| Literature DB >> 23579757 |
Mário Lenza1, Silvia de Barros Ferraz, Dan Carai Maia Viola, Oscar Fernando Pavão dos Santos, Miguel Cendoroglo Neto, Mario Ferretti.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate effectiveness of the use of platelet-rich plasma as coadjuvant for union of long bones.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23579757 PMCID: PMC4872982 DOI: 10.1590/s1679-45082013000100023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Einstein (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1679-4508
Characteristics of the studies included
| Study | Method/Population | Interventions/Outcomes | Results/Conclusions | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calori 2008( | Randomized clinical trial | Interventions: | Clinical and radiographic consolidation: 86.7% rhBMP-7 versus 68.3% PRP (P=0.016); | Bias risk: Randomization generation sequence: low bias risk; Allocation concealment: high bias risk; Blinded patients and researchers: high bias risk; Blinding of outcome evaluators: high bias risk; Incomplete data: uncertain bias risk; Selective report of outcomes: uncertain bias risk; Other bias sources: low bias risk. |
| 120 patients with atrophic pseudarthrosis of long bones (femur, tibia, humerus, ulna or radius). | Primary: clinical and radiographic consolidation. | Pain: no statistically significant differences; | ||
| Group rhBMP-7: 60 patients (28 women) - mean age: 44 years; Group PRP: 60 patients (25 women) – mean age: 41 years. | Follow-up: 1, 3, 6, 9 and 12 months. | Complications: no statistically significant differences. | ||
| Conclusion: results favorable for the use of rhBMP-7 when compared with PRP for the outcome of bone consolidation. | ||||
| Study with moderate/high methodological bias risk subjective criteria and with low statistical power. | ||||
| Dallari 2007( | Randomized clinical trial | Interventions: | There were no statistically relevant differences between the intervention for functional clinical outcomes; | Bias risk: Randomization generation sequence: low bias risk; Allocation concealment: high bias risk; Blinding of patients and researchers: high bias risk; Blinding of outcome evaluators: low bias risk; Incomplete date: uncertain bias risk; Selective report of the outcomes: uncertain bias risk; Other bias sources: low bias risk. |
| 28 patients submitted to valgising tibial osteotomy. | Primary: a) clinical – functional score of the Knee Society and, b) radiographic – integration of the graft; | Complications: none of the three groups presented significant complications. | ||
| Follow-up: 6 and 12 weeks, 6 and 12 months. | Conclusions: PRP or PRP with stromal cells showed better osteointegration of the graft; nevertheless, these coadjuvants do not alter the functional results. | Study with moderate/high methodological bias risk subjective criteria and with low statistical power. |
Ongoing studies
| Author | Reference |
|---|---|
| Griffin et al.( | Griffin XL, Parsons N, Achten J, Costa ML. Warwick Hip Trauma Study: a randomised clinical trial comparing interventions to improve outcomes in internally fixed intracapsular fractures of the proximal femur. Protocol for the WHiT Study. BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2010;11:184 |
| Petrera et al.( | Petrera P, Moody W, Christensen M. Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP) in Total Knee Replacement: A Prospective, Randomized, Single-blind, Single-center Clinical Study to Evaluate the Effect of Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP) on Short-term Patient Outcomes Following Total Knee Replacement. WHO International Clinical Trial Registry. [cited 2011 Dec. 27]. Available from: |
| Smith et al.( | Smith KK. Standard total knee arthroplasty using platelet rich plasma (PRP). WHO International Clinical Trial Registry. [cited 2011 Dec 27]. Available from: |
| Griffin et al.( | Griffin XL, Wallace D, Parsons N, Costa ML. Platelet rich therapies for long bone healing in adults. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2011, Issue 12. Art. No.: CD009496 |