How Evonik Wants to Turn an Innovation from Veterinary Medicine into a Better Quality of Life for Human Patients
Dogs are faithful companions. The four-legged darlings keep families fit, give life friends and give comfort. And they suffer when their health is weakened, such as in the case of hip dysplasia. To relieve dogs and even cats from pain and to regain their natural agility, the Swiss company KYON markets an innovative hip prosthesis based on the high-performance polymer VESTAKEEP® PEEK from Evonik. Collaborating with potential medical device manufacturers, the specialty chemicals company now wants
Read: ca. 6 min
Whether internal fixation of bone fractures, treatment of cruciate rupture or total hip replacement: Many of today's veterinary treatment methods would not be conceivable at all without the underlying highly regulated human medicine. As a rule, veterinary medicine participates in the achievements of medical devices approved for humans by the FDA (Food and Drug Administration in the USA) or the PMDA (Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency, Japan). The polymer experts from the specialty chemicals company Evonik want to see it the other way around: According to their idea, high-performance materials proven used in the treatment of hip dysplasia in dogs and cats should find their way into human medicine. The success of the innovative technology so far could prove them right.
This website embeds YouTube videos. To load the YouTube player and view the video at this point, please first agree to the transfer of your personal data to Google. For more information, please see Evonik Privacy Policy
The hip dysplasia treatment method of the Swiss company KYON is based on a novel cementless hip prosthesis. It was designed from a combination of several high-performance materials, each of which is capable of performing all its functions in the best possible way. "One of the weak points of hip prostheses has always been the tribology between the head and the cup. This is the crucial point where damage due to frictional losses accumulates in form of wear particles with the millions of annual movement cycles of an active dog. The performance of the tribological pair therefore significantly determines the lifespan of a hip prosthesis," explains Dr. Slobodan Tepic, founder of KYON. "In developing our system, we were always driven by the desire to permanently reduce the suffering of the animals. For us, this meant devising a hip prosthesis system that does not require any subsequent revision".
KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER FROM VETERINARY ENVIRONMENT TO HUMAN MEDICINE
"Supported by the knowledge gained from our collaboration with KYON and our many years of materials expertise in polymer design, we are examining the use of VESTAKEEP® in human joint prostheses to bring about a significant improvement for the patient," explains Marc Knebel, head of the Medical Systems Market Segment at Evonik. "For example, we have learned to understand PEEK as a material component in complex joint prosthesis systems that can be integrated into existing technologies according to the modular principle.“
Hip joint replacement operations have long been among the most standard operations. In the group of OECD countries, an average of 182 procedures were performed per 100,000 population in 2017, according to the Health at a Glance 2017 Report. This figure was 30 percent higher than ten years earlier. The current technologies are convincing in terms of availability and reliability as well as professional and experienced handling by orthopedic specialists. "With our PEEK material, we believe we can extend the service life of existing hip systems and thus improve the quality of life for patients," says Knebel.
PEEK FOR JOINT PROSTHESES - AN INNOVATION SCENARIO
In terms of materials or functional requirements, the human hip joint prosthesis barely differs from those used in veterinary orthopedics. Similarly, the friction partner between the head and the cup anchored in the bone is a primary weak point of today's technologies. "Our tribological PEEK biomaterial could make the decisive difference in the future and extend the life of a hip prosthesis fourfold," says Knebel. If it were, millions of patients worldwide could do without years of pain-relieving therapies. These are often necessary to reach a certain age for surgery, so that the probability of a risky revision at an advanced age can be reduced.
The promising patient perspective and the success story of KYON give Evonik's polymer experts the necessary drive to push the PEEK biomaterial for use in human joint prostheses through all regulatory measures with potential partners. The specialty chemicals company's determination is expressed in its close cooperation with the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) in Boston, USA. "We draw on the expertise of medical specialists from the MGH's globally recognized center for knee and hip replacement, test our material for tribological properties in their professional laboratories, and receive valuable feedback that always takes us one step further," explains Kenneth Ross, head of Evonik's medical technology business in America.
The use of VESTAKEEP® PEEK as a material component in human joint prostheses is an innovative scenario and once again demonstrates the possibilities of high-performance materials in modern medicine. If the breakthrough is successful, a new quality in the treatment of hip arthrosis would be available to human medicine. Considering the more than 300 million cases of hip and knee osteoarthritis worldwide in 2017, as published by the Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases magazine, this would be a significant medical achievement.