| Literature DB >> 31073925 |
Germain Honvo1,2, Jean-Yves Reginster3,4,5, Francois Rannou6,7, Xavier Rygaert3,4, Anton Geerinck3,4, Véronique Rabenda3,4, Tim McAlindon8, Alexia Charles3,4, Nicholas Fuggle9, Cyrus Cooper4,9,10, Elizabeth Curtis9, Nigel Arden9,11, Bernard Avouac3, Olivier Bruyère3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Some controversy exists regarding the safety of intra-articular hyaluronic acid (IAHA) in the management of osteoarthritis (OA).Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31073925 PMCID: PMC6509101 DOI: 10.1007/s40266-019-00657-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs Aging ISSN: 1170-229X Impact factor: 3.923
Fig. 1Flow chart of the study. OA osteoarthritis
Characteristics of the studies included from the systematic review process, according to the pre-specified selection criteria (without concomitant OA treatment; those studies ultimately included in the meta-analysis are highlighted in bold type)
| Study | Location of OA | Treated groups/age of participants (mean ± SD or median [P25–P75]) | Origin of HA | Molecular weight | Dose | Number of cycles/number of injections per cycle | Follow-up duration (weeks) | Data provided in the article (type of AE/% of patients considered) | Published data usable for M-A? (yes/no) | Full data provided by the author/sponsor? (source of information) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Knee | IA HA: 62 ± 10 | Avian sodium hyaluronate | 500–730 kDa | 2 mL (20 mg) HA in saline vehicle | 1/5 | 26 weeks | Most commonly occurring AEs (> 5%) on all randomized patients | Yes | No (Fidia Pharma) | |
| Knee | IA HA: Mean: 62.9 Range : 41–85 | Streptococci [Non-animal stabilized hyaluronic acid (NASHA)] | NA | 3 mL injection : 60 mg HA in buffered sodium chloride, 0.9% | 1/1 | 26 weeks | Summary according to the relationship of AEs to the treatment. | Yes | No (Author) | |
| Arden 2014 [ | Knee | IA HA: 64.5 (29–84) | NA | NA | 60 mg, single IA injection | 1/1 | 6 weeks | TRAEs/Summary | No | No (Author) |
| Knee | IA HA: 57.4 ± 12.0 | NA | 1.4 x 106 Da | 2 mL of HA (1% solution of HA) | 1/3 | 29 weeks | Results mainly presented as percentages and numbers of patients with ‘mild’, ‘moderate’, ‘severe’ AEs. | Yes | Author contacted with no response | |
| Knee | IA HA: 65 ± 8.4 | Avian (Rooster combs) | 1.0–2.9 million Da | 2 mL (15 mg/mL) | 1/3 | 27 weeks | AEs reported by ≥ 5 % of the patients (by Body System) | Yes | Author contacted with no response | |
| Carrabba 1995 [ | Knee | IA HA 1 injection: 61.3 ± 6.8 | Avian (Rooster combs) | 500–730 kDa | 20 mg/2 mL, 1, 3 or 5 injections | 1/1, 3 or 5 | 26 weeks | Summary; focus on local AEs. | No | No contact information found |
| Cohen 2008 [ | Ankle | IA HA: 56.2 ± 15.1 | NA | 500–730 kDa | NA (2 mL HYL) | 1/5 | 26 weeks | Summary/Not detailed | No | Author contacted with no response |
| DeCaria 2012 [ | Knee | IA HA: 71.93 ± 6.83 | NA | 730 kDa | 2ml of 20 mg/ml HA | 1/3 | 26 weeks | Summary/Not detailed. | No | Author contacted with no response |
| DeGroot 2012 [ | Ankle | IA HA: 54.1 ± 14.5 | Avian derivate (derived from rooster combs) | 620,000 to 1,170,000 Da | Each 2.5 mL of Supartz contains 25 mg of sodium hyaluronate | 1/1 | 12 weeks | Summary/Not detailed | No | Author contacted with no response |
| Diracoglu 2009 [ | Knee | IA HA: 59.4 ± 9.9 | NA | NA | NA | 1/3 | NA (Short-term study. ‘Injections were repeated in both groups three times after every one-week’) | Summary/Not detailed | No | Author contacted with no response |
| Knee | IA HA and IA SA: Mean: 68.5 Range: 43–85 | NA | NA | 20 mg sodium hyaluronate (2 mL) | 1/11 | 48 weeks | Treatment related or possibly related AEs reported. | Yes | No (Fidia Pharma) | |
| Gormeli 2017 [ | Knee | IA HA: 53.5 ± 14 | NA | NA (‘A high molecular weight HA’) | 2 mL (30 mg/ 2 mL HA) | 1/3 | 26 weeks | AEs assessed, but results not reported | No | Author contacted with no response |
| Hangody 2017 [ | Knee | IA HA: 59.2 ± 8.6 | NA | NA | 4 mL, 88 mg HA | 1/1 | 26 weeks | Summary: numbers of AEs reported, not frequencies | No | Yes, data sent by the author as “Number of AEs - By Severity” and not frequencies; not adequate for M-A |
| Huang 2011 [ | Knee | IA HA: 65.9 ± 8.1 | Avian (naturally derived from rooster combs) | 500–730 kDa | 20 mg HA /2 mL | 1/5 | 25 weeks | Summary/Not detailed. Number of SAEs reported, not frequencies | No | No (Fidia Pharma) |
| Knee | IA HA: 62.6 ± 11.4 | NA | NA | 2 ml Hyalgan (10 mg/ml) | 1/5 | 13 weeks to a maximum of 52 weeks after the 1st injection | Summary/Not detailed. Per group numbers of AEs reported | No | Yes (Author) | |
| Karlsson 2002 [ | Knee | IA HA (Artzal): 72 ± 7 | NA | Artzal : ~106 Da | Artzal: 2.5 ml (1% HA); | 1/3 | 52 weeks | Summary/Not detailed. Number of AEs reported, not the frequencies of specific AEs | No | No (Author) |
| Kotevoglu 2006 [ | Knee | IA HA (Orthovisc) : 58.6 ± 8.0 | NA | NA | NA | 1/3 | 26 weeks | Summary/Not detailed | No | Author contacted with no response |
| Kul-Panza 2010 [ | Knee | IA HA: 59.5 ± 8.8 | NA | 1.5 million Da (average) | 2 mL 1.5% (15 mg/mL) of intra-articular HA | 1/9 (3 injections a week, for 3 consecutive weeks). | 14 weeks | Summary/Not detailed | No | Clarifications from the author not sufficient for inclusion of this study in the M-A |
| Petrella 2002 [ | Knee | IA HA (+ Placebo tablet): 67.3 ± 8.9 | NA (Suplasyn) | NA | 2ml, 10mg/ml | 1/3 | 12 weeks | Summary/Not detailed | No | Author contacted with no response |
| Knee | IA HA: 62.1 (41–75) | Avian (Rooster combs) | 6.0–12.0 × 105 Da | 25 mg of sodium hyaluronate/ 2.5 ml | 1/5 | 18 weeks | All AEs seem to have been reported (treatment-related and others) | Yes | No contact information found | |
| Ankle | IA HA: 57.8 ± 14.7 | NA | 500–730 kDa | 1 mL of hyaluronic acid (10 mg/mL) | 1/5 | 26 weeks | Detailed report of AEs: | Yes | Author contacted with no response | |
| Knee | IA HA: 58.7 ± 9.6 | Produced from the bacterium | 2.2 M Da | 1.5 % HA (30 mg/2 ml) | 1/3 | 29 weeks | Summary/Not detailed | No | Yes (Author) |
Where published data were adequate for inclusion in the M-A and a full safety report was also provided by the author/sponsor, we preferentially used the full data obtained from the author/sponsor
AE adverse event, HA hyaluronic acid, IA intra-articular, IAHA intra-articular hyaluronic acid, IASA intra-articular saline, M-A meta-analysis, NA not available (i.e. information not provided in the manuscript), OA osteoarthritis, SAE serious adverse event, SOC System Organ Class, TRAEs treatment-related adverse events
Fig. 2a Risk of bias summary in studies without concomitant pharmacological OA treatment (studies meeting the pre-specified selection criteria): review authors’ judgements about each risk of bias item for each study included in the primary qualitative synthesis. b Risk of bias summary in studies with concomitant pharmacological OA treatment (studies included in the parallel qualitative synthesis): review authors’ judgements about each risk of bias item for each study included in the parallel qualitative synthesis. OA osteoarthritis
Fig. 3a Risk of bias graph for studies without concomitant pharmacological OA treatment: review authors’ judgements about each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all studies included in the primary qualitative synthesis. b Risk of bias graph for studies with concomitant pharmacological OA treatment: review authors’ judgements about each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all studies included in the parallel qualitative synthesis. OA osteoarthritis
Characteristics of studies included in the parallel qualitative synthesis (trials with concomitant OA treatment allowed; those studies ultimately included in the parallel meta-analysis are highlighted in bold type)
| Study | Location of OA | Treated groups/Age of participants (mean ± SD or median [P25–P75]) | Origin of HA | Molecular weight | Dose | Number of cycles/number of injections per cycle | Follow-up duration (weeks) | Concomitant OA treatment (medication) allowed | Data provided in the article (type of AE/% of patients considered) | Published data usable for M-A? (yes/no) | Full data provided by the author/sponsor? (source of information) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Knee | IA HA: 62,5 ± 11 | Derived from nonpyogenic | 2.4–3.6 Million Da | 20mg/2ml of 1% solution hyaluronate | 1/3 | 26 weeks | Non-prescription nutraceuticals (e.g., glucosamine, chondroitin), topical analgesics, and nasal or inhaled corticosteroids | Report mainly focused on Musculoskeletal and Connective Tissue AEs. Any, Withdrawals, Severe and serious AEs also reported. No detail for others | Yes | Author contacted with no response | |
| Atchia 2011 [ | Hip | IA HA: 69 ± 9 | NA (Non-animal stabilized HA, Durolane) | NA (a high molecular weight hyaluronan) | 3ml/60mg | 1/1 | 8 weeks | There were no restrictions regarding medication use | Summary/Not detailed | No | Yes, data sent by the author as number of AEs, and not frequencies; not adequate for M-A. |
| Chevalier 2010 [ | Knee | IA HA: 63.6 ± 9.64 | NA [Hylan G-F 20 (Synvisc)] | 6000 kDa (Average) | NA (6 ml intra-articular injection) | 1/1 | 26 weeks | Analgesics/ NSAIDs (with a half-life of 5 h or less for indications other than osteoarthritis pain) | Report focused on target knee AEs | No | No (Author) |
| Day 2004 [ | Knee |
| Avian (extracted from rooster combs) | 6.2 × 105 to 11.7 × 105 Da | 25 mg of sodium HA in 2.5 ml of phosphate buffered saline | 1/5 | 17 weeks | In the results section: Important Codeine compounds and NSAID use in violation of the protocol, but patients not excluded | Summary/Not detailed | No | No (Author) |
| Knee | IA HA: 67 ± 9.7 | Avian (extracted from cock’s combs) | 500-730 kDa | Hyalectin 20 mg (10 mg/ml) | 1/4 | 52 weeks | Any nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and/or analgesics | All AEs seem to have been reported | Yes | Author contacted with no response | |
| Henderson 1994 [ | Knee |
| Avian (extracted from rooster combs) | 500,000 -750,000 Da | 20 mg Hyalgan in 2 ml of sterile buffered saline | 1/5 | 22 weeks | Alternative analgesia or anti-inflammatory treatment (permitted during the follow up but not during the treatment period) | Summary/Not detailed | No | No contact information found |
| Henrotin 2017 [ | Knee | IA HA: 66.9 ± 10.4 | NA (Kartilage® Cross, a new reticulated HA supplemented with mannitol) | NA | 2.2ml, 16mg/ml HA | 1/1 | 26 weeks | NSAIDs, Topical NSAIDs | Summary of numbers of AEs | No | No (Laboratories VIVACY, France. Data promised but not provided.) |
| Hand (Basal joint - thumb) | IA HA: 65.0 ± 2.0 | Avian (derived from rooster combs) | NA | NA (1-mL injection of hylan G-F 20) | 1/2 | 26 weeks | NSAIDs (ibuprofen 400 mg every 4–6 h, as needed) | All reported: “No AE observed during the study” | Yes | Author contacted with no response | |
| Huskisson 1999 [ | Knee | IA HA: 65.8 ± 8.8 | Avian (extracted from rooster combs) | 500–730 kDa | 20mg/2ml | 1/5 | 26 weeks | NSAIDs | Summary focusing in local reactions (in the majority of patients); | No | No contact information found |
| Knee | IA HA: 63.5 ± 9.5 | NA (Hyalgan®) | 500–730 kDa | 20mg/2ml HA | 3/3 | 52 weeks | Free use of analgesics and NSAIDs except indomethacin | Most common AEs (≥ 5%) reported. | Yes | No (Fidia Pharma) | |
| Glenohumeral joint (shoulder) | IA HA: 66.1 ± 10.7 | Avian (extracted from rooster combs) | 620,000–1,170,000 Da | NA | 1/3 | 26 weeks | Current regimen of pain medications could be maintained but no additional treatment to the shoulder | Report mainly focused on device related AEs. AEs by SOC not reported, but | Yes | Author contacted with no response | |
| Lohmander 1996 [ | Knee | IA HA: 58.53 ± 8.34 | NA (Hyaluronan, Artzal®) | 1000 kDa (Average) | 25mg/2.5ml | 1/5 | 20 weeks | Simple analgesics, in addition to NSAIDs | Summary/Not detailed | No | No (Author) |
| Knee | IA HA: 68.8 ± 6.27 | NA (Hyaluronate, Hyalgan®) | NA | 2ml of Hyalgan, 10.3 mg/ml | 1/4 | 26 weeks | NSAID (inclusive COX-2 selective inhibitors), codeine, and tramadol | No AE (serious, non-serious, local reaction, post injection ‘flares’) reported during the trial. But 1 withdrawal after 2 weeks due to cerebral haemorrhage | Yes | Author contacted with no response | |
| Munteanu 2011 [ | First MTPJ (foot) | IA HA: 53.7 ± 11.3 | NA (Hylan G-F 20, Synvisc) | NA | NA (up to 1 ml of hylan G-F 20) | 1/1 (with an option of a 2nd and final injection at month 1 or 3 if there was no improvement) | 26 weeks | Not clear: “Use of (paracetamol rescue medication) and co-interventions to relieve first MTPJ pain, as secondary outcome” | Summary/Not detailed | No | Author contacted with no response |
| Navarro-Sarabia 2011 [ | Knee | IA HA: 63.0 ± 8.2 | Obtained from strains of | 900,000 Da (Average) | 2.5 ml 1% sodium hyaluronate | 4/5 | 174 weeks | Short cycles of NSAID | Numbers of AEs reported, not per SOC frequencies | No | Author contacted with no response |
| Petrella 2008 [ | Knee | IA HA, DMW: 68.0 ± 6.0 | NA | DMW: 580–780 kDa + 1.2 to 2.0 million Da | NA | 1/3 | 16 weeks | Analgesics (including NSAIDs) | Summary/Not detailed | No | Author contacted with no response |
| Knee | IA HA: 64.9 ± 8.4 | Produced from | 1.900 kDa | 25 mg of sodium hyaluronate in 2.5 ml | 3/3 | 52 weeks | NSAIDs | Most commonly seen AEs reported. By SOC report for some SOCs, and only specific AEs for GI | Yes | Author contacted with no response | |
| Qvistgaard 2006 [ | Hip | IA HA: 65.0 ± 14.0 | NA (Hyalgan®) | NA | NA | 1/3 | 13 weeks | Usual analgesic consumption (with no other information) | Summary/Not detailed | No | No (Fidia Pharma) |
| Richette 2009 [ | Hip | IA HA: 60.8 ± 10.2 | Obtained from | 900,000 Da | NA (2.5 ml of HA) | 1/1 | 13 weeks | NSAIDs or step 2 analgesics | Summary: All AEs not reported. Some specific (probably related to treatment) AEs reported | No | No (Author) |
| Knee | IA HA: 60.9 ± 10.24 | Avian (Chicken combs) | NA | 30 mg HA in 3 ml | 1/1 | 13 weeks | NSAIDs, herbal therapies, oral HA, glucosamine, chondroitin sulfate, minocycline and short-acting oral opiates | Focus on TRAEs: per SOC results nor reported; “ | Yes | Author contacted with no response | |
| Wobig 1998 [ | Knee | IA HA: 60.0 ± 2.0 | NA (Hylan G-F 20) | NA | NA (2 ml of Hylan G-F 20) | 1/3 | 26 weeks | Steroids, NSAIDs, analgesics, or any other therapy for the treatment of OA | Summary/Not detailed | No | No contact information found |
Where published data were adequate for inclusion in the M-A and a full safety report was also provided by the author/sponsor, we preferentially used the full data obtained from the author/sponsor
AE adverse event, COX-2 cyclooxygenase 2, DMW dual molecular weight, GI gastrointestinal, HA hyaluronic acid, HMW high molecular weight, IA intra-articular, IAHA intra-articular hyaluronic acid, IASA intra-articular saline, LMW low molecular weight, M-A meta-analysis, MTPJ metatarsophalangeal joint, NA not available (i.e. information not provided in the manuscript), NSAID non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, OA osteoarthritis, P25–P75 25th percentile–75th percentile, SD standard deviation, SOC System
Fig. 4Forest plot displaying the results of the meta-analyses comparing infections and infestations with IAHA versus placebo in patients with OA: analysis on studies without concomitant anti-OA medication allowed, analysis on studies with concomitant anti-OA medication allowed, and overall analysis. CI confidence interval, IAHA intra-articular hyaluronic acid, OA osteoarthritis
Fig. 5Forest plot displaying the results of the meta-analyses comparing serious adverse events with intra-articular hyaluronic acid versus placebo in patients with OA: overall analysis and analyses on studies with and without concomitant anti-OA medication allowed. CI confidence interval, OA osteoarthritis
Fig. 6Forest plot displaying the results of the meta-analyses comparing total adverse events with intra-articular hyaluronic acid versus placebo in patients with OA: overall analysis and analyses on studies with and without concomitant anti-OA medication allowed. CI confidence interval, OA osteoarthritis
Fig. 7Forest plot displaying the results of the meta-analyses comparing withdrawals due to adverse events with IAHA versus placebo in patients with OA: overall analysis and analyses on studies with and without concomitant anti-OA medication allowed. CI confidence interval, IAHA intra-articular hyaluronic acid, OA osteoarthritis
Fig. 8Assessment of publication bias: funnel plot using data for the meta-analysis comparing total adverse events with intra-articular hyaluronic acid versus placebo in patients with OA. Harbord’s test: p = 0.26. OA osteoarthritis, OR odds ratio
Summary of safety findings for intra-articular hyaluronic acid (IAHA) compared to placebo in patients with osteoarthritisOrgan Class, TRAEs treatment-related adverse events
| Outcomes | No. of participants (studies), follow-up | Certainty of the evidence (GRADE) | Overall relative effect (95% CI) | Anticipated absolute effects | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk with placebo | Risk difference with IAHA | ||||
| Gastrointestinal adverse events | 1936 (11 RCTs) | ⊕⊕⊕◯ | 0.81 (0.52–1.27) | 87 per 1000 | 15 fewer per 1000 |
| Cardiac disorders | 2560 (13 RCTs) | ⊕⊕◯◯ | 1.25 (0.36–4.41) | 3 per 1000 | 1 more per 1000 |
| Vascular disorders | 2560 (13 RCTs) | ⊕⊕◯◯ | 1.70 (0.39–7.29) | 2 per 1000 | 2 more per 1000 |
| Respiratory, thoracic and mediastinal disorders | 2560 (13 RCTs) | ⊕⊕⊕◯ | 1.21 (0.82–1.78) | 42 per 1000 | 8 more per 1000 |
| Nervous system disorders | 2089 (11 RCTs) | ⊕⊕⊕◯ | 1.15 (0.77–1.70) | 54 per 1000 | 8 more per 1000 |
| Skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders | 1173 (8 RCTs) | ⊕⊕◯◯ | 1.71 (0.52–5.63) | 18 per 1000 | 12 more per 1000 |
| Musculoskeletal and connective tissue disorders | 2962 (13 RCTs) | ⊕⊕⊕◯ | 0.99 (0.71–1.39) | 101 per 1000 | 1 fewer per 1000 |
| Renal and urinary disorders | 2560 (13 RCTs) | ⊕⊕⊕◯ | 0.54 (0.21–1.41) | 10 per 1000 | 4 fewer per 1000 |
| Infections and infestations | 2019 (11 RCTs) | ⊕⊕⊕◯ | 0.61 (0.40–0.93) | 65 per 1000 | 24 fewer per 1000 |
| Hypersensitivity reaction | 2560 (13 RCTs) | ⊕⊕◯◯ | 0.64 (0.05–7.94) | 15 per 1000 | 5 fewer per 1000 |
| Severe adverse events | 3232 (14 RCTs) | ⊕⊕⊕◯ | 1.08 (0.50–2.31) | 16 per 1000 | 1 more per 1000 |
| Serious adverse events | 3956 (16 RCTs) | ⊕⊕⊕◯ | 1.78 (1.21–2.63) | 22 per 1000 | 17 more per 1000 |
| Withdrawals due to adverse events | 3540 (15 RCTs) | ⊕⊕⊕◯ | 1.62 (1.04–2.51) | 26 per 1000 | 15 more per 1000 |
| Any adverse event | 3476 (14 RCTs) | ⊕⊕⊕◯ | 1.09 (0.90–1.31) | 487 per 1000 | 22 more per 1000 |
GRADE working group grades of evidence: High certainty: we are very confident that the true effect lies close to that of the estimate of the effect; Moderate certainty: we are moderately confident in the effect estimate; the true effect is likely to be close to the estimate of the effect, but there is a possibility that it is substantially different; Low certainty: our confidence in the effect estimate is limited; the true effect may be substantially different from the estimate of the effect; Very low certainty: we have very little confidence in the effect estimate; the true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimate of effect
The risk in the intervention group and its 95% CI are based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention and its 95% CI
CI confidence interval, OR odds ratio, RCT randomized controlled trial
aHigh risk of incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) and selective outcome reporting (reporting bias) found in many of the included studies. Full safety data were provided by authors of manuscripts for only 2 studies
bWide CI because of low number of events
| Our meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) without any concomitant pharmacological osteoarthritis (OA) treatments permitted during the trials did not identify any safety issue associated with intra-articular hyaluronic acid (IAHA); however, the certainty of this new evidence was graded between “low” and “moderate”. |
| A shortcoming in the reporting of harms-related data in manuscripts communicating outcomes of RCTs with IAHA in OA was the reason for this uncertainty, which does not allow for a definitive conclusion regarding the safety of IAHA. |
| Additional studies are required to further investigate the safety profile of IAHA, particularly any association with serious adverse events and long-term safety; moreover, authors of studies on IAHA are encouraged to report in a transparent way all harms data collected from RCTs in the future. |