| Literature DB >> 25182680 |
Susanne Grässel1, Julia Lorenz.
Abstract
Focal chondral or osteochondral lesions can be painful and disabling because they have insufficient intrinsic repair potential, and constitute one of the major extrinsic risk factors for osteoarthritis (OA). Attention has, therefore, been paid to regenerative therapeutic procedures for the early treatment of cartilaginous defects. Current treatments for OA are not regenerative and have little effect on the progressive degeneration of joint tissue. One major reason for this underrepresentation of regenerative therapy is that approaches to treating OA with cell-based strategies have to take into consideration the larger sizes of the defects, as compared with isolated focal articular-cartilage defects, and the underlying disease process. Here, we review current treatment strategies using mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) for chondral and osteochondral tissue repair in trauma and OA-affected joints. We discuss tissue-engineering approaches, in preclinical large-animal models and clinical studies in humans, which use crude bone-marrow aspirates and MSCs from different tissue sources in combination with bioactive agents and materials.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25182680 PMCID: PMC4182613 DOI: 10.1007/s11926-014-0452-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Rheumatol Rep ISSN: 1523-3774 Impact factor: 4.592
Fig. 1Overview of preclinical and clinical studies of treatment of traumatic and osteoarthritis-induced defects with mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) discussed in this review. ADSC = adipose-tissue-derived stem cells, BMC = bone-marrow concentrate, BMSC = bone-marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells
Preclinical trials using BMSC for chondral and osteochondral repair in ovine, porcine, and equine animal models
| Reference | BMSC | Experimental groups (pre-incubation, matrix, scaffold, and/or growth factors) | No. of animals | Follow-up (m) | Defect and defect site | Defect size | Results (% of normal tissue) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mrugala et al., 2008 [ | Ovine, p1, 107 | 1: Fibrin glue 2: Chitosan + fibrin glue 3: BMSC + fibrin glue 4: BMSC + chitosan + fibrin glue 5: BMSC + chitosan + TGF-β3 + fibrin glue 6: Chitosan + TGF-β3 + fibrin glue | 3 | 2 | Chondral partial thickness in internal groove of patella | Diameter 4 mm | No scoring was performed. When BMSC were combined with chitosan and TGF-β3, repaired tissue had chondrocytes like rounded cells surrounded by hyaline-cartilage-like tissue. |
| Zscharnack et al., 2010 [ | Ovine, p1, 7.2 × 105 | 1: Cells in collagen I gel, 2 weeks in chondrogenic medium (TGF-β3) 2: Cells in collagen I gel, 2 weeks in expansion medium 3: Collagen I gel 4: Non-treated | 10 | 6 | Osteochondral in medial femoral condyle | Diameter 7 mm, 77 mm3 | 1: 73 % a 2: 47 % 3: 28 % 4: 40 % (O’Driscoll score) |
| Marquass et al., 2011 [ | Ovine, p1, 7 × 105 | 1: Cells in collagen I gel, 2 weeks in chondrogenic medium (TGF-β3) 2: Cells in collagen I gel, 2 weeks in expansion medium 3: Chondrocytes in collagen I gel, 4 weeks in expansion medium 4: Non-treated | 9 | 12 | Osteochondral in medial femoral condyle | Diameter 7 mm, 77 mm3 | 1: 76 % a 2: 44 % 3: 56 % 4: 45 % (O’Driscoll score) |
| Marquass et al., 2010 [ | Ovine, p1, 4 × 105 chondral phase, 106 osseous phase | 1: Triphase implant: cells in collagen I gel, 2 weeks in chondrogenic medium (TGF-β3) (chondral phase) / plasma / cells seeded on β-TCP implants + EDTA plasma + 0.1 mol L−1 CaCl2, 2 weeks in expansion medium (osseus phase) 2: OATS | 5 | 6 and 12 | Osteochondral in medial femoral condyle | Diameter 6.4 mm, 386 mm3 | 1: 56 % 2: 68 % (O’Driscoll score after 12 months) |
| Guo et al., 2004 [ | Ovine, p3, 3 × 107 | 1: Cells were seeded without pre-differentiation on β-TCP implants, cell attachment for 30 h 2: β-TCP implants without cells 3: Untreated | 8 | 3 and 6 | Osteochondral in medial femoral condyle | Diameter 8 mm, 201 mm3 | 1: 75 %a / 87 %a 2: 42 % / 19 % 3: 21 % / 9 % (O’Driscoll score / GAG content after 6 months) |
| Frosch et al., 2006 [ | Ovine, p2 | 1: Cell-coated titanium implant, 3–4 weeks migration in implants 2: Cell-free titanium implant 3: Untreated | – | – | Osteochondral in medial femoral condyle | Diameter 7.3 mm, 209 mm3 | 1: 44 % 2: 28 % 3: 14 % (Wakitani score) |
| Steck et al., 2009 [ | Porcine, p3, 2 × 106 | 1: Undifferentiated BMSC in fibrin glue, defect covered with collagen I and III matrix 2: In-vitro differentiation in fibrin, 2 months with chondrogenic medium (+TGF-β3, +BMP-2) | 6 | 2 | Chondral full thickness in medial trochlear facet | Diameter 5.4 mm, 34–46 mm3 | In vivo, significantly lower MMP-13 and collagen X level related to collagen II expression compared with in vitro |
| Zhou et al., 2006 [ | Porcine, p2, 1.5 × 107 | 1: Chondrogenically inducted BMSC seeded on PGA–PLA construct, 1 week in expansion medium (+TGF-β1) 2: BMSC seeded on PGA–PLA construct, 1 week in expansion medium (−TGF-β1) 3: PGA–PLA construct alone 4: Untreated | 6 10 | 3 6 | Osteochondral in femur trochlea | Diameter 8 mm, 302 mm3 | 1: 85 % / 80 % / 93 % 2: 67 % / 63 % / 78 % 3: 24 % 4: 15 % (mod. Wakitani and Pineda score / compressive moduli / GAG content) |
| Ho et al., 2010 [ | Porcine, p1, 5 × 106 (PCL), 2 × 106 (PCL–TCP) | 1: Undifferentiated BMSC via fibrin in PCL and PCL–TCP, covered with PCL–collagen electrospun mesh 2: Undifferentiated BMSC via fibrin in PCL and PCL–TCP 3: Fibrin in PCL and PCL–TCP, covered with PCL–collagen electrospun mesh | 6 | 6 | Osteochondral in medial condyle and patella groove | Diameter 8 mm, 402 mm3 | Medial condyle: 1: 65 % / 70 % 2: 65 % / 68 % 3: 58 % / 42 % (mod. O’Driscoll score / Young’s modulus) |
| Chang et al., 2011 [ | Porcine, p4, 106 | 1: Cells in collagen I gel, 2 weeks in chondrogenic medium (+TGF-β1), periosteal patch from the tibia 2: Cells in collagen I gel, 2 weeks in chondrogenic medium (−TGF-β1), periosteal patch from the tibia 3: Collagen I gel, periosteal patch 4: Non-treated | 1: 10 2: 6 | 6 | Osteochondral in medial femoral condyle | Diameter 6.5 mm, 100 mm3 | 1: 44 % / 51 % 2: 67 % / 51 % 3: 48 % / 56 % 4: 41 % / 50 % (Pineda score / compressive stiffness) |
| Wilke et al., 2007 [ | Equine, p2/3, 1.2 × 107 | 1: Undifferentiated BMSC in autologous fibrin 2: Autologous fibrin without cells | 6 | 8 | Chondral full thickness in femoral patella | Diameter 15 mm, 309–353 mm3 | 1: 57 % / 54 % / 184 % / 38 % 2: 52 % / 51 % / 197 % / 55 % (score / collagen II / DNA / GAG content) |
| Seo et al., 2013 [ | Equine, p1, MSC 5 × 106, Ch 5 × 104 | 1: Chondrogenic layer: Ch differentiated for 10 days + BMSC + PRP (source for TGF-β1) seeded on acidic GT, osteogenic layer: BMSC + BMP-2 seeded on basic GT sponge (biphasic) 2: Bilayer GT sponge without cells and growth factors | 6 | 4 | Osteochondral in lateral trochlear ridge of talus | Diameter 4.5 mm, 159 mm3 | 1: 55 % 2: 39 % (Niederauer score) |
BMP = bone morphogenetic protein, BMSC = bone-marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells, Ch = chondrogenically differentiated BMSC, GAG = glycosaminoglycan, GT = bilayer gelatin–β tricalcium phosphate, m = months, MMP = matrix metalloproteinase, OATS = osteochondral autografting, p = passage, PCL = polycaprolactone, PGA–PLA = polyglycolic acid–polylactic acid, PRP = platelet-rich plasma, TGF = transforming growth factor, TCP = tricalcium phosphate osseous. a = Group 1 is significantly different from other groups
Clinical trials using BMC and MSC for chondral and osteochondral repair
| Reference | Study type | Indication and defect size | No. of patients | Follow-up | Cells and suspensions | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gigante et al., 2011 (Italy) [ | Case series | Cartilage lesion of medial femoral condyle | 5 (mean age 43.4 y) | 12 m | BMC + collagen membrane (AMIC) | Nearly normal arthroscopic appearance of implants; mean histological score (ICRS II); hyaline-like matrix was found in 1 patient; a mixture of hyaline and fibrocartilage was found in 1 patient; fibrocartilage was found in 3 patients. |
| Gigante et al., 2012 (Italy)[ | Case report | Cartilage lesion of medial femoral condyle 3 cm2 | 1 (age 37 y) | 24 m | 3–5 mL BMC + MFX + collagen membrane (AMIC) | No pain after 6 m; MRI at 12 m revealed good defect filling and no bone edema; at 24 m patient was still asymptomatic |
| Enea et al., 2013 (Italy) [ | Case series | Focal condylar articular knee lesions | 9 | 22 ± 2 m | MFX + PGA–HA matrix + BMC | Eight patients had significant improvement in mean IKDC subjective score, Lysholm score, VAS, and median Tegner score up to 22 m; one cartilage repair appeared normal, three almost normal, one appeared abnormal, and one appeared hyaline-cartilage-like. MRI at 8–12 m revealed complete defect filling |
| Giannini et al., 2009 (Italy) [ | Case series | Focal osteochondral lesions of the talar dome. Size: 2.07 ± 0.48 cm2 Depth: 4.0 ± 0.9 mm | 48 (age 28.5 ± 9.5 y) | 24–35 m | 2 mL BMC + collagen powder (or HA membrane) + 1 mL PRF | Increase of clinical score (AOFAS, MRI revealed newly formed tissue with hyaline-like characteristics but hypertrophic appearance; close integration with surrounding cartilage |
| Giannini et al., 2010 (Italy) [ | Comparative study | Focal osteochondral monolateral lesions of the talar dome. Size: 2.18–0.5 cm2 Depth: 4.0–0.9 mm | 81 total (age 30 ± 8 y): 10 (ACI); 46 ACI arthroscopic; 25 BMC | 36 m | ACI open; ACI arthroscopic injection; 2 mL BMC + collagen powder (or HA membrane) + 1 mL PRF | Clinical score (AOFAS) improvement in all 3 groups; MOCART (MRI) scoring system revealed nearly complete integration of regenerated tissue with surrounding cartilage in 76 % of patients; in 5 cases hypertrophy of regenerated tissue; histology revealed hyaline-like cartilage and tissue remodeling |
| Skowronski et al., 2013 (Poland) [ | Case series | ICRS grade III or IV cartilage lesions. Size: 4–12 cm2 | 54 | 1 and 5 y | BMC + collagen membrane | KOOS and Lysholm functional scales and VAS and KOOS pain scales increased in 52 patients. No MRI data, no histology data |
| Wakitani et al., 2004 (Japan) [ | Case report | Full-thickness articular-cartilage defects in patellae | 2 (age 26 y and 44 y) | 4 and 5 y | Transplantation of expanded BMSC in collagen gel + periosteum | Improvement of clinical symptoms (6 m–2 y); defects were filled with fibrocartilage (1 and 2 y) |
| Kuroda et al., 2007 (Japan) [ | Case report | Full-thickness articular-cartilage defects in medial femoral condyle (ICRS IV). Size: 20 × 30 mm | 1 (age 31 y) | 1 y | Transplantation of 5 × 106 expanded BMSC per mL collagen gel + periosteum | Clinical symptoms were improved; histology revealed defect filling with 3 layers of repair tissue appearing hyaline-like (middle), fibrous (top), and bone-like (lower). MRI revealed tissue irregularities |
| Wakitani et al., 2007 (Japan) [ | Case report | Full-thickness articular-cartilage defects in patella femoral joints. Size: 1: 1.6 and 1 2: 4 3: 1.1 and 1 | 3 (age 31 y, 44 y, and 45 y) | 17–27 m | Transplantation of 5 × 106 expanded BMSC per mL collagen gel + periosteum or synovium | Clinical symptoms were improved; in 2 patients defect was filled with fibrocartilaginous tissue |
| Haleem et al., 2010 (Egypt) [ | Case series | Full-thickness articular-cartilage defects in medial femoral condyle. Size: 3 to 12 cm2 (Outerbridge III/ IV) | 5 ( age 21–37 y) | 12–16 m | 2 × 106 cells per cm2 expanded BMSC + 3 mL PRF | Improved clinical scores; MRI revealed partial defect filling with complete or incomplete congruity for 2 patients, and for 3 patients complete defect filling without hypertrophy and with congruity of repair tissue with native cartilage |
| Nejadnik et al., 2010 (Singapore) [ | Comparative study | Full-thickness cartilage defects in knees | 72 total (age < 65 y): 36 ACI; 36 BMSC | Up to 24 m | Transplantation of chondrocytes or 2 × 106 BMSC + periosteum | Overall no difference in clinical scores between ACI and BMSC groups; men had greater improvement than women; histology of biopsies from 7 patients revealed hyaline-like cartilage |
| Varma et al., 2010 (India) [ | Comparative study | Mild to moderate knee OA | 50 total: 25 BMC + debridement; 25 debridement | ? | Injection of BMC concentrate | Improvement of visual analogue scale (VAS) score, OA outcome score, and quality of life |
| Kim et al., 2014 (South Korea) [ | Case series | Radiological degree of OA; there were 12, 24, 33, and 6 cases of each of Kellgren–Lawrence grade I, II, III, and IV | 41 (age 53–80 y) | 3, 6, 12 m | Injection of BMC concentrate + adipose tissue | BMC injection significantly improved both knee pain (VAS score) and function. VAS score improvement was least in the K–L grade IV group |
| Centeno et al., 2008 (USA) [ | Case report | MRI evidence of degenerative knee OA | 1 (age 46 y) | 6 m | Injection of 22.4 × 106 expanded BMSC + 1 mL PRP | Femoral cartilage volume increase determined from MRI, functional scores improvement (VAS and FRI), and increase in range of motion in extension |
| Centeno et al., 2010 (USA) [ | Case series | Degenerative joint and disc diseases | 213 (mean age 52.8 ± 13.5 y) | 3, 6, 12, 24 m | Injection of 1–3 × 106 expanded BMSC + 10–20 % PRP | No evidence of neoplastic complications in any re-implant site by MRI |
| Centeno et al., 2011 (USA) [ | Case series | Degenerative joint and disc diseases | 340 (53 ± 13.85 y) | 3, 6, 12, 24 m | Injection of expanded BMSC + PRP | Knee outcome scores: >75 % improvement was reported for 41.4 % while reducing the improvement threshold to >50 % improvement, 63.2 % reported an improvement; no evidence of neoplastic complications in any re-implant site on MRI |
| Emadedin et al., 2012 (Iran) [ | Case series | Radiological evidence of knee OA | 6 (mean age 54.5 y) | 12 m | Injection of 20–24 × 106 expanded BMSC | Pain, functional status, and walking distance improved; MRI indicated increase in cartilage thickness and extension of the repair tissue over the SB in 3/6 patients |
| Davatchi et al. 2011 (Iran) [ | Case report | Moderate to severe knee OA | 4 (age 55, 57, 65, and 54 y) | 6 m | Injection of 8–9 × 106 expanded BMSC | Mild improvement of pain on the basis of walking time, stair climbing, and VAS |
| Pak, 2011 (South Korea) [ | Case report | Knee OA | 2 (age 70 y and 79 y) | 12 weeks | Injection of ADSC (not expanded) + PRP + HA + dexamethasone | Improvement of pain and range of motion; increase of height and thickness of meniscus cartilage on the medial side |
| Koh et al., 2012 (South Korea) [ | Comparative study | Knee OA | 50 total: 25 ADSC + PRP; 25 PRP | 16 m | Injection of 1.9 × 106 concentrated ADSC after debridement (not expanded) + 3 mL PRP | Mean Lysholm, Tegner activity scale, and VAS scores improved significantly, but no significant differences between study and control groups |
| Koh et al., 2013 (South Korea) [ | Case series | Knee OA | 18 (mean age 55 y) | 26 m | Injection of 03–2.7 × 106 concentrated ADSC (increasing number) after debridement (not expanded) + 3 mL PRP | Improvements in clinical scores (VAS, OA indices, Lysholm) and MRI results were positively related to the number of stem cells injected |
| Koh et al., 2013 (South Korea) [ | Case series | Knee OA | 30 (age > 65 y) | 3, 12 and 24 m | Injection of 4.2 × 107 expanded ADSC + 3 mL PRP | 25/30 patients had improved KOOS, Lysholm, and VAS scores |
| Wakitani et al., 2002 (Japan) [ | Comparative study | Severe knee OA | 24 total (mean age: 63 y range: 49-70 y): 12 BMSC + collagen gel + collagen sheet + periosteum; 12 cell-free controls | 42 weeks | Implantation of 1.3 × 107 expanded BMSC + collagen gel + collagen sheet | Defects were coved with soft white cartilage-like tissue; Although the clinical improvement was not significantly different, the arthroscopic and histological grading score was better in the cell-transplanted group than in the cell-free control group |
| Koh et al., 2014 (South Korea) [ | Case series | Isolated full-thickness articular-cartilage lesions because of knee OA. Size: 5.4–2.9 cm2 | 35 (mean age 57.4 y, range 48–69 y) | 24–34 m | Implantation of 3.8 × 106 ADSC (not expanded) | Clinical score (IKDC and Tegner activity scale) improved; on the basis of ICRS repair score, 2 lesions were normal, 7 near normal, 20 abnormal, and 8 severely abnormal: 76 % of repair was rated as abnormal or severely abnormal |
| Wong et al., 2013 (Singapore) [ | Comparative study | Uni-compartmental knee OA | 56 total (mean age 51 y): 28 MFX + BMSC; 28 MFX | 12 m | Injection of 1.5 × 107 expanded BMSC after MFX | Improvement in clinical scores (Tegner, IKDC, Lysholm) but significantly better in BMSC group; MRI revealed significantly better MOCART scores for BMSC group |
ACI = autologous chondrocyte implantation, ADSC = adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells, AMIC = autologous matrix-induced chondrogenesis, BMC = bone-marrow concentrate, BMSC = bone-marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells, FRI = functional rating index, HA = hyaluronic acid, ICRS = International Cartilage Repair Society, IKDC = International Knee Documentation Committee, KOOS = osteoarthritis outcome score, m = months, MFX = microfracture, MOCART = magnetic-resonance observation of cartilage repair tissue, MRI = magnetic-resonance imaging, OA = osteoarthritis, PGA–HA = polyglycolic acid–hyaluronan, PRF = platelet-rich fibrin gel (glue), PRP = platelet-rich plasma, SB = subchondral bone, VAS = visual analogue scale, WOMAC = Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index, y = years.