| Literature DB >> 21127696 |
Alexis Thomas1, Ardeshir Bayat.
Abstract
Dupuytren disease (DD) is a common fibroproliferative disease of unknown etiopathogenesis affecting the palmar aponeurosis, causing reduced hand function and resulting in fixed flexion contractures of the digits. Current gold standard treatment for the management of DD is surgical excision involving removal of the affected palmar fascial tissue. However, there are potential complications associated with surgery as it is costly and a positive surgical outcome is often short-lived because the disease tends to recur. Therefore, there is growing interest in nonsurgical, outpatient-based treatments that could be quicker, cheaper, reduce morbidity, show a decreased rate of recurrence, and give DD patients an improved quality of life when compared with traditional surgical management. Of the available nonsurgical options, injectable Clostridium histolyticum collagenase (CHC) has received recent clinical interest. In this article, a brief overview of DD surgical and nonsurgical treatments utilized is given, followed by a detailed examination of the nine papers published to date on the use of CHC in DD (and similar fibrotic disorders). These papers have investigated safe and efficacious doses for the injection of CHC to treat palpable DD cords in adult patients and have shown significant short- to mid-term results for correction to near-full digital extension (≤5° extension) following CHC injection of DD cords. CHC has been shown to target the collagen-based DD cords while sparing surrounding neurovasculature, with a complication profile that appears comparable to that of the surgical methods currently utilized. In conclusion, clostridial collagenase is a novel nonsurgical treatment option of considerable potential in the management of DD when administered by specialist hand surgeons with detailed knowledge of the disease and the relevant anatomy. Nonetheless, there is a need for further data on long-term results, complications, and rate of recurrence with the use of this emerging treatment option.Entities:
Keywords: Dupuytren contracture; enzymatic injection; fibrosis; nonsurgical treatment
Year: 2010 PMID: 21127696 PMCID: PMC2988615 DOI: 10.2147/TCRM.S8591
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Clin Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6336 Impact factor: 2.423
All papers retrieved relating to CHC use in the management of fibrotic disorders, in their chronological order of publication
| Authors/refs | Disorder | Aim/end point | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gelbard | PD | Effect of CHC on: healthy vs PD-affected tunica albuginea surrounding tissues following injection into rat femoral canal | No significant difference in the degree of collagen degradation between the diseased and healthy tissues |
| Starkweather | DD | Effect of injected CHC on tensile strength of DD cords | Phase I: 3,600 U injection; 10 CHC vs 10 control injections; 93% decrease in tensile modulus |
| Badalamente | DD | In vivo effect of CHC on joint contractures – correction to ≤5° extension | Phase I: dose trial (300, 600, 1,200, 4,800, 9,600 U) – no cord rupture |
| Badalamente | DD | In vivo effect of CHC on joint contractures – correction to ≤5° extension (PCRT) | Phase I: |
| Kang | Keloid | Effects of CHC/triamcinolone/ combination of both on scar | Mixed keloid and hypertrophic scars (7 patients): keloid – 33% reduction in scar volume in first 6 mo, then effect lost; hypertrophic scars – no effect |
| Badalamente | DD | In vivo effect of CHC on joint contractures – correction to ≤5° extension (PCRT) | Blinded PCRT: 55 joints; 10,000 U/injection; multiple injections to achieve primary end point; 91% CHC joints achieved primary end point vs 0% placebo |
| Del Carlo | PD and DD | In vitro effect of CHC when injected into PD plaques and DD cords | Enzymatic effect maximal at 4 h; near-complete digestion at 12 h; no cellular death; noncollagenous tissues unaffected |
| Hurst | DD | In vivo effect of CHC on joint contractures – correction to ≤5° extension (PCRT) | 512 joints: 64% CHC joints achieved primary end point vs 6.8% placebo joints |
| Watt | DD | Recurrence rate 8 y after single CHC injection – correction to ≤5° extension | MCPJ – 2/6 no recurrence; 4/6 recurrence |
Abbreviations: CHC, Clostridium histolyticum collagenase; PD, Peyronie disease; DD, Dupuytren disease; MCPJ, metacarpophalangeal joint; PIPJ, proximal interphalangeal joint; PCRT, placebo-controlled, randomized trial.
Figure 1Illustration of classes of Clostridium histolyticum collagenase (CHC) based on their hydrolytic point of attack on collagen molecule: class I CHCs act at loci near the N and C terminals of the collagen domain; class II CHCs cleave within the central collagen domain – the combined action of both classes synergistically effects thorough degradation of the collagen triple helix.
Figure 2Timeline of key milestones in the history of Clostridium histolyticum collagenases (CHCs) and their use in Dupuytren disease (DD).
Figure 3Diagram illustrating: A) hand with palpable “bow-stringed” Dupuytren disease (DD) cord. B) anatomical landmarks in DD-affected hand.
Figure 4Diagram illustrating indications, relative contraindications, injection technique with adjustments for metacarpophalangeal (MCP) vs proximal interphalangeal (PIP) joints and suggested aftercare following successful Dupuytren disease (DD) cord rupture (as per Hurst et al5).
Abbreviations: CHC, Clostridium histolyticum collagenase.
Figure 5Flowchart for managing patients with Dupuytren disease (DD) from initial presentation to treatment, demonstrating the role of Clostridium histolyticum collagenase (CHC) injection within the treatment algorithm of DD.