| Literature DB >> 22593830 |
Doniel Drazin1, Jack Rosner, Pablo Avalos, Frank Acosta.
Abstract
Low back pain is widely recognized as one of the most prevalent pathologies in the developed world. In the United States, low back pain is the most common health problem for adults under the age of 50, resulting in significant societal and personal costs. While the causes of low back pain are myriad, it has been significantly associated with intervertebral disc (IVD) degeneration. Current first-line therapies for IVD degeneration such as physical therapy and spinal fusion address symptoms, but do not treat the underlying degeneration. The use of tissue engineering to treat IVD degeneration provides an opportunity to correct the pathological process. Novel techniques are currently being investigated and have shown mixed results. One major avenue of investigation has been stem cell injections. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have shown promise in small animal models, but results in larger vertebrates have been mixed.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22593830 PMCID: PMC3347696 DOI: 10.1155/2012/961052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Orthop ISSN: 2090-3464
Figure 1Illustration of the main intervertebral disc structures and vertebral column. CEP: cartilage endplate; AF: annulus fibrosus; NP: nucleus pulposus; VB: vertebral body; 1: spinal cord; 2: nerve root; 3: apophyseal joint; 4: site of NP protrusion and nerve root compression after IVD degeneration.
Figure 2Different treatments for IVD degeneration are illustrated. (a) Injecting a viral vector into the IVD causes expression of the coded protein by the transformed disc cells. (b) Cells from the NP are harvested and then can be cultivated, genetically modified, or seeded into a scaffold before being transplanted into the IVD. (c) Bone MSCs are harvested and injected into the IVD as MSCs or as differentiated cells.
Review of stem cell intervertebral disc therapy reported in the literature, including the animal model, cell type, and treatment outcome.
| Study year | Animal model | Cell type | Cellular scaffold | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nishimura and Mochida, 1998 [ | Rat (nucleus aspiration) | Autologous NP tissue | NA | NA |
| Okuma et al., 2000 [ | Rabbit (nucleus aspiration) | NP cells | No | Delayed formation of clusters of chondrocyte-like cells, the destruction of disc architecture, and the elaboration of type-II collagen |
| Nomura et al., 2001 [ | Rabbit (nucleus aspiration) | Allograft NP tissue | No | Decreased IVD |
| Gruber et al. 2002 [ | Sand rat | Autologous disc chondrocytes—AF cells | No | Engrafted cells integrated into the disc and normal ECM was synthetized |
| Ganey et al., 2003 [ | Canine (disc material removal) | Autologous disc chondrocytes—NP and AF cells | No | Viable proliferating chondrocytes that synthetized ECM (collagen I and II) were found and retention of disc height |
| Gorensek et al., 2004 [ | Rabbit (nucleus aspiration) | Autologous cartilage chondrocytes | No | Only Hyaline-like cartilage was found |
| Sakai et al. 2003 [ | Rabbit (nucleus aspiration) | Autologous BMSCs—genetic marking with LacZ | Atelocollagen gel | Improved annular structure and proteoglycan preservation |
| Crevensten et al., 2004 [ | Rat (no injury) | BMSCs | Hyaluronan gel | Increased disc height and matrix synthesis |
| Sakai et al. 2005 [ | Rabbit (nucleus aspiration) | Autologous BMSCs—genetic marking with GFP | Atelocollagen gel | Proliferation and site-dependent differentiation |
| Zhang et al., 2005 [ | Rabbit (no injury) | Allogeneic BMSCs—genetic marking with LacZ | No | Increased proteoglycan and collagen type II synthesis |
| Leung et al. 2006 [ | Rabbit (nucleus puncture) | Allogeneic BMSCs | NA | NA |
| Sobajima et al., 2008 [ | Rabbit (no injury) | Allogeneic BMSCs—genetic marking with LacZ | No | Transplanted BMSCs migration and engraftment into the inner annulus fibrosus |
| Hiyama et al., 2008 [ | Canine (nucleotomy) | Autologous BMSCs | No | Suppression of disc degeneration and preservation of immune privilege |
| Hoogendoorn et al. 2008 [ | Goat (ABC chondroitinase) | None | Mild slowly progressive degeneration | |
| Yang et al., 2009 [ | Murine (annular puncture) | BMSCs from EGFP transgenic mice | No | Increased matrix synthesis by both autonomous differentiation and stimulatory action on endogenous cells |
| Henriksson et al., 2009 [ | Porcine (nucleus aspiration) | Human BMSCs | Hydrogel | Cells survival and disc-like differentiation |
| Wei et al., 2009 [ | Rat (no injury) | Human BMSCs labeled with tracker orange | No | Cells survival and chondrocytic differentiation |
| Acosta et al., 2011 [ | Porcine (nucleotomy) | Juvenile Chondrocytes/Allogeneic BMSCs | Fibrin | JC survival, proliferation, and synthesis of ECM. MSCs were not observed |
NP: nucleus pulposus, AF: annulus fibrosus, ECM: extracellular matrix, MSCs: mesenchymal stem cells, BMSCs: bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells, and IVD: intervertebral disc.