| Literature DB >> 31803726 |
Kendrick To1, Bridget Zhang2, Karl Romain2, Christopher Mak2, Wasim Khan1.
Abstract
Articular cartilage damaged through trauma or disease has a limited ability to repair. Untreated, focal lesions progress to generalized changes including osteoarthritis. Musculoskeletal disorders including osteoarthritis are the most significant contributor to disability globally. There is increasing interest in the use of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) for the treatment of focal chondral lesions. There is some evidence to suggest that the tissue type from which MSCs are harvested play a role in determining their ability to regenerate cartilage in vitro and in vivo. In humans, MSCs derived from synovial tissue may have superior chondrogenic potential. We carried out a systematic literature review on the effectiveness of synovium-derived MSCs (sMSCs) in cartilage regeneration in in vivo studies in accordance with Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) protocol. Twenty studies were included in our review; four examined the use of human sMSCs and 16 were conducted using sMSCs harvested from animals. Most studies reported successful cartilage repair with sMSC transplantation despite the variability of animals, cell harvesting techniques, methods of delivery, and outcome measures. We conclude that sMSC transplantation holds promise as a treatment option for focal cartilage defects. We believe that defining the cell population being used, establishing standardized methods for MSC delivery, and the use of objective outcome measures should enable future high quality studies such as randomized controlled clinical trials to provide the evidence needed to manage chondral lesions optimally.Entities:
Keywords: cartilage repair; mesenchymal stem cells; osteoarthritis; synovium; transplantation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31803726 PMCID: PMC6873960 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2019.00314
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Figure 3Risk of bias in individual studies.
Figure 2Summary of overall bias.
Figure 1Flow diagram illustrating search process.
Studies of human synovium derived MSC in the repair of cartilage in vivo.
| Li et al. ( | Case control | Human | Murine | 10 | 10 | Arthroscopic flushing fluid from knee joint | Flushing fluid cells were plated on culture medium. Colony forming assays, flow cytometry, and proliferation assays were used to validate MSCs. MSCs were induced in chondrogenic medium and subsequently fixed and stained with Safranin O | Xenogenic injection of MSC encapsulated in polyPEGDA/HA hydrogel into full thickness cartilage defects in trochlear groove | Reduction in defect area compared to control at 4 and 8 weeks |
| Shimomura et al. ( | Case series | Human | Human with knee OA | 5 | N/A | Arthroscopic biopsy | Cultured cells were characterized by flow cytometry for MSC markers. They were not induced into chondrogenic differentiation | Autologous implantation of cultured tissue-engineered construct (TEC) into chondral defects without fixation | Improvement in PROMs for pain, ADL, QoL, at 48 months. Secure defect filling confirmed by second look arthroscopy, improved MRI score |
| Sekiya et al. ( | Case series | Human | Human | 10 | N/A | Arthroscopic biopsy of subsynovial tissue on the femur at the suprapatellar pouch | Synovial MSCs were cultured with Invitrogen containing antibiotics. No | Autologous injection of cultured cells into femoral condyle defect | Improved qualitative appearance in cartilage defect filling in four out of 10 patients, improved MRI score and increased Lysholm score at an average 52 month follow up |
| Koizumi et al. ( | Case control | Human | Murine | 36 knees in 18 rats | 4 knees in 2 rats | Arthroscopic biopsy of synovium from knee joint of patients with rheumatoid arthritis or with osteoarthritis or without either | Synovial MSCs were cultured in chondrogenic medium and evaluated. Total RNA from synovial MSC pellets were analyzed using Real Time PCR. qRT-PCR was also used to assess gene expression. GAG expression was quantified using a protein assay. | Xenogenic transplantation of MSC on a tissue engineered scaffold | Osteochondral repair using MSC derived from all patients were superior to control. There was no difference between cells from RA, OA, or normal patients |
Studies of MSCs derived from animal synovium in the repair of cartilage in vivo.
| Schmal et al. ( | Rabbit | Rabbit | 6 | 6 | Excisional biopsy of synovium from knee of rabbit | MSCs were cultured in chondrogenic media for 21 days. Chondrogenic differentiation was evaluated through RNA analysis using qPCR | Allogenic transplantation of sMSC into full-thickness cartilage lesions in central medial femoral condyle | Improved ICRS in sMSC group at up to 24 weeks, improved macroscopic appearance |
| Pei et al. ( | Rabbit | Rabbit | 12 | 12 | Synovial tissue from knee joint O | Passage 3 synovial MSCs were attached onto PGA mesh and incubated in a bioreactor containing growth factors for 4 weeks. The samples were analyzed with immunohistology and western blot to confirm chondrogenic differentiation | Allogenic implantation of sMSCs on cell-engineered tissue construct into full thickness femoral condyle cartilage defect | Improved qualitative appearance of cartilage defect at 6 months |
| Lee et al. ( | Rabbit | Rabbit | 27 | 27 | Excisional biopsy of infrapatellar fat pad | Synovial MSCs were suspended in chondrogenic culture medium, histological analysis was utilized to determine GAG expression and immunohistology was used to determine Collagen II expression at 4 weeks after cultivation | Allogenic transplantation of synovial membrane derived MSCs supported by platelet rich plasma (PRP) into osteochondral defect in trochlear groove of femur | Improved qualitative macroscopic appearance and histological findings |
| Shimomura et al. ( | Rabbit | Rabbit | 23 | 18 | Excision of synovial membrane from knee joints of rabbits | Synovial MSCs were suspended in growth medium containing DMEM and FBS. Cells at passage 3–7 were utilized | Allogenic implantation of combined implant made of scaffold-free tissue engineered construct from MSCs and Hydroxyapatite artificial bone into a osteochondral defect of femoral groove | Improved histological scores and improved macroscopic appearance at 1, 2, and 6 months |
| Li et al. ( | Rabbit | Rabbit | 5 | 5 | Excision of synovial tissue from knee joint | Synovial MSCs were isolated and incubated in culture flasks containing chondrogenic medium. The cells were not assessed for chondrogenic differentiation | Allogenic injection of MSC into full-thickness cartilage defect in central portion of femoral trochlea groove | No significant difference in MSC vs. control group in macroscopic and MRI scores. Improvement in tissue quality was observed by MRI |
| Lee et al. ( | Rabbit | Rabbit | 20 | 20 | Synovial tissue from knee joint | Second passage synovial MSCs were trypsinized and suspended in a composite gel containing collagen, hyaluronic acid, and fibrinogen. The cells were then cultured on a plate with chondrogenic medium. Proliferation assay, RT-PCR, Real Time PCR, and GAG staining were used to assess chondrogenic differentiation | Allogenic injection of SDCS in a composite gel into full thickness defect in the patellar groove of the distal femur | Improved macroscopic scores for Gel SDSC group vs. control, increased immunostaining |
| Jia et al. ( | Rabbit | Rabbit | 6 | 6 | Synovial fluid from knee joint obtained through arthrocentesis | Cells were isolated from pellets which were formed by centrifugation of synovial fluid. The cells were culture expanded and induced by chondrogenic differentiation medium. Histological staining and qRT-PCR were used to quantify chondrogenic marker expression e.g., Col2A1, Sox9, and LPL | Allogenic intra-articular injection into cartilage defects of the patellar groove of femur weekly for 4 weeks | Improved ICRS scores in predifferentiated chondrogenic MSCs treated compared to control groups, a third undifferentiated MSC group was also used and was found to be superior to predifferentiated group in ICRS macroscopic score at 12 weeks |
| Hori et al. ( | Murine | Murine | 24 | 24 | Excision of synovial membrane at medial femoral condyle | Harvested synovium MSCs were expanded on plates with culture medium. Passage 3 cells were magnetically labeled. Chondrogenesis | Allogenic transplantation of feroxide labeled synovial MSC into osteochondral defect on articular cartilage of patellar groove of distal femur with a permanent magnet placed | Increased thickness of regenerated cartilage as compared with control, stem cells with magnets performed better than stem cells alone, increased histological scores |
| Mak et al. ( | Murine | Murine | 9 | 43 | Biopsy of synovium of knee joint | Synovial MSCs were seeded into plates and chondrogenic medium was added. qPCR was used to quantify expression of chondrogenic markers including Sox9, Col2A1, and ACAN | Allogenic intra-articular injection of MSCs into a full thickness focal cartilage defect in the femur | Increased cartilage repair in both groups, improved MRI appearance, and histological scores |
| Zayed et al. ( | Equine | Murine | Not available | Not available | Culture of sMSC derived from synovial fluid in previous experiment | sMSCs were cultured in DMEM media with TGF-β1 for 14 days. Western blot analysis was used to analyze chondrogenic differentiation | Xenogenic transplantation of fluorescently labeled MSCs encased in agarose scaffold constructs into full thickness cartilage defect in the trochlear groove of rat femur | Improved Macroscopic appearance in sMSC treated knees vs. control, sMSC treated knees demonstrated higher type II collagen expression. |
| Pei et al. ( | Porcine | Rabbit | 12 | 12 | Biopsy of intimal layer of synovium from knees joint | Synovial MSCs were culture-expanded | Xenogenic transplantation of tissue engineered construct into medial femoral condyle of surgically induced osteochondral defects | Improved defect filling in the treated group at 3 weeks by macroscopic appearance. At 6 months, worsened macroscopic appearance in the treated group as compared with the control group. Improved histological scoring in the control group compared to the treated group |
| Ando et al. ( | Porcine | Porcine | 6 | 3 | Excision of synovial membrane from knee joint | Synovial MSCs were expanded | Allogenic implantation of tissue engineered construct into chondral defects in medial femoral condyle | Improved ICRS scores in TEC implanted subjects compared to control at 6 months |
| Shimomura et al. ( | Porcine | Porcine | 14 | 10 | Biopsy of synovial membranes of knee joint | Synovial MSCs were isolated from membranes and plated in dishes with chondrogenic medium. A pellet culture system was used to assess | Allogenic implantation of MSCs on tissue engineered constructs into chondral defects on the medial condyle | Improved macroscopic and histological scores in treated vs. untreated groups (ICRS histological score). No difference between whether tissue was harvested from mature or immature pigs at 6 months post implantation |
| Chiang et al. ( | Porcine | Porcine | 12 | 12 | Aspiration of needle flushing fluid from synovium of knee joint | Synovial fluid was centrifuged into pellets. The pelleted cells were suspended in DMEM culture and subsequently injected into PRP composite hydrogels. Immunohistology and Real Time PCR were used to evaluate chondrogenic gene expression | Autologous implantation of MSC with platelet-rich-plasma (PRP) composite hydrogel | Improved macroscopic appearance when treated with MSC in hydrogel compared with controls (without MSC—which demonstrated degradation of the hydrogel complex) at 4 and 8 weeks follow up, greater amount of ECM deposition in treated group |
| Pei et al. ( | Porcine | Porcine | 20 | 6 | Biopsy of synovial membrane in knees of pigs | Expanded synovial MSCs were centrifuged into pellets. The pellets were cultured in chondrogenic medium and analyzed for chondrogenic differentiation at 0, 7, and 14 days following incubation. RT-PCR and immunohistology were used to examine chondrogenic differentiation | Allogenic injection of expanded cells into partial thickness cartilage defects in porcine medial femoral condyle | Improved macroscopic appearance with treated groups, greater histological scores at 3 months |
| Nakamura et al. ( | Porcine | Porcine | 7 | 7 | Biopsy of suprapatellar pouch synovium through arthrotomy of knee joint | Synovial MSCs were plated and culture expanded. The cells were transformed into pellets by centrifugation and cultured in chondrogenic medium containing DMEM, BMP7, TGF, etc. The pellets were assessed histologically with Safranin O staining | Allogenic transplantation of MSC into full thickness osteochondral defects in medial femoral condyle | Improved macroscopic appearance of defect—thicker white membrane at 2 months on arthroscopic Inspection. Significantly improved ICRS score in treated groups |