorable compositions such as polylactides (PLA) are useful for bone fixation and bone repair and have the advantage of not requiring surgical removal after the bone heals. However, the use of polylactides for bone fixation and bone repair can lead to a variety of undesirable side effects, such as inflammation or allergic reactions.
Combining apatite, such as hydroxyapatite (HA), with PLA yields a composition similar to the composition found in bone and teeth in vivo. Polylactide/hydroxyapatite (PLA/HA) composites facilitate the osteoconductive properties of an implant plus aides in lessening the side-effect of the PLA composite by neutralizing its acidic bio-degraded by-products. PLA/HA composites have the potential of improving clinical bone healing, but current PLA/HA composites have a significant disadvantage due to their mechanical weakness. This weakness eliminates the use of PLA/HA composites in load-bearing areas. It is generally suspected that PLA/HA composite weakness is caused by the weak interphase between PLA (hydrophobic) and HA (hydrophilic) structures.
Current PLA/HA composites are prepared by several different methods such as direct blending using nonmodified HA, solution co-precipitation, emulsion, and mechanical mixing. Because of the relatively high hydrophobicity of PLA and hydrophilicity of HA, obvious problems of these methods include weak interfacial adhesion between HA and the PLA matrix and agglomeration of the HA particles in the matrix. Lack of adhesion between the two phases will result in an early failure at the interface between PLA and HA, usually leading to weak mechanical properties. As an example, the tensile strength of PLA/HA composites decreased significantly from 54 MPa for pure PLA to 41 MPa even with a HA content of only 18%.
Increasing interfacial bond strength between PLA and HA is an important factor on a matrix interface to achieve increased mechanical strength. In the last decade, coupling agents such as silanes, isocyanates, and organotitanates have been used to improve the interfacial adhesion between certain ceramic fillers and different polymeric matrices. Although the effects on alumina and silica systems (SiO2, bioglass, clay, etc.) were encouraging, the feasibility of using these agents to gain improved interfacial adhesion to HA was not confirmed.
It has been unexpectedly found that a polylactide having a general formula of —(OCH(R)CO)n—, wherein R═H or C1-C10 alkyl and wherein n=1-4, may be combined with an apatite material having a general formula of Ca10(PO4)6X2 where X is OH or F or both, whereby the apatite is modified prior to coupling with the polylactide. In one form, the material may be prepared by combining a hydroxyapatite source having a general formula of Ca10(PO4)6(OH), with an organic material with phosphonic acid functionality having a general formula of —PO(OH)2 to form an intermediate hydroxyapatite phosphonic acid containing material. The intermediate hydroxyapatite phosphonic acid containing material, which is a reaction product of the hydroxyapatite source and the organic material with phosphonic functionality may then be combined with a lactide material having a general formula of (OCH(R)CO)n, wherein n=1-4, preferably 2=n, or CH(OH)(R)COOH, wherein R=H or C1-C10 alkyl, to form the polylactide/hydroxyapatite material.
Further, the polylactide/modified phosphonic acid apatite material which has been reacted with polylactide may then be combined with additional polylactide to form a composite polylactide/apatite material. It is believed that such a composite polylactide/apatite material may have increased tensile strength compared to a polylactide/apatite material that has not been modified with a phosphonic acid containing material. The amount of additional polylactide to polylactide/modified phosphonic acid apatite material in the composite may range from about 1% weight to about 99% weight. In one form, the amount of polylactide/modified phosphonic acid apatite material combined with additional PLA is sufficient to affect an increase in a tensile strength of the composite of at least about 50% when compared to a composite which does not include modified phosphoric acid apatite material as described herein. According to another form, the amount of polylactide/modified phosphonic acid apatite material is sufficient to effect a 100% increase in tensile strength when compared to a composite which does not include modified phosphonic acid apatite material.
According to one form, the apatite source is modified with the phosphonic acid containing material to introduce —OH and/or NH2 groups on the surface of the apatite source to form the apatite material which is reactive with polylactide. In one form, the intermediate apatite phosphoric acid containing material undergoes surface initiated polymerization with the lactide groups of the polylactide via —OH and/or NH2 groups found on a surface of the intermediate apatite phosphoric acid containing material.
The method may also include the step of separating unreacted phosphonic acid containing material from the intermediate apatite material. Similarly, the method may include the step of separating unreacted lactide containing material from the polylactide/apatite material.
In one form, the phosphonic acid containing organic material includes N-(2-hydroxyethyl) iminobis(methylphosphonic) acid (HIMPA). In this regard, in one form, the hydroxyapatite source is suspended in an aqueous solution of N-(2-hydroxyethyl) iminobis(methylphosphonic) acid. In another form, the hydroxyapatite is precipitated in the presence of N-(2-hydroxyethyl) iminobis(methylphosphonic) acid. However, other forms of phosphorous containing compounds also may be used.
It has been found that there are significant benefits of this method of synthesis, such as significantly increased tensile strength when compared to that of polylactide alone.
By one approach, the composition comprises significantly higher polylactide covalently attached to hydroxyapatite than that of current compositions produced by conventional methods.
Described herein are synthesis methods and compositions comprising PLA/HA composites. The general method provides synthesis of PLA/HA composites by grafting PLA on an HA intermediate, such as via surface-initiated polymerization (SIP) through the non-ionic surface hydroxyl groups. It should be noted that when referring to a composite material, the material includes modified phosphonic acid apatite material along with additional apatite material.
In one form, the synthesis methods described herein use a method for preparing a polylactide/apatite material comprising the steps of combining an apatite source with a phosphonic acid containing material to form an intermediate apatite material. In one form, the intermediate apatite material is formed thereby introducing a plurality of —OH and/or NH2 groups coupled to the apatite. The intermediate apatite material may then be combined with a lactide containing material to form the polylactide/apatite material which has a diametral tensile strength that is at least 1.5 times the diametral tensile strength of a polylactide/apatite material prepared without combining a apatite material with the organic material having phosphonic acid functionality.
The apatite material may include a variety of apatite containing and/or providing materials prepared in a variety of manners. In one form, the apatite material has a general formula of Ca10(PO4)6X2 where X is OH or F or both OH or F. In this regard, the apatite material may be fluoroapatite and/or hydroxyapatite. According to one form, the hydroxyapatite material has a general formula of Ca10(PO4)6(OH)2. In one form, the hydroxyapatite material includes purified HA which may be prepared as described below.
Other forms of calcium phosphate containing materials may also be used in lieu of HA or in combination with HA. For example, such materials include, but are not limited to monocalcium phosphate (MCP, Ca(H2PO4)2), dicalcium phosphate (DCP, CaHPO4), tricalcium phosphate (TCP, Ca3(PO4)2), amorphous calcium phosphate (ACP, Ca3(PO4)2), tetrcalcium phosphate (TTCP), fluoroapatite (FAP, Ca10(PO4)6(OH,F)2), octacalcium phosphate (OCP, Ca8SH2(PO4)6).
The apatite and/or calcium phosphate containing material may be used in a variety of amounts. For example, the modified apatite and/or calcium phosphate material may be used in an amount of about 1% weight to about 99% weight based upon the weight of the reaction product of modified apatite and/or calcium phosphate material and lactide. In another form, less than about 60% is used in the overall composite material. It should be noted that a number of the descriptions and examples below describe the use of HA, but other apatite materials and calcium phosphate materials may similarly be used.
The organic material with phosphonic acid functionality may include a variety of different materials, such as phosphorous containing molecules, including N-(2-hydroxyethyl) iminobis(methylphosphonic) acid, hydroxyethylphophonic acid, any other hydroxyl or amino containing phosphonic acid, phosphoric acid or any kind of phosphorous containing compound. According to one form, the organic material with phosphonic acid functionality has a general formula of —PO3H2. In one form, the source of phosphonic acid includes N-(2-hydroxyethyl) iminobis(methylphosphonic) acid. The amount of phosphonic material will be determined by the amount of phosphate to precipate the apatite. The molar ratio of phosphonic to phosphate may be 1/5 or lower. The phosphonic agent may contain either —OH or —NH2 or both, which can initiate polymerization of the polymers.
The lactide used in the method may also include a variety of different sources. For example, the lactide may include a material has a general formula of —(OCH(CH3)CO)n—, such as PLA (polylactide). Other polymers can be used to composite with HA include polycaprolactone (PCL), polyglycolide (PGA), PLGA (polylactide-co-glycolide), polyhydroxybutyrate or poly(hydroxyvalerate or poly(carbonates) or polyphosphazene or polyanhydrides or other polyesters or polyurethane and natural origin degradable polymers such as cellulose or starch or gelatin or chitosan or peptides and their derivatives. The lactide material may be used in a variety of amounts, such as up to about 99 weight % of the overall composite material as described in
The method may also further comprise the step of separating unreacted phosphonic acid containing material from the intermediate hydroxyapatite material by washing with an aqueous solution, such as regular water, preferably distilled water.
The polylactide/apatite composite material can further comprise the step of combining the polylactide/apatite material with additional polylactide to form a composite polylactide/apatite material. The polylactide/apatite can be separated by precipitation in a solvent such as chloromethane, chloroform, preferably methylene chloride, and precipitated with an excess of methanol, propanol, acetone, preferably ethanol, and then dried in vacuum to remove the residual solvent.
In one form, a calcium-phosphate/phosphonate hybrid shell intermediate is formed thereby creating a greater amount of reactive hydroxyl groups onto the HA moieties. This structure may be formed through a phosphonic based bi-dentate chelating agent that bonds to the HA surfaces. Afterwards, PLA is covalently grafted from the HA through the increased —OH groups by a phosphonic agent. Improved mechanical properties of the PLA/HA composite results from the chemical bonding of the phosphonic group increasing the activity of surface —OH groups on the HA, at the same time surface-initiated polymerization between the HA and PLA particles improves the HA/PLA interface.
Preparation of HA
In one form, the HA was synthesized by solution reaction of Ca(OH)2 and H3PO4 (or CaCl2 or Ca(NO3)2 or any other calcium containing salt and Na3PO4 or any other phosphate containing salts). In brief, about 300-1000 mL, preferably 500 mL of distilled water was boiled in a Teflon-coated pot, equipped with an electric stirring paddle and a reflux condenser with a CO2-absorbing NaOH trap to protect from atmospheric CO2, under Ar or nitrogen gas for range 10-60 min. One mole of CaO was added to the water, and 300 mL of H3PO4 solution (2 mol/L) was slowly (about 0.5 mL/min) added to the Ca(OH)2 slurry to obtain a final Ca/P molar ratio of about 1.67. The reacting mixture was boiled for two days. The precipitated solid was collected by centrifugation and washed with distilled water. The solid was re-dispersed in boiled distilled water and was re-boiled for another two days. These washing and boiling procedures were repeated until the pH of the supernatant was about 6. At pH 6, any traces of anhydrous dicalcium phosphate (DCPA) that might have formed due to possible local more acidic environments were converted to HA. In some cases, the HA precipitate, collected by centrifugation, was used for phosphonic acid coating. In other cases, the HA precipitate was collected by centrifugation, washed with an organic solvent, e.g. methanol, ethanol, preferably acetone, and dried at about 110° C.
The HA may be modified in a number of different manners to form the HA intermediate. For example, the HA may be modified by coating the material and/or the HA may be modified by co-precipitation.
In an aspect for preparing the PLA/HA composite, the HA intermediate is prepared by coating with —OH groups using surface modification (PLA-HA-HIMPA-A) (method A which produces a monolayer surface modification as shown in
In another form, HA intermediates are prepared by coating —OH groups using in situ co-precipitation (PLA-HA-HIMPA-B). In this method (method B which produces core shell structure as shown in
In one form, PLA was grafted on the above prepared HA intermediate particles using surface initiated polymerization (SIP) (Hong et al., “Nano-composite of poly(L-lactide) and surface grafted hydroxyapatide: Mechanical properties and biocompatibility,” 2005, Biomaterials 26:6296-6304). An exemplary grafting method involved suspending HA in 20 ml of toluene containing 10 μL of SnOct2 acting as a catalyst; and separately dissolving 2 g of L-lactide in 10 mL of dry toluene or dimethylformamide (DMF). The HA suspension was heated to about 90° C., and then dropped into the L-lactide solution under argon protection and with stirring. Argon protects against ring-opening polymerization of lactide, which is sensitive to moisture and impurities. After the reaction continued at about 140° C. for about 48 hours, the reaction mixture was cooled down to room temperature. The PLA-grafted-HA (PLA-g-HA) particles were separated by centrifugation and washed with excess volumes of methylene chloride to remove the free PLA that did not graft on the surface of the HA particles.
According to one form, PLA/PLA-g-HA composites were synthesized from PLA-g-HA and additional PLA. An exemplary method involved dispersing non-treated HA or PLA-g-HA with PLA in a ratio of 1/4, with a varied range from 0% to 100% dispersed in methylene chloride and mixed vigorously for about three hours. The composite was precipitated with an excess of ethanol to remove the residual solvent.
The synthesis methods may also include the step of separating unreacted phosphonic acid containing material from the intermediate hydroxyapatite material. Similarly, the method may include the step of separating unreacted lactide containing material from the polylactide/hydroxyapatite material.
HA coated with —OH groups prepared by using in situ co-precipitation was characterized by powder X-ray diffraction (XRD). XRD was used to determine the crystalline phases and crystallinity of these phases present in the HA/PLA composites. As found in
Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) was used to estimate the amount of HIMPA coated on HA intermediates.
The amount of PLA grafted on HA was also evaluated by TGA.
In contrast, HA-HIMPA-B shows a large peak around 450° C., due to the toss of HIMPA that was incorporated within the HA. PLA grafted HA from both solvents showed the same mass loss profile around 450° C. In addition, PLA HA-HIMPA-B-toluene shows a significant peak around 260° C., which can be attributed to the loss of PLA. The sharpness of this peak provides evidence of a large amount of PLA on HA. The above results indicate that phosphonic acid (HIMPA) can be used as an efficient coupling agent to coat HA particles, especially by using in situ co-precipitation of HA in the presence of HIMPA (method B). PLA can also be grafted on HIMPA coated HA through surface initiated polymerization. Due to the greater amount and different kind of —OH groups on the HIMPA-HA than that of uncoated HA, more PLA can be grafted on HIMPA-coated HA by using method A or method B than on HA alone. Furthermore, the amount of grafted PLA by method B is greater than that of method A, suggesting that HIMPA coating produced by method B is a more efficient approach to graft more PLA onto HA particles.
The pH dependent ζ-potential and particles size profiles provided further information regarding grafting of PLA onto the HA. The weighted average value (n=3) of median particle size and ζ-potential of the non-treated HA and PLA grafted HA (HA-PLA) are shown in
In contrast, the DTS of the two composites prepared from interfacially improved HA (PLA/HA-PLA-A and PLA/HA-PLA-B) were (37.3±1.4) and (38.3±2.3) MPa, respectively. These values are more than twice (p<0.05) that of the composite from non-treated HA (17.4 MPa) and 23% higher than that of the PLA itself. The increased DTS values are also higher than the DTS values of composites with a similar HA ratio. These results demonstrate that combination of SIP with the phosphonic acid agent can significantly improve the tensile strength of the PLA/HA composite. Because HIMPA can lead to a strong interfacial binding between HA and non-ionic —OH groups of HIMPA, the PLA initially grafted on the coated-HA can be considered as covalently bond to HA, and the mechanical properties of PLA/HA can be significantly improved.
Disclosed herein are methods of improving the interfacial interactions between PLA and HA by grafting PLA directly from the surface of HA via surface initiated polymerization (SIP). This approach consists of several conceptual steps as depicted schematically in
In one form, HIMPA, a molecule with two phosphonic acid groups on one end and an —OH group on the other end, was used as a bidentate chelating agent to link the non-ionic hydroxyl groups to HA (
Initiated by the surface non-ionic hydroxyl groups from the HIMPA coating, PLA could be successfully grafted from HA by using surface initiated polymerization in the presence of SnOct2. Because ring-opening polymerization of lactide (LA) is sensitive to moisture or impurities in the solvent or reactants, in one form, all the solvents including toluene and DMF must be dried over sodium or calcium hydride, respectively. Due to the reactivity of the surface —OH from HIMPA coated HA, the amount of grafted PLA either from method A or method B was greater than that of non-modified HA. In particular, the greater amount of HIMPA coating formed on HA by method B led to a higher amount of grafted PLA (7% mass fraction), which was higher than that previously reported in the literature (5%). The combination of phosphonic acid coupling agent and surface initiated polymerization facilitated the PLA to link with the HIMPA coated HA surface through covalent bonding, and a strong interfacial adhesion can thus be established.
Due to the improved interface and the entanglement of the PLA on the surface of HA and the PLA matrix, the mechanical properties of PLA/HA composites prepared from PLA-grafted HA was significantly improved in comparison to that of the composite prepared using non-grafted HA (17 MPa). This suggests that the interfacial improvement plays a role in the mechanical properties of the composite. The design of biocomposites is more complex than that of conventional monolithic materials because of the large number of design variables that must be considered. It is believed that the mechanical properties of PLA/HA composite are affected by the inherent characteristic of PLA such as chemical configuration, crystallinity, relative molecular mass and polydispersity index, and characteristics of the HA filler such as morphology (particulate or whisker), size distribution, crystallinity (amorphous or crystalline), preparation method (sintered or solution precipitated). Additional considerations include mass fraction of HA, composite preparation methods (solvent casting, hot pressing, compression molding, melt extrusion, biomimetic process, etc.), interfacial treatment as well as specimens fabrication techniques and conditions (heat pressing, casting, sintering, machining, together with molding temperature, pressure, and processing time).
In order to specifically demonstrate the effect of interfacial improvement proposed in this application, the composites for this study were prepared from the same PLA under the same experimental condition, e.g., filler ratio, composite technology, temperature, molding pressure, etc., with the interfacial optimization of the HA particles (non-treated HA or PLA grafted HA) being the only difference.
The foregoing descriptions are not intended to represent the only forms of the compositions and methods according to the present application. The percentages provided herein are by weight unless stated otherwise. Changes in form and in proportion of components, as well as the substitution of equivalents, are contemplated as circumstances may suggest or render expedient. Similarly, while compositions and methods have been described herein in conjunction with specific embodiments, many alternatives, modifications, and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art in light of the foregoing description.
This application is a divisional of prior application Ser. No. 14/391,044, filed Oct. 7, 2014, which is a U.S. national phase application filed under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of Inter-national Application PCT/US2013/029839, filed Mar. 8, 2013, designating the United States, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/623,483, filed Apr. 12, 2012, which are incorporated herein as if fully rewritten, and also claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/623,490, filed Apr. 12, 2012, which is incorporated as if fully rewritten herein.
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