Project Summary: Percutaneous devices are often utilized in medicine and serve as a bridge between the internal and external bodily environments. Dental implants, bone-anchored hearing aids, and percutaneous osseointegrated (OI) devices for amputees are just a few examples. Although widely used, the soft tissue interface (in particularly, the epidermis) with these devices commonly fails to heal properly and disintegrates over time. It is known that immediately following percutaneous implantation; epidermal cells migrate proximally along the implant surface in an attempt to heal the surgically-created soft tissue defect. This phenomenon, termed "epidermal downgrowth," creates a sinus tract around the implant and provides a nidus for bacterial colonization. To improve patient outcomes, our previously funded PRORP study investigated the relationship between crystallinity and coating stability of fluoridated apatites. The data revealed that sintered fluorapatite (FA) possessed the ability to enhance epidermal adhesion and differentiation—a transition highly crucial for preserving the integrity of soft tissue attachment at the implant exit-site—when compared to the current standards of practice, titanium. These data further revealed that osteoblasts and fibroblasts also have affinities to this treated apatite surface, implicating a possible wider application of these apatites for promoting osseointegration as well as skin integration. FA coatings are not currently used in percutaneous osseointegrated (OI) device applications, and thus considered novel. It was believed that commercial technologies that use high temperatures for vaporizing the coating materials might not be suitable for maintaining the optimized crystallinity found within the sintered FA agglomerates. Thus, we used a low- temperature proprietary coating technique, IonTite™, which worked well in initial animal trials in rats and pigs. The overall goal of this proposal is to undertake safe and efficacious testing of this coating in a weight-bearing large animal model prior to assessing its clinical and commercialization potentials. To this end, we hypothesized that epidermally mediated downgrowth, osseointegration and healing outcomes around the percutaneous OI devices would be improved by coating the devices with a bioactive, fluorapatite sintered at 1150°C. Aim 1 will establish an ideal, low temperature, commercial coating technique for applying FA to titanium surfaces. Aim 2 will determine the efficacy of the FA-coated percutaneous OI devices to prevent epidermal downgrowth and to accelerate osseointegration in a weight-bearing large animal model. Aim 3 will confirm the completion of wound healing cascades within the periprosthetic tissue of FA-coated devices by molecular means. The outcome of this proposed study will have immediate clinical applications for the design of both permanent and temporary percutaneous implants. This proposed technology will permit current amputee patient po...