| Literature DB >> 27072345 |
Giuseppe Filardo1, Francesco Perdisa1, Alice Roffi2, Maurilio Marcacci1,3, Elizaveta Kon1,3.
Abstract
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have emerged as a promising option to treat articular defects and early osteoarthritis (OA) stages. However, both their potential and limitations for a clinical use remain controversial. Thus, the aim of this systematic review was to examine MSCs treatment strategies in clinical settings, in order to summarize the current evidence of their efficacy for the treatment of cartilage lesions and OA.Among the 60 selected studies, 7 were randomized, 13 comparative, 31 case series, and 9 case reports; 26 studies reported the results after injective administration, whereas 33 used surgical implantation. One study compared the two different modalities. With regard to the cell source, 20 studies concerned BMSCs, 17 ADSCs, 16 BMC, 5 PBSCs, 1 SDSCs, and 1 compared BMC versus PBSCs. Overall, despite the increasing literature on this topic, the evidence is still limited, in particular for high-level studies. On the other hand, the available studies allow to draw some indications. First, no major adverse events related to the treatment or to the cell harvest have been reported. Second, a clinical benefit of using MSCs therapies has been reported in most of the studies, regardless of cell source, indication, or administration method. This effectiveness has been reflected by clinical improvements and also positive MRI and macroscopic findings, whereas histologic features gave more controversial results among different studies. Third, young age, lower BMI, smaller lesion size for focal lesions, and earlier stages of OA joints have been shown to correlate with better outcomes, even though the available data strength does not allow to define clear cutoff values. Finally, definite trends can be observed with regard to the delivery method: currently cultured cells are mostly being administered by i.a. injection, while one-step surgical implantation is preferred for cell concentrates. In conclusion, while promising results have been shown, the potential of these treatments should be confirmed by reliable clinical data through double-blind, controlled, prospective and multicenter studies with longer follow-up, and specific studies should be designed to identify the best cell sources, manipulation, and delivery techniques, as well as pathology and disease phase indications.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27072345 PMCID: PMC4830073 DOI: 10.1186/s13018-016-0378-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Surg Res ISSN: 1749-799X Impact factor: 2.359
Fig. 1Scheme of research methodology
Fig. 2The systematic research showed an increasing number of clinical studies published over time
Details of the 60 clinical trials identified by the systematic review focusing on MSCs use for the treatment of cartilage pathology
| MSCs | Publication | Study type | Treatment | Additional information | Pathology |
| Follow-up | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cultured BMSCs | Davatchi [ | Case series | IA injection | Previous study update | Knee OA | 3 | 60 months | Still significant improvement at 5 years, but gradual worsening after 6-month follow-up |
| Vega [ | RCT | IA injection | Allogeneic BMSCs | Knee OA | 15 BMSCs | 12 months | Significant better functional and cartilage quality improvements in MSCs group vs. control | |
| Sol Rich [ | Case series | IA injection | Knee OA | 12 | 24 months | Excellent clinical and quantitative MRI outcome measures at 2 years | ||
| Vangsness [ | RCT | IA injection | Allogeneic BMSCs | Knee OA | 18 low-dose MSCs + HA | 24 months | Knee pain improvement and evidence of meniscus regeneration at MRI for both doses vs. control | |
| Orozco [ | Case series | IA injection | Previous study update | Knee OA | 12 | 24 months | Pain improvement at 12 months maintained at 24 months. | |
| Wong [ | RCT | IA injection | Comb HTO + MFX and post-op injection | Knee OA | 28 BMSCs + HA | 24 months | BMSCs i.a. injection produced superior clinical and MRI outcomes at 24 months | |
| Ricther [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | MAST | Ankle chondral defects | 25 | 24 months | No adverse events. | |
| Orozco [ | Case series | IA injection | Knee OA | 12 | 12 months | No safety issues. Rapid and progressive clinical improvement at 12 months | ||
| Lee [ | Comparative | IA injection | Knee cartilage defects | 35 MFX + BMSCs + HA | 24 months | MFX + BMSCs + HA had comparable results vs. BMSCs + periosteal patch, but lower invasivity | ||
| Emadedin [ | Case series | IA injection | Knee OA | 6 | 12 months | No local or systemic adverse events. | ||
| Kasemkijwattana [ | Case report | Surgical delivery | MAST | Knee cartilage defects | 2 | 31 months | Significant clinical improvement | |
| Davatchi [ | Case series | IA injection | Knee OA | 4 | 12 months | Encouraging clinical results no X-Rays improvement | ||
| Haleem [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | MAST | Knee cartilage defects | 5 | 12 months | 5/5 symptoms improvement | |
| Nejadnik [ | Comparative | Surgical delivery | BMSCs + periosteal flap | Knee cartilage defects | 36 ACI | 24 months | Comparable improvement in quality of life, health, and sport activity. M better than F, older than 45 years lower improvement only in ACI group. | |
| Centeno [ | Case report | IA injection | Knee cartilage defects | 1 IA BMSCs + 2 weekly platelet lysate IA injections | 24 months | Improvement of range of motion and pain scores. Significant cartilage and meniscus growth at MRI | ||
| Kuroda [ | Case report | Surgical delivery | BMSCs + collagen gel + periosteum | Knee cartilage defects | 1 | 12 months | Hyaline-like tissue regeneration, improvement in clinical symptoms and return to previous activity level | |
| Wakitani [ | Case report | Surgical delivery | BMSCs + collagen gel + periosteum or synovium | Knee cartilage defect patella | 3 | 17–27 months | Improvement in clinical symptoms maintained over time. Fibrocartilaginous tissue at histology | |
| Adachi [ | Case report | Surgical delivery | MAST | Knee osteochondral defect | 1 | Cartilage-like and bone tissue regeneration at 2nd look arthroscopy | ||
| Wakitani [ | Case report | Surgical delivery | BMSCs + collagen gel + periosteum | Knee cartilage defect | 2 | 5 years | Short-term clinical improvement, then stable at 24 months fibrocartilage defect filling | |
| Wakitani [ | Comparative | Surgical delivery | Collagen gel sheet + periosteum | Knee OA | 12 BMSCs + HTO | 16 months | Comparable clinical outcomes, but better arthroscopic and histological score in cell-transplanted group | |
| BM Concentrate | Gobbi [ | Comparative | Surgical delivery | MAST | Knee cartilage defects patellofemoral | 19 MACT | 3 years | Significant scores improvement in both groups. |
| Buda [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | MAST | OLTs and ankle OA | 56 | 36 months | Clinical outcome improvement at 12 months, further increase at 24 months and lowering trend at 36 months | |
| Buda [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | MAST | Ankle osteochondral lesions (hemophilic patients) | 5 | 24 months | Clinical improvement at 2 years. | |
| Buda R [ | Comparative | Surgical delivery | MAST | OLTs | 40 ACI | 48 months | ACI and MAST was equally effective for the treatment of OLT. MAST preferred for the 1 step procedure, and lower costs | |
| Gobbi [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | MAST | Knee chondral defects | 25 | 3 years | Significant scores improvement | |
| Cadossi [ | RCT | Surgical delivery | MAST | OLTs | 15 BMDCs + HA + PEMF | 12 months | Biophysical stimulation started soon after surgery aided patient recovery leading to pain control and a better clinical outcome with these improvements lasting more than 1 year after surgery | |
| Buda [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | MAST | OLTs | 41 BMAC + HA + PRF | 53 months | Significant clinical improvement, gradual decrease after 24+ months | |
| Skowronski [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | MAST | Knee chondral defects | 54 | 5 years | Improvement in clinical scores in 52/54 patients without complications | |
| Giannini [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | MAST | OLTs | 49 | 24–48 months | Good clinical results at 24 months, then significant decrease at 36 and 48 months. T2 mapping similar to native hyaline cartilage and correlate with the clinical results | |
| Buda [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | MAST | OLKs | 30 | 29 months | Good clinical outcome osteochondral regeneration at control MRI and biopsies | |
| Gigante [ | Case report | Surgical delivery | MAST | Knee chondral defects | 1 | 24 months | Pain free at 6 months, still asymptomatic at 24 months | |
| Gigante [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | MAST | Knee chondral defects | 5 | 12 months | Patients asymptomatic | |
| Giannini [ | Comparative | Surgical delivery | MAST | OLTs | 10 ACI open | 36 months | Similar clinical improvement among groups. | |
| Varma [ | Comparative | IA injection | Augmentation to debridement | Knee OA | 25 Debridement + BMC | 6 months | BMC: higher improvement in symptoms, function, and quality of life | |
| Buda [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | MAST | OLKs | 20 | 24 months | Significant clinical improvement at 12 and 24 months. Associated procedures delayed recovery. Satisfactory MRI findings in 80 % of patients | |
| Giannini [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | MAST | OLTs | 48 | 24 months | Clinical improvement | |
| PBSCs | Fu [ | Case report | Surgical delivery | PBSCs + autologous Periosteal flap + patellofemoral realignment | Knee chondral defects | 1 | 7.5 years | Patient returned to competitive kickboxing |
| Turajane [ | Case series | IA injection | PBSCs + GFs addition/preservation + HA + microdrilling | Knee OA | 5 | 6 months | Improvement in all clinical scores without adverse events | |
| Saw [ | RCT | IA injection | Subchondral drilling | Knee chondral defects | 25 drilling + (PBSCs + HA) | 2 years | Comparable significant clinical improvement for both groups | |
| Skowronski [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | PBSCs covered by collagen membrane | Knee chondral defects | 52 | 6 years | No adverse events | |
| Saw [ | Case series | IA injection | Subchondral drilling + 5 weekly IA injections | Knee chondral defects | 5 | 10–26 months | No adverse events hyaline cartilage regeneration at histology | |
| BMC vs. PBSCs | Skowronski [ | Comparative | Surgical delivery | PBSCs vs. BMC covered by collagen membrane | OLKs | 21 BMC | 5 years | Superior results in PBSCs group: good cartilaginous surface and integration. Slight clinical scores decrease in both groups at 60 months |
| SDSCs | Sekiya [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | Cultured cells | Knee chondral defects | 10 | 48 months | Significant clinical improvement |
| ADSCs | Kim [ | Comparative | Surgical delivery vs. IA injection | Subcutaneous fat | Isolated focal defects in knee OA | 20 SVF-FG | 28.6 months | Significant improvement in both groups. Better clinical results at final f-up and 2nd look appearance at 12 months for SVF-FG. No. of cells correlated with outcomes only for injective group |
| Kim [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | Subcutaneous fat | Isolated focal defects in OA knee | 20 | 27.9 months | Significant clinical and MRI scores improvement | |
| Michalek [ | Case series | IA injection | Subcutaneous fat | OA (various joints) | 1114 | 17.2 months | No adverse effects, safe, cost-effective | |
| Koh [ | RCT | Surgical delivery | Subcutaneous fat | Knee chondral defects | 40 MFX + SVF-FG | 27.4 months | KOOS pain and symptoms better for SVF vs. control | |
| Kim [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | Subcutaneous fat | Isolated Focal defects in OA knee | 49 | 26.7 months | 74.5 % good/excellent results | |
| Jo [ | Case series | IA injection | Cultured subcutaneous | Knee OA | Phase I: 9 | 6 months | High-dose was more effective for knee function improvement | |
| Kim [ | Comparative | IA injection | Subcutaneous fat | OLTs | 24 marrow stim + SVF | 21.9 months | All clinical and MRI scores in SVF group improved significantly with respect to marrow stimulation alone SVF gave better outcomes for patients older than 46.1 years, lesion size >152.2 mm2, or in presence of subchondral cysts | |
| Kim [ | Comparative | Surgical delivery | Subcutaneous fat | Isolated focal defects in OA knee | 17 FG | 28.6 months | Both comparable clinical improvement | |
| Bui [ | Case series | IA injection | Subcutaneous fat | Knee OA | 21 | 8.5 months | Significant clinical scores improvement. No side effects. | |
| Koh [ | Case series | Surgical delivery | Subcutaneous fat | Isolated focal defects in knee OA | 35 | 26.5 months | Clinical improvement | |
| Koh [ | RCT | IA injection | Subcutaneous fat | Knee OA | 23 HTO + PRP + SVF | 24 months | SVF produced better improvement of KOOS pain and symptoms and VAS pain | |
| Pak [ | Case series | IA injection | Subcutaneous fat SVF + PRP | OA (various joints) | 91 | 26.7 months | SVF/PRP injections are safe | |
| Kim [ | Comparative | IA injection | Subcutaneous fat SVF + PRP | Isolated defect in ankle OA | 35 MFX | 21.8 months | Clinical improvement both groups | |
| Koh [ | Case series | IA injection | Subcutaneous fat | Knee OA | 30 | 24 months | Significant clinical improvement | |
| Koh [ | Case series | IA injection after debridement | Fat pad | Knee OA | 18 | 24 months | function and pain improvement. Womac and MRI correlate with cell no. | |
| Koh [ | Comparative | IA injection | Fat pad | Knee OA | 25 debridement | 12 months min | Both improved scores. | |
| Pak [ | Case report | IA injection | Subcutaneous fat | Knee OA | 2 | 3 months | Clinical improvement |