| Literature DB >> 26915003 |
Francesco Castagnini1, Camilla Pellegrini2, Luca Perazzo2, Francesca Vannini2, Roberto Buda3.
Abstract
Ankle osteoarthritis (AOA) is a severe pathology, mostly affecting a post-traumatic young population. Arthroscopic debridement, arthrodiastasis, osteotomy are the current joint sparing procedures, but, in the available studies, controversial results were achieved, with better outcomes in case of limited degeneration. Only osteotomy in case of malalignment is universally accepted as a joint sparing procedure in case of partial AOA. Recently, the biological mechanism of osteoarthritis has been intensively studied: it is a whole joint pathology, affecting cartilage, bone and synovial membrane. In particular, the first stage is characterized by a reversible catabolic activity with a state of chondropenia. Thus, biological procedures for early AOA were proposed in order to delay or to avoid end stage procedures. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) may be a good solution to prevent or reverse degeneration, due to their immunomodulatory features (able to control the catabolic joint environment) and their regenerative osteochondral capabilities (able to treat the chondral defects). In fact, MSCs may regulate the cytokine cascade and the metalloproteinases release, restoring the osteochondral tissue as well. After interesting reports of mesenchymal stem cells seeded on scaffold and applied to cartilage defects in non-degenerated joints, bone marrow derived cells transplantation appears to be a promising technique in order to control the degenerative pathway and restore the osteochondral defects.Entities:
Keywords: Ankle; Joint sparing procedures; Mesenchymal stem cells; Osteoarthritis
Year: 2016 PMID: 26915003 PMCID: PMC4713405 DOI: 10.1186/s40634-016-0038-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Orthop ISSN: 2197-1153
Features and results of the selected papers about arthroscopic debridement, arthrodiastasis and osteotomy in AOA
| Authors | Year of publication | Type of study | Number of patients | Inclusion criteria | Treatment | Follow-up (months) | Clinical results | Radiological results | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arthroscopic debridement | |||||||||
| Tol et al | 2001 | Prospective case series | 57 | Anterio bony impingement and moderate AOA | Arthroscopic debridement | 78 | Excellent or good (VAS and Tegner) | 65 % successful | AOA reduces the success rate |
| Parma et al | 2014 | Retrospective case series | 80 | Anterio bony impingement and moderate AOA | Arthroscopic debridement | 105 | Aofas score 70.7 pt at final follow-up | NA | Chondral lesions, age and cavus foot negatively affect the outcome |
| Choi et al | 2013 | Retrospective case series | 63 | Mild and moderate AOA | Arthroscopic debridement | 71 | Aofas score 76.2 pt at final follow-up | NA | High BMI and chondral lesions reduce the success rate |
| Hassouna et al | 2007 | Prospective case series | 80 | Anterio bony impingement and moderate AOA | Arthroscopic debridement | 60 | 28 % requiring major surgery at 5 years | NA | AOA reduces the success rate |
| Arthrodiastasis | |||||||||
| Ploegmaker et al | 2005 | Retrospective case series | 25 | Severe AOA | Fixed joint distraction | 84 | 73 % clinical benefit at 7 years | NA | Distraction has long term benefit |
| Marijnissen et al | 2002 | Open prospective study | 57 | Severe AOA | Fixed joint distraction | 34 | Good pain control, more mobility | Joint space width increased 10 % | Improvement increased over the time |
| Marijnissen et al | 2002 | Randomized controlled trial | 17 | Severe AOA | Joint distraction vs debridement | 12 | Good pain control, more mobility | Less subchondral sclerosis, more joint space | Better clinical and radiological results for arthrodiastasis |
| Tellisi et al | 2009 | Retrospective case series | 25 | Severe AOA | Joint distraction | 30 | Aofas score at the final follow-up: 74 | NA | 91 % improved pain |
| Nguyen et al | 2015 | Retrospective case series | 36 | Severe AOA | Fixed joint distraction | 60 | 45 % requiring arthrodesis or replacement | Progression of AOA | Outcome decreased over the time |
| Marijnissen et al | 2014 | Retrospective case series | 111 | Severe AOA | Fixed or hinged joint distraction | 144 | 50 % of failures | NA | Outcome decreased over the time |
| Osteotomy | |||||||||
| Knupp et al | 2011 | Prospective case series | 94 | Asimmetric AOA | Supramalleolar osteotomy | 43 | Good clinical improvement | AOA improved | 10 patients failed |
| Colin et al | 2014 | Retrospective case series | 83 | Asimmetric AOA | Supramalleolar osteotomy | 42 | Aofas score 73 pt for varus and 80 for valgus | Improved | Sidewalk sign to assess the correct indication |
| Kim et al | 2014 | Retrospective case series | 31 | Asimmetric (varus) AOA | Supramalleolar osteotomy and microfractures | 27 | Aofas score 83.1 pt at final follow-up | 42 % AOA advancement | Microfractures may improve the results |