| Literature DB >> 32170710 |
N R Fuggle1, C Cooper2,3, R O C Oreffo4, A J Price5, J F Kaux6, E Maheu7, M Cutolo8, G Honvo9, P G Conaghan10, F Berenbaum11, J Branco12,13, M L Brandi14, B Cortet15, N Veronese16, A A Kurth17, R Matijevic18, R Roth19, J P Pelletier20, J Martel-Pelletier20, M Vlaskovska21, T Thomas22,23, W F Lems24, N Al-Daghri25, O Bruyère9, R Rizzoli26, J A Kanis27,28, J Y Reginster9,25,29.
Abstract
Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common joint condition and, with a burgeoning ageing population, is due to increase in prevalence. Beyond conventional medical and surgical interventions, there are an increasing number of 'alternative' therapies. These alternative therapies may have a limited evidence base and, for this reason, are often only afforded brief reference (or completely excluded) from current OA guidelines. Thus, the aim of this review was to synthesize the current evidence regarding autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI), mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) therapy, platelet-rich plasma (PRP), vitamin D and other alternative therapies. The majority of studies were in knee OA or chondral defects. Matrix-assisted ACI has demonstrated exceedingly limited, symptomatic improvements in the treatment of cartilage defects of the knee and is not supported for the treatment of knee OA. There is some evidence to suggest symptomatic improvement with MSC injection in knee OA, with the suggestion of minimal structural improvement demonstrated on MRI and there are positive signals that PRP may also lead to symptomatic improvement, though variation in preparation makes inter-study comparison difficult. There is variability in findings with vitamin D supplementation in OA, and the only recommendation which can be made, at this time, is for replacement when vitamin D is deplete. Other alternative therapies reviewed have some evidence (though from small, poor-quality studies) to support improvement in symptoms and again there is often a wide variation in dosage and regimens. For all these therapeutic modalities, although controlled studies have been undertaken to evaluate effectiveness in OA, these have often been of small size, limited statistical power, uncertain blindness and using various methodologies. These deficiencies must leave the question as to whether they have been validated as effective therapies in OA (or chondral defects). The conclusions of this review are that all alternative interventions definitely require clinical trials with robust methodology, to assess their efficacy and safety in the treatment of OA beyond contextual and placebo effects.Entities:
Keywords: Alternative; Cartilage; Herbal; Osteoarthritis; Therapy; Treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32170710 PMCID: PMC7170824 DOI: 10.1007/s40520-020-01515-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging Clin Exp Res ISSN: 1594-0667 Impact factor: 3.636
Fig. 1A schematic demonstrating the process of autologous chondrocyte implantation. A chondral lesion is identified and a biopsy of non-articular cartilage is performed. The biopsy is cultured to amplify the number of chondrocytes. These are then injected under a periosteal flap (which is acquired from the proximal tibia)
Fig. 2A depiction of the injectable and implantable options for delivery of MSCs and the potential sources of MSCs which are appropriate for each method
A summary of the advantages and disadvantages in OA therapy of MSCs acquired from different sources, including; bone marrow, adipose tissue and stromal vascular fraction, the synovial membrane, umbilical cord and peripheral blood, synovial fluid and amniotic fluid
| MSCs Cell source | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Bone marrow (bone marrow conc. and bone marrow aspirate conc.) | High chondrogenic potential Relative ease of collection | High variability in MSC number MSC numbers and quality decline with age |
| Adipose tissue and stromal vascular fraction | Ease of harvest Large amount of tissue can be extracted Limited donor site morbidity | MSC numbers decline with obesity Lower chondrogenic potential |
| Synovial membrane | High chondrogenic potential Lowest osteogenic potential among MSCs | Limited number |
| Umbilical cord MSCs | Major source of allogeneic cells Ease of harvest Unlimited numbers | Chondrogenic potential variable |
| Peripheral blood, synovial fluid, amniotic fluid | Relative ease of collection | High variability in MSC numbers Chondrogenic potential variable |
A synthesis of the main issues in MSC efficacy in the treatment of OA and limitations to adequate assessment through clinical trials
| Key factors for stem cell efficacy in OA | Key factors limiting stem cell efficacy and clinical trial interpretation of MSC use in OA |
|---|---|
• Age (younger patients typically display better outcomes) • Gender (males typically better outcomes compared to female counterparts) • BMI (lower BMI is associated with better outcomes) • Lesion or defect size (better repair associated with smaller lesion size) • Stage of OA (early OA, mild to moderate OA correlated with better outcomes) | • Significant variation in MSC source • Significant variation in MSC preparation protocols • Variation in MSC Delivery • Significant variation in the number of different co-interventions with MSCs Micro-fracture, sub-chondral drilling, debridement, and platelet rich plasma Less common—hyaluronic acid, albumin and serum, osteophyte removal, and surgical interventions (ACL repair and high tibial osteotomy) |
Fig. 3A comparison of platelet concentration and volume of protein-rich plasma (PRP) resulting from the extraction methods employed by 5 laboratories. [33]
A summary table of the key, take-home points for each of the interventions reviewed
| Alternative therapy | Key points |
|---|---|
| Autologous chondrocyte implantation | • Treatment for cartilage defects and not osteoarthritis • Includes ACI and MACI • Trial evidence to support symptomatic benefit • Supported by NICE in the UK for specific patient group (including no previous knee surgery, limited evidence of knee osteoarthritis, large chondral defect) |
| Mesenchymal stem cell injection | • There are multiple sources of MSCs with differing profiles of usage and limitations • Multiple sources of MSCs lead to difficulties in directly comparing clinical trials • Trial evidence to support symptomatic benefit • Limited evidence to support structural benefit (MRI cartilage thickness) |
| Platelet-rich plasma | • Trial evidence to support symptomatic benefit • Multiple methods of preparation lead to difficulties in directly comparing clinical trials |
| Vitamin D | • Evidence of efficacy in clinical trials is equivocal • Recommendation to provide supplementation to those patients with evidence of depleted levels of 25OH-vitamin D |
| Other alternative therapies | • Very limited clinical trial data to suggest the efficacy of oral collagens, MSM, SAMe, curcuma and ginger • Adverse events: largely rare, though ginger appears to be associated with an increased risk of mild gastro-intestinal adverse events |