| Literature DB >> 33008471 |
Qiang Li1,2, Guangwen Yang1,2, Jialing Li2,3, Meng Ding2, Na Zhou1, Heng Dong4,5, Yongbin Mou6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Periodontal tissue regeneration (PTR) is the ultimate goal of periodontal therapy. Currently, stem cell therapy is considered a promising strategy for achieving PTR. However, there is still no conclusive comparison that distinguishes clear hierarchies among different kinds of stem cells.Entities:
Keywords: Network meta-analysis; Periodontal defects; Periodontal tissue regeneration; Periodontitis; Stem cell therapy; Tissue engineering
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33008471 PMCID: PMC7531120 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-020-01938-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1Flowchart of the study selection process according to the PRISMA guidelines. “Other sources” refer to a manual search of bibliographies of the included studies and relevant systematic reviews. Down arrows indicate the progression of studies that passed the previous criteria. Side arrows indicate the number of studies excluded at each stage
Fig. 2Quality assessment of each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included studies. The horizontal axis indicates the percentage of answers to the questions in the SYRCLE risk of bias tool. Each color represents a different level of bias: red for a high-risk, green for a low-risk, and yellow for an unclear risk of bias
Fig. 3Network plot of comparisons for all studies investigating stem cell therapies for alveolar bone (a), cementum (b), and periodontal ligament regeneration (c). The nodes represent an intervention and their size is proportional to the number of trials comparing this intervention to any other in the network. The lines connecting each pair of interventions represent a direct comparison and are drawn in proportion to the number of trials in each direct comparison. The numbers on the lines represent the number of trials in each comparison
Fig. 4Summary treatment effects from network meta-analysis and pairwise meta-analysis for alveolar bone (a), cementum (b), and periodontal ligament regeneration (c) likelihood. Comparisons should be read from left to right. The estimate is located at the intersection of the column-defining treatment and the row-defining treatment. The lower triangles of the league tables represent the NMA results, and the upper triangles are the pairwise meta-analysis results. For the NMA and pairwise meta-analysis results, an SMD value higher than 0 favors column-defining treatment. For SMDs of comparisons in the opposing direction, the opposite numbers should be taken. Significant results are bold and underscored. NA = not applicable, no preclinical studies making direct comparisons
Fig. 5Network meta-analyses of stem cell therapies compared to cell carrier-only controls for each outcome. Points signify SMD estimates, and lines mark their 95% CIs. SMDs of more than 0 favor stem cells over cell carrier-only control. All single 95% CIs crossing the vertical line (0) imply no significant effect on the alveolar bone, cementum, or periodontal ligament regeneration. The SMDs with 95% CIs were estimated from the random-effects consistency model
Fig. 6Cumulative ranking plots comparing each of the stem cells for alveolar bone (a), cementum (b), and periodontal ligament regeneration (c). Ranking indicates the cumulative probability of being the best intervention, the second-best intervention, the third-best intervention, etc. The x-axis shows the relative ranking, and the y-axis shows the cumulative probability of each ranking. The surface underneath this cumulative ranking line (SUCRA) was estimated; the larger the SUCRA, the higher its rank among all available treatments
Characteristics of the included clinical trials
| Study | Baseline of participants | Defect type | Stem cells | Cell carrier | Control | Major finding | Study design |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aimetti 2018 [ | 11 participants with 11 defects; mean age 51.2 ± 6.1 years; five males and six females; Italia | Intrabony defect | Autologous DPSCs isolated from one vital tooth of the patients | Collagen sponge | Self-control | The application of DPSCs significantly improved clinical (PD, AL) and radiographic parameters (BF) of periodontal regeneration. | Single-arm and single-center clinical study |
| Baba 2016 [ | 10 participants with ten defects; mean age 48.4 years; three males and seven females; Japan | Intrabony defect | Autologous BMSCs isolated from patient iliac crest marrow aspirate | PRP and a composed of PLA resin fibers | Two healthy teeth per patient were used as the control | All three clinical parameters (PD, AL, and LBG) improved significantly. No clinical safety problems attributable to BMSCs were identified. | Single-arm and single-center clinical study |
| Chen 2016 [ | 30 participants with 41 defects; 30.04 ± 7.90 years for the control group; 26.05 ± 4.44 for cell group; Male and Female; China | Intrabony defect | Autologous PDLSCs isolated from the third molars of the patients | Bio-oss® | 21 defects treated with GTR and Bio-oss® without stem cells | Each group showed a significant increase in the alveolar bone height, while no statistically significant differences were detected between the cell group and the control group. Using autologous PDLSCs is safe and does not produce significant adverse effects. | Single-center RCTs |
| Dhote 2015 [ | 14 participants with 24 defects; mean age 32.62 ± 6.99 years; eight males and six females; India | Intrabony defect | Allogeneic UMSCs isolated from human umbilical cord | β-TCP and rh-PDGF-BB | 14 control sites were treated by an open flap debridement only | Using stem cells cultured on β-TCP in combination with rh-PDGF-BB resulted in a significant added benefit in terms of AL gains, PD reductions, more excellent radiographic BF, and improvement in LBG compared to the control group. | Single-center RCTs |
| Feng 2010 [ | Three participants with 16 defects; 25, 25, and 29 years; Male; China | Intrabony defect | Autologous PDLSCs obtained from third molars | Bone grafting material CALCITITE 4060-2 | Self-control | Clinical examination (PD, AL, and GR) indicated that PDLSCs might provide therapeutic benefits for periodontal defects. All treated patients showed no adverse effects during the follow-up. | Single-arm and single-center clinical study |
| Ferrarotti 2018 [ | 29 participants with 29 defects; mean age 50.7 ± 8.5 years; 13 males and 14 females; Italia | Intrabony defect | Autologous DPSCs isolated from one vital tooth of the patients | Collagen sponge | 14 control sites were filled with collagen sponge alone | Application of DPSCs significantly improved clinical parameters of periodontal regeneration (PD, AL, and BF) 1 year after treatment. | Single-center RCTs |
| Iwata 2018 [ | 10 participants with 14 defects; mean age 46 ± 12 years; five males and five females; Japan | Intrabony defect | Autologous PDLSCs isolated from the third molars of the patients | β-TCP | Self-control | Clinical parameters (PD, AL) and radiographic assessment (bone height) were improved in all 10 cases at 6 months after the transplantation. These therapeutic effects were sustained during a mean follow-up period of 55 ± 19 months, and there were no serious adverse events. | Single-arm and single-center clinical study |
| Yamada 2006 [ | One participant with one defect; 54 years; Female; Japan | Intrabony defect | Autologous BMSCs isolated from patient iliac crest marrow aspirate | PRP and thrombin-calcium chloride | The patient’s contralateral homonymous teeth | BMSCs/PRP gel could be clinically effective in reducing PD, improving AL in intrabony lesions. | Single-arm and single-center clinical study |
Abbreviations: AL attachment level, BF bone filling, β-TCP beta-tricalcium phosphate, GR gingival recession, LBG linear bone growth, PD probing depth, PLA poly-L-lactic acid, PRP platelet-rich plasma, RCTs randomized controlled trials, rh-PDGF-BB recombinant human platelet-derived growth factor-BB