| Literature DB >> 30041472 |
Jaewoo Pak1, Jung Hun Lee2, Natalie Pak3, Yoon Pak4, Kwang Seung Park5, Jeong Ho Jeon6, Byeong Chul Jeong7, Sang Hee Lee8.
Abstract
Adipose tissue-derived stem cells (ASCs) in the form of stromal vascular fraction (SVF) and cultured expansion have been applied in clinical settings in some countries to treat osteoarthritis (OA) of knees, one of the most common debilitating, incurable disorders. Since the first report of successful cartilage-like tissue regeneration with autologous adipose SVF containing ASCs, there has been a gradual increase in the number of publications confirming such results. Thus far, most of the reports have been limited to treatments of OA of knees. Recently, successful applications of adipose SVF in treating OA of ankles and hips have been reported. In addition, several groups have reported modified methods of applying adipose SVF, such as combining bone marrow stimulation with adipose SVF or adding additional extracellular matrix (ECM) in treating OA. Here, we present an updated, systematic review of clinical effectiveness and safety in treating OA of knees, ankles, and one hip since 2016 using ASCs in the form of adipose SVF or in cultured expansion, along with a description and suggestion of potential biological mechanisms of cartilage regeneration.Entities:
Keywords: adipose tissue-derived stem cells; human cartilage regeneration; osteoarthritis; stromal vascular fraction
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30041472 PMCID: PMC6073159 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19072146
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Clinical studies on treatments with adipose tissue-derived stem cells and adipose stromal vascular fraction cells for cartilage defects.
| Study (Year) | Intervention Treatment | Study Type | Number of Subjects/Age (Years) | Subject Characteristic | Concurrent Treatment | Follow-Up | Outcome Measures | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kim et al. (2016) [ | ASCs harvested from the patient’s buttock | Retrospective comparative study, level III | 62 patients (64 ankles)/51.8: 31 patients/33 ankles Marrow stimulation alone (Group I); 31 patients/31 ankles Marrow stimulation with ASCs injection (Group II) | Varus ankle OA | 12.8 months | VAS, AOFAS | The mean VAS and AOFAS scores improved significantly for both groups. There were significant differences in the mean VAS and AOFAS scores between groups at the final follow-up. At second-look arthroscopy, there were significant differences in ICRS grades between groups | |
| Fodor and Paulseth (2016) [ | ASCs obtained through enzymatic disaggregation of lipoaspirate from the abdomen, flanks, or lateral thighs | Case series, level IV | 6 patients (8 knees)/59 | OA knee | 12 months | WOMAC, VAS, ROM, TUG, MRI | Improvement in WOMAC and VAS scores at 3 months and maintained at 1 year. ROM and TUG both improved from preoperative to 3 months. MRI showed no detectable structural differences | |
| Pers et al. (2016) [ | Autologous ASCs: one intra-articular injection, low dose (2 × 106 cells) vs. medium dose (10 × 106 cells) vs. high dose (50 × 106 cells) | Cohort study, level III | 18/64.6: 6 low dose, 6 medium dose, 6 high dose | OA knee | 6 months | VAS | Even the low-dose patients group experienced significant improvements in pain levels and function compared with the baseline | |
| Nguyen et al. (2016) [ | Autologous ASCs harvested from the abdomen isolated arthroscopic microfracture vs. arthroscopic microfracture + ASCs (107 ASCs cells/mL) suspended in PRP | Prospective | 30 patients: 15 patients placebo group/58.2; 15 patients treatment group/58.6 | Knee OA (Kellgren–Lawrence grade II–III) | Arthroscopic microfracture and ASC injection | 18 months | WOMAC, Lysholm, VAS, Outerbridge classification, MRI | WOMAC, Lysholm, and VAS scores improved; Outerbridge classification, measured with MRI, showed non-differences between the two group, but Outerbridge scores increased in the placebo group over time and decreased in the treatment group |
| Pak et al. (2017) [ | Autologous adipose SVF + ECM + PRP + HA | Case report | 1 patient | Hip OA | 20 weeks | MRI, FRI, ROM, VAS | Along with MRI evidence, FRI, ROM, and VAS all improved | |
| Song et al. (2018) [ | Autologous culture-expanded ASCs were injected for the low-dose, mid-dose, and high-dose groups, providing three injections and followed up for 96 weeks. | Double-blind, randomized pilot study | 18 patients divided into three dose groups: the low-dose (1 × 107), mid-dose (2 × 107), and high-dose group (5 × 107) cells | Knee OA | 96 weeks | WOMAC, NRS-11 and SF-36, MRI | Along with MRI evidence, autologous ASCs improved WOMAC, NRS-11, and SF-36 results. The dosage of 5 × 107 adipose MSCs exhibited the highest improvement | |
| Kim and Koh (2016) [ | ASCs harvested from the patient’s buttock | Retrospective comparative study, level III | 49 patients/53.9: 23 ankles underwent marrow stimulation alone (Group 1), and 26 underwent marrow stimulation with | Varus ankle OA | 27.6 months | VAS, AOFAS, Second-look-arthroscopy | The mean VAS and AOFAS scores improved significantly for both groups. The VAS and AOFAS scores were significantly better in Group 2. Significant differences in ICRS grades between the groups | |
| Jo et al. (2017) [ | Autologous ASCs isolated from abdominal subcutaneous fat by liposuction and culture-expanded autologous ASCs in normal saline were injected intra-articularly | Cohort study; level of evidence, 3. | 18 patients: 3 male/61.8; 15 female/66.6 | Knee OA | 24 months | WOMAC, KSS, KOOS, VAS, MRI | WOMAC, KSS, KOOS, and VAS improved for up to 2 years regardless of the cell dosage. However, statistical significance was found mainly in the high-dose group. Clinical outcomes tended to deteriorate after 1 year in the low- and medium-dose groups, whereas those in the high-dose group plateaued until 2 years. The structural outcomes evaluated with MRI also showed similar trends. | |
| Pak et al. (2016) [ | Autologous adipose SVF + ECM | Case series | 3 patients: 2 female/60 and 87; 1 male/68 | Knee OA | 6–22 weeks | MRI, FRI, ROM, VAS | Along with MRI evidence, FRI, ROM, and VAS all improved | |
| Kuah et al. (2018) [ | Culture-expanded ASCs with culture media supernatant (CMS) | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Study | 20 patients/40–65 | Knee OA | None | 12 months | MRI, VAS, WOMAC | VAS and WOMAC improved in ASC + CMS groups, but MRI deteriorated in placebo and high-dose ASC + CMS group; no change in low-dose ASC + CMS group |
ASC: adipose tissue-derived stem cells; SMO: supramalleolar osteotomy; OA: osteoarthritis; VAS: visual analogue scale; AOFAS: American Orthopaedic Foot & Ankle Society Score; ICRS: International Cartilage Repair Society; WOMAC: Western Ontario and McMaster Universities osteoarthritis index; ROM: range of motion; TUG: time up-and-go; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; SVF: stromal vascular fraction; ECM: extracellular matrix; PRP: platelet-rich plasma; HA: hyaluronic acid; FRI: functional rate index; NRS-11: numerical pain rating scale; SF-36: short form-36; MSC: mesenchymal stem cell; KSS: Knee Society clinical rating system; KOOS: knee injury and osteoarthritis outcome score.
Figure 1Literature selection process (PRISMA flow diagram).