Today, the risk of contamination for the recipient of bone allograft remains very low and the european demand of bone allograft is still high. But nevertheless, the best performant bone graft continues to be the autograft because of its osteogenicity.
Van Isacker, T., Cornu, O., Barbier, O., Dufrane, D., de Gheldere, A., & Delloye, C. (2014). Bone Autografting, Allografting and Banking. In George Bentley [editor] (ed.), European Surgical Orthopaedics and Traumatology : The EFORT Textbook. Springer. https://hdl.handle.net/2078.5/222577