| Literature DB >> 26914757 |
Peter Angele1,2, Richard Kujat3, Matthias Koch4, Johannes Zellner5.
Abstract
Meniscus integrity is the key for joint health of the knee. Therefore, the main goal of every meniscus treatment should be the maintenance of as much meniscus tissue as possible.Repair of meniscus tears can be achieved by meniscus suture. However, in a recently published meta-analysis, the long-term outcome of meniscus repair showed a mean failure rate of 24%.In a preclinical trial, locally applied mesenchymal stem cells produced differentiated meniscus-like tissue in meniscus tears indicating that mesenchymal-based cells, harvested from the bone marrow, enhance meniscus healing in critical-size meniscus tears.Symptomatic meniscus defects offer the option for meniscus transplantation with porous cell free biomaterials, when a complete meniscus rim is available. Cell-free biomaterials, which are actually in clinical application, reveal variable outcome in mid-term results from complete failure to regeneration with meniscus-like tissue.In several preclinical studies with different critical-size defects in the meniscus, the application of mesenchymal stem cells could significantly enhance meniscus regeneration compared to empty defects or to cell-free biomaterials.Regenerative treatment of meniscus with mesenchymal stem cells seems to be a promising approach to treat meniscal tears and defects. However it is still not clear, whether the stem cell effect is a direct action of the mesenchymal-based cells or is rather mediated by secretion of certain stimulating factors. The missing knowledge of the underlying mechanism is one of the reasons for regulatory burdens to permit these stem cell-based strategies in clinical practice. Other limitations are the necessity to expand cells prior to transplantation resulting in high treatment costs. Alternative treatment modalities, which use growth factors concentrated from peripheral blood aspirates or mononucleated cells concentrated from bone marrow aspirates, are currently in development in order to allow an attractive one-step procedure without the need for cell expansion in cultures and thus lower efforts and costs.In summary, Tissue Engineering of meniscus with mesenchymal based cells seems to be a promising approach to treat meniscal tears and defects in order to restore native meniscus tissue. However, advances of the technology are necessary to allow clinical application of this modern regenerative therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Biomaterial; Meniscus suture; Meniscus tear; Meniscus transplantation; Mesenchymal stem cells
Year: 2014 PMID: 26914757 PMCID: PMC4648833 DOI: 10.1186/s40634-014-0012-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Orthop ISSN: 2197-1153
Figure 1Medial meniscus tear and meniscus repair in a right knee joint: Meniscus tear recognized by a probe (upper left); Meniscus tear preparation with a grasp, which refreshes the tear site (upper right); Meniscus suture with all inside technique (Fast T Fix, Smith nephew) (lower left); Stable meniscus tear after repair (lower right).
Mesenchymal stem cells for meniscus regeneration
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| • High regenerative potential | • High treatment costs |
| • Self renewal capacity | • Regulatory burden |
| • Cellular modulation at lesion site | • Missing knowledge of underlying repair mechanisms |
| • Potential of differentiation into meniscal repair cells | • Possible need for cell expansions prior to application |
| • Secretion of bioactive substances like growth factors | |
| • Support/promotion of intrinsic meniscal healing capacity |
Regenerative treatment options for meniscal lesions
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| Augmentation of meniscal suture and meniscus reconstruction by intraarticular microfracturing | + Easy to perform |
| + Adhesion of stem cells at lesion site | |
| - Uncertain effect | |
| - Low concentration of stem cells at defect site | |
| Augmentation of meniscal suture or meniscus cell-free reconstruction (e.g. Actifit) by locally applied growth factors (e.g. PRP) | + Application directly at meniscal lesion site |
| + High concentration at lesion site | |
| + Support of intrinsic healing potential | |
| + One-step-procedure | |
| - Preparation time | |
| - Short term effect at lesion site | |
| - Uncertain local effect | |
| Augmentation of meniscal suture by locally applied MSCs (e.g. bone marrow derived) | + High potential differentiation |
| + Application directly at meniscal lesion site | |
| + Support of meniscus regeneration | |
| + Use of autologous cells | |
| + Potentially one-step-procedure | |
| - Preparation time | |
| - Regulatory burden | |
| - Missing knowledge of repair mechanisms | |
| Intraarticular injection of MSCs/growth factors | + Adhesion at lesion site |
| + Easy to perform | |
| - Uncertain effect | |
| - Low concentration of stem cells at lesion site | |
| - Harvesting and preparation prior to application | |
| - Side effects in the knee joint beside the defect site | |
| Intravascular injection of MSCs | + Adhesion at lesion site |
| - Uncertain effect | |
| - Low concentration of stem cells at lesion site | |
| - Harvesting and preparation prior to application | |
| - Side effects in other areas besides the defect | |
| - No clinical experience | |
| Implantation of MSC loaded carrier/scaffold at meniscal defect site | + Potential for treatment of meniscal critical size defects |
| + Application directly at meniscal defect site | |
| + Option for pre-differentiation of MSC/carrier construct | |
| + Use of autologous cells | |
| - High costs | |
| - Missing knowledge of repair mechanisms | |
| - Necessity of cell expansion prior to implantation/two-step-procedure | |
| - No clinical experience |
Figure 2Treatment of meniscal tears (rabbit) in the avascular zone with a mesenchymal stem cell matrix composite resulted in a stable repair compared to implantation of a cell free scaffold: Representative macroscopic views, histological (toluidine blue) and immunohistochemical (collagen type II) slides of menisci and the meniscal repair tissue 3 months after treatment of tears in the avascular zone: A, B, C: treatment with hyaluronan-collagen composite matrices loaded with mesenchymal stem cells; D, E, F: treatment with a cell-free composite matrix (control).
Figure 3Meniscus transplantation with cell-free biomaterial after subtotal meniscectomy of the medial meniscus (Actifit). Subtotal meniscectomy, note the residual meniscus base (upper left); Measurement of the meniscus defect for preparation of suitable biomaterial (upper right); Insertion of the cell-free biomaterial and fixation with all-inside and outside-in suture techniques (lower row).
Figure 4Treatment of meniscal defects (rabbit) in the avascular zone with a mesenchymal stem cell matrix composite resulted in defect filling with a differentiated meniscus like tissue compared to implantation of a cell free scaffold: Representative macroscopic views, histological (toluidine blue) and immunohistochemical (collagen type II) slides of menisci and the meniscal repair tissue 3 months after treatment of circular meniscal punch defects in the avascular zone; A, B, C: treatment with hyaluronan-collagen composite matrices loaded with mesenchymal stem cells; D, E, F: treatment with a cell-free composite matrix (control).