| Literature DB >> 28938917 |
Ahmet Bozkurt1,2, Kristl G Claeys3,4,5, Simone Schrading6, Jana V Rödler1, Haktan Altinova4,7, Jörg B Schulz3,8,9, Joachim Weis4,8, Norbert Pallua1, Sabien G A van Neerven10,11,12.
Abstract
Many new strategies for the reconstruction of peripheral nerve injuries have been explored for their effectiveness in supporting nerve regeneration. However only a few of these materials were actually clinically evaluated and approved for human use. This open, mono-center, non-randomized clinical study summarizes the 12-month follow-up of patients receiving reconstruction of the sural nerve biopsy defect by the collagen-based nerve guide Neuromaix. Neuromaix was implanted as a micro-structured, two-component scaffold bridging 20-40 mm nerve defects after sural nerve biopsy in twenty patients (eighteen evaluated, two lost in follow-up). Safety of the material was evaluated by clinical examination of wound healing. Performance was assessed by sensory testing of modalities, pain assessment, and palpation for the Hoffmann-Tinel's sign as well as demarcating the asensitive area at each follow-up visit. Every patient demonstrated uneventful wound healing during the complete 12-month time course of the study. Two patients reported complete return of sensation, whereas eleven out of eighteen patients reported a positive Hoffmann-Tinel's sign at the lower leg with simultaneous reduction of the asensitive area by 12 months. Our data show that Neuromaix can be implanted safely in humans to bridge sural nerve gaps. No procedure-related, adverse events, or severe adverse events were reported. These first clinical data on Neuromaix provide promising perspectives for the bridging of larger nerve gaps in combined nerves, which should be investigated more through extensive, multi-center clinical trials in the near future.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28938917 PMCID: PMC5610476 DOI: 10.1186/s40001-017-0279-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Med Res ISSN: 0949-2321 Impact factor: 2.175
In- and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| Patients between 18 and ≤ 70 years | Paraneoplastic pnp |
| Patients with clinical and electrophysiological suspect of a peripheral neuropathy that were indicated for a nerve biopsy to establish the cause of this neuropathy | |
| Patients that were mentally and legally capable to understand the informed consent | |
| Patients that signed the informed consent |
Demographic data
| Patient | Gender | Age | Clinical diagnosis | Muscle biopsied | Pathological diagnose |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | M | 54 | Sensorimotor PNP | – | Chronic neuritis, axonal neuropathy |
| 2 | F | 69 | Sensory PNP | – | Undefined, CIDP, or neoplasm excluded |
| 3* | F | 63 | Sensorimotor PNP | GN | Chronic axonal neuropathy with neurogenic muscle atrophy |
| 4 | M | 48 | Sensory PNP | GN | Chronic, partially axonal, and demyelinating neuropathy with muscle atrophy |
| 5 | M | 50 | Sensorimotor PNP | – | Chronic, partially axonal, and demyelinating neuropathy |
| 6 | M | 57 | Sensory PNP | GN | Chronic, axonal neuropathy, neurogenic muscle atrophy, and perivascular inflammatory cell infiltrates in the muscle |
| 7 | M | 67 | Sensory PNP | VL | Chronic, predominantly axonal neuropathy with moderate demyelinating components, micro-angiopathy of endo- and epineural blood vessels, chronic neurogenic muscle atrophy, neuritis, and vasculitis-excluded, possible hereditary PNP |
| 8 | M | 43 | Sensory PNP | GN | Chronic, predominantly demyelinating neuropathy with axonal components, chronic neurogenic muscle atrophy, mitochondrial abnormalities |
| 9 | M | 53 | Sensorimotor PNP | GN | Chronic, predominantly axonal neuropathy with demyelinating components, neurogenic muscle atrophy |
| 10* | M | 46 | Sensorimotor PNP | GN | Chronic, predominantly axonal neuropathy with demyelinating components, neurogenic muscle atrophy |
| 11 | M | 65 | Cidp | – | Chronic axonal and demyelinating neuropathy micro-angiopathy of endo- and epineural blood vessels |
| 12 | M | 48 | Sensory PNP | GN | Chronic axonal neuropathy with demyelinating components, micro-angiopathy of endo- and epineural blood vessels, chronic neurogenic muscle atrophy |
| 13 | M | 54 | Motoric PNP | GN | Chronic, axonal neuropathy, chronic neurogenic muscle atrophy |
| 14 | F | 61 | Sensory PNP | VL | Chronic, predominantly axonal neuropathy, with little demyelinating components, micro-angiopathy of endoneurial blood vessels, progressive neurogenic muscle atrophy |
| 15 | M | 46 | Sensorimotor PNP | – | Chronic, axonal neuropathy of demyelinating hypertrophic type |
| 16 | M | 41 | Sensorimotor PNP | GN | Chronic, axonal neuropathy, chronic neurogenic muscle atrophy |
| 17 | F | 55 | Sensory PNP | – | Chronic, axonal neuropathy, micro-angiopathy of endo- and epineural blood vessels, no neuritis |
| 18 | F | 53 | Sensorimotor PNP | – | Chronic, axonal neuropathy |
| 19 | M | 39 | Sensorimotor PNP | GN | Chronic, axonal neuropathy with demyelinating components, endoneurial inflammatory cell infiltrates, neurogenic muscle atrophy |
| 20 | F | 47 | Sensory PNP | – | Chronic, predominantly axonal neuropathy with few components, possible neuritis |
Sensory modalities measured by sensory testing
| Sensory modality | Test | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| Hoffmann–Tinel’s Sign | Localization of the sign by palpation along the course of the SN | cm distance to landmarks and ASENS |
| Innocuous mechanoreception | Tactile: Hypoesthesia (asensitive area, ASENS) | cm2 |
| Innocuous mechanoreception | Tactile: Semmes–Weinstein Monofilaments | g |
| Innocuous mechanoreception | Vibrotactile: vibration at 128 Hz | 0–8 scale |
| Nociception | VAS-score, self-evaluation at the lateral foot | 1–10 scale |
| Nociception | Presence of touch-hypersensitivity at the lateral foot | Yes/no |
| Spatial distribution | Pointed (sharp)/blunt discrimination | Yes/no |
| Thermoception | Cold/warm discrimination | Yes/no |
Fig. 1Representative example of wound healing after Neuromaix implantation. Clear wound healing was evident already after 1 month after biopsy and Neuromaix implantation (a). At 3 (b) and 6 months (c) and also thereafter no complications could be observed in any of the patients (Example of patient 17)
Fig. 2Traversing of the positive HTS in time and measurements of the ASENS. Six months after surgery a positive HTS was detected at the lower leg approximately 15 cm above the Achilles tendon (a). After 9 months this spot was detected more distally at approximately 10 cm distant from the Achilles tendon (b). Three months later this spot was detected at the level of the lateral malleolus (c) (Images of patient 2). Positive HTS below the operation site in the majority of patients could be observed as early as 9 months after surgery. Thereafter, the number of patients who reported positive HTS increased as well as the distance traversed by the wandering HTS. By 12 MPO, fifteen patients demonstrated a positive HTS below the operation site. Eleven of them demonstrated simultaneously a reduction in the ASENS and five patients of this latter population showed a positive HTS located below the lateral malleolus. Two patients reported no sensation of a HTS anymore, but reported complete recovery of sensation at the lateral aspect of the foot (dotted line represents HTS located at the lateral malleolus = 100%, below this line < 100% heading towards, and above this line > 100% HTS located below the lateral malleolus) (d). Quantification of the mean ASENS in patients with a positive HTS as percentage of the area immediately after surgery (e)
Fig. 3Example images of patients that showed reduction in the ASENS as well as a positive HTS that was found in the vicinity of the lateral malleolus. ASENS 1 month after surgery (a–c). Reduced ASENS at 12 MPO (a*–c*). The distance traversed by the HTS in relation to the ASENS at 12 MPO. Red circles indicate the location of the HTS, whereas the yellow arrows indicate the middle of the scar at the level of the calf (a**–c**) (Images of patient 8, 9, and 13)
Fig. 4Mechanical sensation was reduced immediately after the operation, and patients often reported “no sensation at all.” Thereafter mechanical sensitivity thresholds slightly improved, but never reached values measured at the non-operated side (a). VAS scores remained constant over time on both non-operated and operated feet (b). Vibrotactile sensation was slightly reduced after surgery (ns). In time, vibrotactile sensation recovered, but remained reduced compared to the non-operated foot (c). Blunt sensation returned quite rapid after surgery; by 1 MPO slight touch with the 10 g filament elicited in more than 50% of the patients a positive response (d). Sharp sensation recovered slower; only in the last month there was a clear improvement in the majority of patients detectable (e). Cold sensation showed a slower recovery in time, and even after 12 MPO the majority of patients were unable to sense the cold metal tip (f). Data of a–c represent mean ± SEM where */**/*** represent p < 0.05/0.01/0.001 operated vs non-operated, ### represents p < 0.001 preoperative vs post-surgery, + represents p < 0.05 post-surgery compared to immediately after surgery (0 MPO). Graphs d–f represent percentages of total