| Literature DB >> 22028946 |
Marissa J Carter, Carelyn P Fylling, Laura K S Parnell.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Autologous platelet rich plasma is an advanced wound therapy used in hard-to-heal acute and chronic wounds. To better understand the use and clinical outcomes of the therapy, a systematic review of the published literature in cutaneous wounds was performed.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22028946 PMCID: PMC3174862
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eplasty ISSN: 1937-5719
Figure 1Systematic review of platelet rich plasma literature, March 2001 to March 2011. Template from Moher D, Liberati A, Tetzlaff J, Altman DG; The PRISMA Group (2009). Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses: The PRISMA Statement. PLoS Med. 6(6): e1000097. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed1000097
Description of studies: Types of wounds and interventions used. Intervention group received all care described for control group unless otherwise stated*
| Study | Design | N | Study Period | Wound Type | Control Group | Intervention Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Almdahl et al | RCT | 140 | 6 wk | Leg wounds from long saphenous vein harvesting (CABG) | No topical treatment. Standard closure (intracutaneous poliglecaprone) | Autologous PRP (GPS, Biomet Biologics; activated with autologous thrombin) sprayed prior to closure |
| Anitua et al | RCT | 15 | 8 wk | Cutaneous ulcers <12cm diameter, ≥4-wk old | Moist saline gauze dressings and cleaning with normal saline; debridement and systemic antibiotics for infection | Autologous PRP (PRGF System, BTI Biotechnology Institute, Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain) injected once in wound margins. |
| Buchwald et al | RCT | 70 | 50 d | Leg wounds from long saphenous vein harvesting (CABG) | No topical treatment. Standard closure | Autologous PRP (Angel; Dideco, Mirandola, Italy; activated with autologous thrombin) sprayed prior to closure |
| Carter et al | Comparative (run-in vs treatment period) | 46 | ≤86 d (run-in); ≤36 d (treatment) | DFUs, PUs, VUs, surgical, dehisced, & traumatic wounds, other types | Run-in period represented control group; authors state variety of moist wound care dressings, dressing changes, debridement as required; compression or offloading per wound type; NPWT for some wounds | Autologous PRP gel treatment (AutoloGel, Cytomedix, Gaithersburg, MD, bovine thrombin) applied to wound bed at least once. |
| Driver et al | RCT | 72 | 12 wk | DFUs, 1A (U Texas), 0.5-20 cm2, ≥4-wk old | Cleaning, dressing changes, debridement as required; offloading; saline gel (Mölynycke Health Care, Norcross, GA) and foam dressing applied after wound bed preparation biweekly for 12 wk or until healed | Autologous PRP gel (AutoloGel, Cytomedix, Gaithersburg, MD, bovine thrombin) applied after wound bed preparation biweekly for 12 wk or until healed |
| Englert et al | RCT | 30 | ∼30 d | Sternal wounds (CABG) | No topical treatment. Control wound care not reported | Autologous PRP (Magellan, Minneapolis, MN) “caulking bead” applied to sternum with cannula prior to closure |
| Everts et al | Prospective cohort (controls are consecutive patients who followed) | 165 | ∼1 wk | Surgical wounds (TKA) | Wound drain, no topical treatment, wound dressings not specified, compression bandage | Autologous PRP (Electa, Sorin Group, Mirandola, Italy; 85% activated with autologous thrombin, remaining activated with bovine thrombin) sprayed in back of knee cavity, posterior recess, gutters, etc.) and after deep closure injected on repaired extensor mechanism/prepatellar fat (no wound drain) |
| Friese et al | RCT | 42 | 25 wk (12 wk for CWH) | DFUs, Wagner 1-3, >0.7 cm2, >6-wk old | Cleansing, debridement, dressing changes as needed & offloading. No topical treatment, wound dressed with polyurethane foam | Autologous PRP (Harvest Technologies, Plymouth, MA) every 2 wk for 12 wk |
| Gardner et al | Retrospective comparison 61 PRP-treated wounds, 37 controls over same time period | 98 | ∼1 wk | Surgical wounds (TKA) | No topical treatment, standard layered closure, dressings used but not specified and use of passive motion device after 24 h | Autologous PRP (Medtronic Sequestra 1000 Autotransfusion System, Medtronic, Minneapolis, MN) injected into posterior recess, gutters, exposed femur/tibia surfaces, repaired extensor mechanism/prepatellar fat (no wound drain) |
| Hom et al | Prospective comparison of treated wounds with contemporary own patient controls | 8 patients, 80 wounds | 6 mo | PRP-treated skin punch wounds | Bacitracin topical treatment and semiocclusive dressing | AutoloGel PRP gel (Magellan, Medtronic, Minneapolis, MN; autologous thrombin-rich serum) plus white petrolatum ointment applied once or twice |
| Kazakos et al | RCT | 59 | 3 wk | Traumatic wounds | Cleansing, debridement, and Vaseline gauze dressings | Autologous PRP gel (PRP Fast system, Bioteck; bench centrifuge; autologous thrombin) applied before or after debridement, and then weekly. Gauze sponges applied following PRP gel. |
| Khalafi et al | Retrospective analysis with propensity scoring (PRP/controls) | 1,128 | ∼1 wk | Sternal and leg wounds (CABG) | No topical treatment. Control wound care not reported | Autologous PRP (GPS II, Biomet, Inc., Warsaw, IN; activated with bovine thrombin) sprayed into sternal edges/subcutaneous tissue & graft harvest site |
| Margolis et al | Retrospective cohort study with propensity scoring (PR/controls) | 26,599 | 32 wk | DFUs (neuropathic) | No topical treatment. Standard treatment (moist wound care-not specified, debridement, offloading) | Autologous Platelet Releasate (Curative Health Services, Hauppauge, NY) initiated within the first 12 wk of care |
| Mazzucco et al | Prospective cohort with historical controls (dehiscent); cohort and controls (ulcers) | 2231 | 1 y | Dehiscent sternal wounds (CABG); necrotic skin ulcers | Daily topical washing/cleaning, and antibiotic therapy as needed (dehiscent wounds); cleaning/dressing with hyaluronic acid/synthetic collagen gauze (ulcers) | Autologous PRP gel (ACD-A Vacutainer tubes, Becton Dickinson Labware, Franklin Lakes, NJ, and bench centrifuge; autologous thrombin) twice per week (dehiscent wounds) or once per week (ulcers) until healed. Covered with Vaseline gauze. |
| Peerbooms et al | RCT | 102 | 3 mo | Surgical wounds (TKA) | No topical treatment, closed with staples. Wound care dressings not specified. Compression bandages and rehabilitation | Autologous PRP (GPS, Biomet, Inc., Warsaw, IN) sprayed into knee cavity (synovium + cut edges of femur/tibia) and PPP sprayed into subcutaneous tissues; autologous thrombin |
| Saldalamacchia et al | RCT | 14 | 5 wk | DFUs Wagner 2/3 & ≥8-wk old | No topical treatment, nonspecific standard care | Autologous PRP gel application topically for 5 wk, each week. |
| Saratzis et al | Comparison 50 prospectively treated PRP-treated wounds with 50 controls over same time period | 100 | ∼30 d | Surgical wounds (inguinal) | No topical treatment, layered closure with sutures and staples. Wound care dressings not specified. Antibiotics, aspirin, clopidogrel, ambulation, and documentation of endograft integrity | Autologous PRP (Magellan, Minneapolis, MN; not activated) injected subcutaneously and percutaneously |
| Spyridakis et al | RCT | 52 | 30 d | Surgical wounds (pilonidal disease) | No topical treatment, wound care dressings not specified. | Autologous PRP (GPS II system, Biomet, Inc., Warsaw, IN; autologous thrombin) applied into the wound intra-operatively and before postoperatively day 4 and 12 |
| Trowbridge et al | Retrospective comparison PRP-treated wounds with contemporary & historical controls | 2,259 | Not reported | Sternal wounds (cardiac surgery) | Two control groups both had no topical treatment and standard care that was not specified. One control was a historic control; the other control was performed at time of study. | Autologous PRP (CATS, Terumo Cardiovascular, Ann Arbor, MI; Harvest Technologies, Plymouth, MA; Angel, COBE Cardiovascular, Arvada, CO; bovine thrombin) sprayed to subcutaneous areas, as well as topical application |
| Vang et al | RCT | 38 | ∼3 wk | Sternal wounds (CABG) | No topical treatment, wound care dressings not specified. | Autologous PRP (Magellan, Minneapolis, MN; bovine thrombin) sprayed into deep tissue and subcutaneous layers |
| Yoo et al | RCT | 52 | ∼1 wk | Surgical wound (thyroid) | Saline spray used instead of PRP (wound bed) and PPP (under skin incision); Penrose drain (5-min duration) and closed suction drain applied to surgical site after closure. | Autologous PRP (GPS, Biomet, Inc., Warsaw, IN, autologous thrombin) sprayed into wound bed and PPP sprayed under skin incision |
*CABG indicates coronary artery bypass graft; CWH, complete wound healing; DFU, diabetic foot ulcer; NPWT, negative pressure wound therapy; PU, pressure ulcer; PPP, platelet-poor plasma; PRP, platelet-rich plasma; PU, pressure ulcer; RCT, randomized controlled trial; TKA, total knee arthroplasty; VU, venous ulcer.
Quality review of studies: Score sheet. SIGN grade was estimated using the general methodology of Harbour and Miller, assigning a grade based on the total score of external validity, internal validity (bias and confounding) as follows: 0-8 (-); 9-12 (+); 13-16 (++)
| Downs and Black, Carter, Carter | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study Quality Assessed | Reporting | External Validity | Internal Validity (Bias) | Internal Validity (Confounding) | Power | Score (of 29) | Harbour and Miller SIGN | Author Comments Reason for Upgrade or Downgrade |
| Anitua et al | 9 | 1 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 16 | − | |
| Driver et al | 10 | 2 | 6 | 1 | 1 | 20 | − | Downgrade - Efficacy analysis: dropouts high; many treatment violations |
| Friese et al | ||||||||
| Saldalamacchia et al | ||||||||
| Carter et al | 8 | 3 | 5 | 3 | 1 | 20 | + | |
| Mazzucco et al | 10 | 3 | 5 | 2 | 2 | 22 | + | |
| Margolis et al | 8 | 3 | 3 | 4 | 0 | 18 | + | |
| Almdahl et al | 11 | 3 | 7 | 5 | 1 | 27 | ++ | |
| Buchwald et al | 9 | 0 | 7 | 2 | 0 | 18 | − | Downgrade- Not clear what treatment controls got |
| Englert et al | 7 | 3 | 5 | 3 | 0 | 18 | − | Downgrade- Not clear what treatment controls got |
| Peerbooms et al | 9 | 2 | 7 | 3 | 1 | 22 | ++ | Upgrade- ITT analysis showed better results than PP |
| Vang et al | 10 | 2 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 19 | − | |
| Yoo et al | 9 | 2 | 6 | 5 | 0 | 22 | ++ | |
| Everts et al | 8 | 3 | 5 | 2 | 0 | 18 | + | |
| Gardner et al | 5 | 3 | 4 | 2 | 0 | 14 | + | |
| Khalafi et al | 7 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 15 | + | Upgrade- Large N, propensity scoring techniques used |
| Saratzis et al | 10 | 2 | 6 | 4 | 0 | 22 | + | |
| Trowbridge et al | 9 | 3 | 4 | 4 | 0 | 20 | + | |
| Kazakos et al | 10 | 3 | 5 | 2 | 0 | 20 | + | |
| Spyridakis et al | 8 | 3 | 5 | 3 | 0 | 19 | + | |
| Hom et al | 10 | 2 | 4 | 2 | 0 | 18 | − | |
*Friese citation was a RCT abstract and the Saldalamacchia citation was a research letter. Neither of these two citations could be scored. Both citations are included because Cochrane would have included them in their analysis.
Detailed outcomes reported for the study period. Number needed to treat (NNT) was calculated based on complete wound healing information provided in the publication*
*Wound size reductions are reported as mean reductions unless otherwise stated; CIs are calculated for risk difference in dichotomous outcomes and for weighted mean difference in continuous outcomes unless otherwise stated. AE indicates adverse event; C, control group (comparison); CI, confidence intervals; E, experimental group (PRP); KM, Kaplan-Meier; NNT, number needed to treat (based on complete wound healing); NS, not significant; OR, odds ratio; PRP, platelet rich plasma; PR, platelet releasate; RR, relative risk.
† Values calculated using the Z test (fixed effects) when significant unless otherwise indicated (ie, author values).
‡Intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis.
§ Per protocol (PP) analysis.
∥Author values.
¶C represents wounds during a run-in period and E represents same wounds during treatment period.
# Multivariate repeated measures general linear model in which 95% CI is for mean difference; values for C represent area or depth at first pretreatment value and for E represent percent area or depth at last treatment time.
** Repeated-measures ANOVA: multivariate for chest pain (Wilk's λ = 0.43) and univariate for leg pain.
†† Repeated-measures ANOVA, 42 days.
Quality assessment and summary of findings for studies comparing use of platelet-rich plasma treatments against standard care for acute wounds*
| Quality Assessment | Summary of Findings | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No of Patients | Effect | ||||||||||
| No of Studies | Design | Quality | Consistency | Directness | Other Modifying Factors | PRP | Controls | Relative (95% CI) | Absolute | Quality | Importance |
| Complete wound healing | |||||||||||
| 1 | RCT | No limitations | No inconsistency | No uncertainty | Short follow-up | 50 | 52 | RD: −0.23 (−0.37 to −0.08) | −23/100 | Mod | Critical |
| Infection | |||||||||||
| 1 | RCT | No limitations | No inconsistency | No uncertainty | Leg infection | 70 | 70 | RD: 0.01 (−0.09 to 0.12) | 1.4/100 | High | Important |
| 1 | Comparative | No serious limitations | No inconsistency | No uncertainty | Leg infection; large N | 560 | 546 | RD: −0.01 (−0.01 to 0) | −5.5/1000 | Mod | Important |
| 2 | Comparative | No serious limitations | No inconsistency | No uncertainty | Superficial infection | 467 | 1028 | RD: −0.02 (−0.06 to 0.01) | −22/1000 | Mod | Important |
| 1 | Comparative | No serious limitations | No inconsistency | No uncertainty | Chest infection; large N; propensity scoring | 571 | 557 | OR: 0.0743 (0.0032-1.7535) | — | Mod | Important |
| 1 | Comparative | No serious limitations | No inconsistency | No uncertainty | Chest infection | 382 | 948 | RD: −0.01 (−0.02 to −0.01) | 14.8/1000 | Mod | Important |
| Pain reduction | |||||||||||
| 3 | RCT | Some serious limitations | Inconsistency between studies | Some uncertainty (overall vs. chest pain) | Small N | 63 | 61 | WMD: −0.75 (−2.38 to 0.89) | −0.75/10 | Very low | Important |
| 1 | RCT | No serious limitations | No inconsistency | Some uncertainty | 50 | 52 | — | No difference | Mod | Important | |
| 1 | RCT | Serious limitations | No inconsistency | Some uncertainty | Dichotomous outcomes | 15 | 15 | RD: 0 (−0.36 to 0.36) | No difference | Very low | Important |
| Wound drainage/exudate | |||||||||||
| 1 | RCT | No serious limitations | No inconsistency | No uncertainty | Small N | 26 | 26 | WMD: 18.6 (36.92 to 0.28) | 18.6 mL | Low | Important |
| 1 | Comparative | No serious limitations | No inconsistency | No uncertainty | Large N; propensity scoring | 571 | 557 | OR: 0.042 | — | Mod | Important |
| 1 | Comparative | No serious limitations | No inconsistency | Some uncertainty | 85 | 80 | RD: −0.13 (−0.21 to −0.04) | −13/100 | Mod | Important | |
| Complete wound healing | |||||||||||
| 1 | Comparative | Serious limitations | No inconsistency | No uncertainty | Small N | 16 | 16 | RD: 0.31 (−0.02 to 0.64) | 31/100 | Very low | Critical |
| Time to complete wound healing | |||||||||||
| 1 | RCT | No serious limitations | No inconsistency | No uncertainty | Small N | 30 | 22 | — | 6 d | Low | Critical |
| Wound volume reduction | |||||||||||
| 1 | RCT | No serious limitations | No inconsistency | No uncertainty | Small N | 30 | 22 | WMD: 4.9 (3.79-6.01) | 4.9 mL | Mod | Important |
| Area reduction (quotient method) | |||||||||||
| 1 | RCT | No serious limitations | No inconsistency | No uncertainty | Small N | 32 | 27 | WMD: 0.13 (0.08-0.18) | 0.13 cm2 | Mod | Important |
| Pain | |||||||||||
| 1 | RCT | No serious limitations | Some inconsistency | No uncertainty | Small N | 32 | 27 | WMD: −22.2 (−31.16 to −13.28) | −22.2/100 | Low | Important |
*Mod indicates moderate; OR, odds ratio; RCT, randomized controlled trial; RD, risk difference; RR, relative risk; WMD, weighted mean difference.
Quality assessment and summary of findings for studies comparing use of platelet-rich plasma treatments against standard care for chronic wounds
| Quality Assessment | Summary of Findings | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No of Patients | Effect | ||||||||||
| No of Studies | Design | Quality | Consistency | Directness | Other Modifying Factors | PRP | Controls | Relative (95% CI) | Absolute | Quality | Importance |
| Complete Wound healing | |||||||||||
| 4 | RCT | Serious limitations | Some inconsistency | No uncertainty | Small trials (power issues) | 76 | 67 | RD: 0.24 (0.07-0.40) | 22/100 | Low | Critical |
| 1 | Comparative | No serious limitations | No inconsistency | No uncertainty | Large N, well-done analysis, evidence of better healing for severe wounds | 6,252 | 20,347 | RR: 1.38 (1.33-1.42) | 9/100 | Mod | Critical |
| Time to heal (days) | |||||||||||
| 1 | RCT | Serious limitations | Some inconsistency | No uncertainty | Numerous protocol violations | 19 | 21 | WMD: -4.50 (–17.0 to 8.0) | −4.5 d | Low | Critical |
| 1 | Comparative | No serious limitations | No inconsistency | No uncertainty | Small N | 10 | 12 | — | −17.5 d | Low | Critical |
| Mean time to reach 50% depth or area reduction | |||||||||||
| 1 | Comparative | No serious limitations | No inconsistency | No uncertainty | Relatively small N | 41 | 46 | Depth: WMD: −50.6 (–37.56 to −63.64) | Depth: 3.3-fold | Mod | Critical |
| 39 | 46 | Area: WMD: −40.9 (−26.19 to -55.61) | Area: 2.6-fold | ||||||||
| Adverse events | |||||||||||
| 3 | RCT | Some limitations | No inconsistency | No uncertainty | Small aggregate N | 63 | 74 | — | NNH: 11 | Low | Important |
*Data from one RCT uses intermediate PP results (N = 19/21); mod indicates moderate; NNH, number needed to harm; RCT, randomized controlled trial; RD, risk difference; RR, relative risk; WMD, weighted mean difference.
Figure 2Meta-analysis: Forest plot of chronic wound complete wound healing studies treated with standard wound care and either PRP or control agent. This analysis used the least conservative PP analysis for Driver et al.19 CI indicates confidence interval; df, degrees of freedom; M-H, Mantel-Haenszel; PRP, platelet-rich plasma.
Figure 3Meta-analysis: Forest plot of acute wounds with primary closure for superficial infection treated with standard wound care and either PRP or control agent. CI indicates confidence interval; df, degrees of freedom; M-H, Mantel-Haenszel; PRP, platelet-rich plasma.
Figure 4Meta-analysis: Forest plot of acute wounds with primary closure for pain reduction treated with standard wound care and either PRP or control agent. CI indicates confidence interval; df, degrees of freedom; M-H, Mantel-Haenszel; PRP, platelet-rich.