| Literature DB >> 30979313 |
Ralph M Jeuken1, Alex K Roth2, Ruud J R W Peters3, Corrinus C Van Donkelaar4, Jens C Thies5, Lodewijk W Van Rhijn6, Pieter J Emans7.
Abstract
Cartilage defects in the knee are often seen in young and active patients. There is a need for effective joint preserving treatments in patients suffering from cartilage defects, as untreated defects often lead to osteoarthritis. Within the last two decades, tissue engineering based techniques using a wide variety of polymers, cell sources, and signaling molecules have been evaluated. We start this review with basic background information on cartilage structure, its intrinsic repair, and an overview of the cartilage repair treatments from a historical perspective. Next, we thoroughly discuss polymer construct components and their current use in commercially available constructs. Finally, we provide an in-depth discussion about construct considerations such as degradation rates, cell sources, mechanical properties, joint homeostasis, and non-degradable/hybrid resurfacing techniques. As future prospects in cartilage repair, we foresee developments in three areas: first, further optimization of degradable scaffolds towards more biomimetic grafts and improved joint environment. Second, we predict that patient-specific non-degradable resurfacing implants will become increasingly applied and will provide a feasible treatment for older patients or failed regenerative treatments. Third, we foresee an increase of interest in hybrid construct, which combines degradable with non-degradable materials.Entities:
Keywords: biomaterials; biomimetic; cartilage repair; functional natural polymers; functional synthetic polymers; knee joint; resurfacing; scaffold; tissue engineering
Year: 2016 PMID: 30979313 PMCID: PMC6432241 DOI: 10.3390/polym8060219
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1Schematic representation of current regenerative cartilage repair techniques: (A) Microfracture; (B) Mosaicplasty; (C) autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) and matrix-assisted chondrocyte implantation (MACI); and (D) Autologous matrix-induced chondrogenesis (AMIC). Reprinted with permission from Marjolein M. J. Caron [41].
Figure 2Schematic representation of articular cartilage and its contents: (A) Normal view of cartilage as osteochondral unit with specific zones; (B) Magnification of middle zone and its content; (C) Representation of typical proteoglycan structure. Reprinted with permission from Marjolein M. J. Caron [41].
Figure 3Structures of commonly used (bio)polymers in cartilage repair. Displayed are the natural polymers (1) agarose, (2) alginate, (3) chitosan with partial deacetylation, (4) hyaluronic acid, (5) chondroitin-4-sulfate, where R1 = SO3H; R2 = H or chondroitin-6-sulfate, where R1 = H; R2 = SO3H, (6) collagen, showing two common tripeptide repeats, where Hyp represents L-4-hydroxyproline and X represents any amino acid other than Gly, Pro or Hyp, and is often a basic or acidic amino acid. Synthetic polymers (7) poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid), (8) poly(lactic acid), (9) poly(glycolic acid), (10) polydioxanone and (11) poly(ethylene glycol).
Table 1 gives general properties of polymers used in clinical repair of osteochondral lesions.
| Polymer Type | Scaffold Type | Degradability | Degradation Time | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Hydrogel (thermal) | Hydrolysis | Slow | Injectable | No direct cell adhesion | [ |
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| Hydrogel (non-covalent cross-links) | Hydrolysis | Slow | Injectable | No direct cell adhesion | [ |
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| Hydrogel (non-covalent cross-links) or solid scaffold | Enzymatic, hydrolysis | Slow, dependent on deacetylation degree | Chemically modifiable structure | Source dependent variation | [ |
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| Hydrogel | Enzymatic, hydrolysis | Fast | Natural component in synovial fluid/cartilage, High low friction | Source dependent variation | [ |
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| Hydrogel | Enzymatic, hydrolysis | Fast | Natural component in synovial fluid/cartilage, low friction | Source dependent variation | [ |
|
| Hydrogel or solid scaffold | Enzymatic | Fast (weeks) | Natural cartilage component, Fully degradable | Fast degradation, unstable mechanical properties due to degradation | [ |
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| Hydrogel (enzymatically cross-linked) | Enzymatic | Fast (weeks) | Injectable ( | Sensitive to gel shrinkage | [ |
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| Solid scaffold | Enzymatic, hydrolysis (bulk degradation) | Tunable (weeks to months) | Monomer ratio determines degradation rate | Inert, acidic degradation products | [ |
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| Solid scaffold | Enzymatic, hydrolysis | Months | Fully degradable | Inert, acidic degradation products | [ |
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| Cross-linked hydrogel | Non-degradable polymer; degradable cross-links possible | Non-degradable | Injectable ( | Inert | [ |
Table 2 gives an overview of the commercially available products, their composition, the procedure type and typical clinical findings.
| Construct Type | Group | Product | Company | Composition | Procedure | Typical Clinical Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Degradables | PLGA-based | BioSeed®-C | BioTissue, AG | PGA-PLA scaffold reinforced with PDS and seeded with autologous chondrocytes and suspended in fibrin | Two-step procedure; MACI | No clinical superiority compared to ACI-p; radiologically better than ACI-p. | [ |
| Chondrotissue® | BioTissue AG | Non-woven PGA textile treated with hyaluronic acid combined with either PRP or BMC. | One-step procedure; AMIC | Promising outcomes from case series with evidence of hyaline cartilaginous tissue; no comparative studies available. | [ | ||
| Collagen-based | NeoCart® | Histogenics Corporation | Scaffold using bovine type I collagen seeded with autologous chondrocytes cultured in a bioreactor | Two-step procedure; MACI | Good clinical outcomes and superior to microfracture in comparative study. | [ | |
| NovoCART® 3D | TETEC® Tissue Engineering Technologies AG | 3D collagen-chondroitin sulfate scaffold seeded with autologous chondrocytes | Two-step procedure; MACI | Performed better than ACI-p in high demanding patients, effect was not significant; high rate of graft hypertrophy in case series studies. | [ | ||
| CaReS® | Arthro Kinetics | Hydrogel using type I collagen from rat tails seeded with autologous chondrocytes cultured in autologous blood | Two-step procedure; MACI | Superior results when compared to microfracture in matched-pair analysis after 3 years | [ | ||
| Chondro-Gide® | Geistlich Pharma AG, Wolhusen, Switzerland | Collagen type I/III matrix sutured to debrided microfractured defect and supported by fibrin glue | One-step procedure; AMIC | No comparative studies available. | [ | ||
| Maioregen® | Fin-Ceramica Faenza S.p.A., Italy | Threelayered nanostructured scaffold with a top layer consisting of type I collagen, a middle layer of 60% type I collagen and 40% hydroxyapatite and a bottom layer with 60% hydroxyapatie and 40% type I collagen. | One-step procedure; AMIC | No comparative studies available. | [ | ||
| Other natural polymer-based constructs | Hyalograft® C | Anika Therapeutics, Inc. | Hyaluronan (HYAFF-11S), a benzylic ester of hyaluronic acid, scaffold seeded with autologous chondrocytes and fixated using fibrin glue | Two-step procedure; MACI | Performed better than microfracture after 2 years up to 7 years; faster improvements compared to Chondro-Gide® | [ | |
| Cartipatch® | Tissue Bank of France | Hydrogel using an ultrapurified agarose-alginate suspension (GelForGel) seeded with autologous chondrocytes cultured in monolayer conditiones in autologous serum | Two-step procedure; MACI | Inferior results compared to mosaicplasty after 2 years in comparative study. | [ | ||
| Chondron™ | Sewon Cellontech Co. Ltd | Hydrogel using autologous chondrocytes mixed with fibrin glue (ratio 1:1). | Two-step procedure; MACI | No comparative studies available. | [ | ||
| BST-CarGel® | Piramal Healthcare Ltd | Chitosan mixed with autologous blood | One-step procedure; AMIC | Little evidence; clinically equal to microfracture but radiologically superior in comparative study | [ | ||
| GelrinC™ | Regentis Biomaterials | PEG-fibrinogen hydrogel applied as liquid formulation and cured | One-step procedure; AMIC | No comparative studies available. | [ | ||
| Non-degrad-ables | Metals | HemiCAP® | Arthosurface INC. | Titanium cancellous screw with cobalt-chrome articular surface | One-step procedure; FKR | No comparative studies available; possible feasible treatment option for failed regenerative treatments. | [ |
| Episealer® Condyle Solo | Episurf medical AB | Cobalt-chrome monobloc with titanium-hydroxyapatie coating | One-step procedure; FKR | No clinical evidence yet. | [ |