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Musculoskeletal tissue banking in Singapore: 15 years of experience (19882003) |
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A Nather |
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PURPOSE. To report 15 years’ experience of
musculoskeletal tissue banking by the National
University Hospital Tissue Bank. METHODS. This study describes the development of Singapore’s national
bone bank since its establishment in 1988. The bone bank’s protocol follows
guidelines recommended by the American Association of Tissue Banks and
the European Association of Tissue Banks using strict donor selection
criteria. Informed consent is obtained from all potential donors for tissue
procurement and laboratory tests. Detailed medical history, thorough clinical
examination, and chart review is performed for consenting donors. Suitable
donors are subjected to tests for hepatitis B, hepatitis C, syphilis,
and culture/sensitivity test of tissue for aerobic and anaerobic organisms.
For living donors, repeat testing for AIDS and hepatitis C is performed
at least 180 days after procurement. Tissue procurement is performed under
sterile conditions. Small tissues are procured using the ‘sterile double
jar technique’ and long bones using the ‘sterile triple wrap technique’,
both developed by the author. Deep-frozen bones are gamma irradiated at
25 kilograys. Morsellised bones are lyophilised and gamma irradiated.
Meticulous preparation for grafts is performed during transplantation.
Antibiotic prophylaxis is used for 2 weeks. RESULTS. The bank maintains a good quality control.
In January 2003, it was accredited ISO 9001 status.
Up to June 2003, it has procured 440 bones from 440
living donors and 1055 allografts from 63 deceased
donors. 854 musculoskeletal transplantations have
been performed using tissues processed by the
bank. Complication rate encountered was only 2.2%. CONCLUSION. The tissue bank provides high-quality allografts for safe tissue transplantations. |
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Journal
of Orthopaedic Surgery 2004;12(2):184-190
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Last update: 25 December 2004 |