| Literature DB >> 33298867 |
Ker Rui Wong1, Richelle Mychasiuk1, Terence J O'Brien1,2, Sandy R Shultz1,2, Stuart J McDonald1,3, Rhys D Brady4,5.
Abstract
Neurological heterotopic ossification (NHO) is a debilitating condition where bone forms in soft tissue, such as muscle surrounding the hip and knee, following an injury to the brain or spinal cord. This abnormal formation of bone can result in nerve impingement, pain, contractures and impaired movement. Patients are often diagnosed with NHO after the bone tissue has completely mineralised, leaving invasive surgical resection the only remaining treatment option. Surgical resection of NHO creates potential for added complications, particularly in patients with concomitant injury to the central nervous system (CNS). Although recent work has begun to shed light on the physiological mechanisms involved in NHO, there remains a significant knowledge gap related to the prognostic biomarkers and prophylactic treatments which are necessary to prevent NHO and optimise patient outcomes. This article reviews the current understanding pertaining to NHO epidemiology, pathobiology, biomarkers and treatment options. In particular, we focus on how concomitant CNS injury may drive ectopic bone formation and discuss considerations for treating polytrauma patients with NHO. We conclude that understanding of the pathogenesis of NHO is rapidly advancing, and as such, there is the strong potential for future research to unearth methods capable of identifying patients likely to develop NHO, and targeted treatments to prevent its manifestation.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33298867 PMCID: PMC7725771 DOI: 10.1038/s41413-020-00119-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bone Res ISSN: 2095-4700 Impact factor: 13.567
Incidence, demographics and locations of NHO reported across the literature
| Author | Description ( | Type of injury/s | Location of HO and imaging modality used |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reznik et al.[ | 262 TBI patients, 226 M, 36 F TBI-NHO patients: 10, mean: 39.6 years, 10 M 151 SCI patients, 128 M, 23 F 16 SCI-NHO patients, mean: 31.4 years, 13 M, 3 F | TBI and SCI | Hip: 17 lesions, shoulder: 1 lesion, elbow: 3 lesions, knee: 5 lesions Bone scintigraphy |
| Dizdar et al.[ | 151 TBI patients, 126 M, 25 F 56 NHO patients, mean: 34.6 years, 48 M, 8 F | TBI | Hip: 41 patients, shoulder: 11 patients, elbow: 20 patients, knee: 25 patients, ankle: 2 patients Imaging modality: not reported (NR) |
| Van Kampen et al.[ | 176 TBI patients, 75 M, 22 F 13 TBI-NHO patients, mean: 34.65 years, 10 M, 3 F 79 excluded GCS <8. Coma duration in NHO group: 15 days Coma duration in non-NHO group: 4.18 days Mechanical ventilation: 17.23 days Immobilisation days: 13.46 | TBI Concomitant bone FX: 8/13 patients | Hip: 3 lesions, shoulder: 2 lesions, thigh: 2 lesions, elbow: 4 lesions, knee: 5 lesions, femur: 1 lesion, ankle: 1 lesion, iliopsoas muscle: 1 lesion Imaging modality: NR |
| Rigaux et al.[ | 31 TBI patients, 31 M 12 TBI-NHO patients, 33 years,12 M GCS: ≥8 3 months-post-injury | TBI | NR X-ray, bone scintigraphy |
| Hurvitz et al.[ | 90 TBI patients, mean: 11.9 years, 67 M, 23 F 13 TBI-NHO patients, 9 M, 4 F 35 patients TBI + extremity FX 30 patients TBI + skull FX | TBI | Hip: 4 lesions, shoulder: 3, femur: 3, elbow: 3, knee: 4 lesions, forearm: 2, ischium: 2 X-ray, bone scintigraphy |
| Hendricks et al.[ | 76 TBI patients, 16–84 years, mean: 36.67 years, 47 M 29 F 9 TBI-NHO patients GCS 3: 9 Coma duration of 76 patients: 10.03 (1–61 days) Mechanical ventilation: 8.95 (0–52 days) Diffuse axonal injury: 7 patients | TBI Concomitant bone FX: 9/9 patients | Hip: 5 lesions, shoulder: 3 lesions, elbow: 5, knee: 5, ankle: 2 |
| Seipel et al.[ | 1 463 total patients, 17–77 years, mean: 40.4 years, 916 M, 547 F 30 NHO patients, 23 M, 7 F Mean time to HO diagnosis: 7.2 ± 1.2 weeks | TBI and SCI TBI/SCI: 23 patients Concomitant peripheral trauma: 5 patients Non traumatic: 7 patients | Hip: 42 lesions, shoulder: 22 lesions, elbow: 7 lesions, knee: 10 lesions, upper ankle joint: 1 lesion, diaphysis of long bones: 3 lesions X-ray |
| Singh et al.[ | 18 SCI patients, 18–54 years, mean: 32 years, 16 M, 2 F 7 SCI-NHO patients, 18–40 years, mean: 30 years Average abbreviated injury scale (AIS): A Average HO score: 1a | SCI | Hip: 7 patients X-ray, SPECT |
| Wittenberg et al.[ | 413 SCI patients, mean: 35.4 years, 274 M, 82 F 71 SCI-NHO patients, mean: 33.8 years, 63 M, 8 F 30 tetraplegia, 39 paraplegia 57 excluded from study | SCI Concomitant head injuries: 23 patients Concomitant extremity injury: 19 patients Concomitant pelvic injury: 1 patient Concomitant injuries (abdominal and thoracic): 33 patients | Left hip: 70.4%, right hip 57.8% Elbow: 5, knees, 2 X-ray |
| Bravo-Payno et al.[ | 654 SCI patients 85 SCI-NHO patients, 18–56 years, 29.70 years 41 excluded from study | SCI | Hip: 36 patients, shoulder: 3 patients, elbow: 1 patient, knee: 4 patients X-ray |
| Orzel and Rudd[ | 50 total patients 43 NHO patients, 18–56 years, 30 M, 13 F | SCI, TBI, peripheral trauma (cerebral vascular insult, burn) SCI trauma: 27 Paraplegics: 17 Closed head injury: 7 Peripheral trauma: 8 | Hip: 33 patients, shoulder: 8 patients, thigh: 10 patients, elbow: 8 patients, knee: 3 patients, leg: 1 patient Bone scintigraphy |
F female, M male, NR not reported, TBI traumatic brain injury, SCI spinal cord injury, NHO neurological heterotopic ossification, FX fracture, SPECT single-photon emission computed tomography
aHO grade according to Brooker classification
Fig. 1Proposed mechanism for NHO development. Simultaneous injury to the CNS and peripheral sites triggers the release of osteogenic and inflammatory factors including; SP, CGRP, OSM, IL-6, BMPs and FGFs. The influx of osteogenic and inflammatory factors, initiates the differentiation of OPCs into fibroblasts which is mediated by fibroblast growth factors (FGFs). This influx also elicits angiogenesis, which results in an increase in oxygen tension, triggering the differentiation of OPCs into chondrocytes which undergo hypertrophy and form a cartilage matrix. This cartilaginous matrix provides a structural framework for the formation of blood vessels, osteoblast proliferation and differentiation and formation of ectopic bone (created with BioRender.com)
Fig. 2Current treatments targeting specific pathways of NHO. NHO development is triggered by a cascade of inflammatory factors. Presently, the preferred prophylactic treatment for NHO/HO involves NSAIDs (e.g. Indomethacin) to downregulate the inflammatory response and prevent OPC differentiation. Radiotherapy is thought to prevent the formation and development of ectopic bone specifically by inhibiting the differentiation of OPCs. RAR-γ agonists have been shown to prevent chondrogenesis and therefore subsequent mineralisation. While, nitrogen-containing bisphosphonates (e.g. sodium etidronate) have been used to inhibit mineralisation, and the formation of ectopic bone. Finally, when bone is completely mineralised, surgical resection is the only remaining intervention. This invasive procedure, however, is accompanied by the risk of recurrence and is associated with complications which include incomplete resection, functional and physiological impairment (created with BioRender.com)
Treatments for clinical and radiographical evidence of HO/NHO reported across literature
| Author | Description ( | Injury and imaging modality used to confirm NHO | Location of NHO and treatment/s | Reported recurrence and complications |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surgical resection | ||||
| Meiners et al.[ | 29 SCI-NHO patients, 27–68.13 years, mean: 37.87 years, 28 M, 1 F 41 lesions Cervical lesions of spinal cord: 10 patients Thoracic spine lesions: 19 patients | SCI X-ray | Hip Dose: average: 9.17 Gy, range: 0.7–12 Gy in 1–5 sessions Mean follow-up: 4.2 years Mean time to surgery: 82.1 months (17–298 months) Indications for surgery: seating problems, loss of functions, pressure sore, pain Preoperative ROM: 21.95° (range: 0–80°) Postoperative ROM: 82.68° (range: 0–120°) | Recurrence: 3 patients Complications: deep and superficial wound infections, fracture, aneurysm and pressure ulcer |
| Hunt et al.[ | 42 burns patients, 22–62 years, mean: 38 years 42 burn-HO patients, 22–62 years, mean: 38 years 47 lesions Mean TBSA: 55% Mean third degree burn: 37% Average ventilator support: 58 days | Burn injuries X-ray | Hip, elbow, forearm Indications for surgery: decreased ROM resulting in loss of functions in daily activities, ulnar nerve entrapment, inability to perform physical therapy Preoperative ROM: 52° Postoperative ROM: 119° | Recurrence in 6 elbows, 1 hip and 1 forearm Complications: ulnar nerve deficit, numbness weakness, small haematoma, minor wound dehiscence and cellulitis. |
| Radiation therapy | ||||
| Hamid et al.[ | 45 patients with elbow trauma, 18–65 years, mean: 44 years, 25 M, 20 F 20 elbow trauma-HO patients | Intraarticular distal humeral fracture, Fracture-dislocation with proximal radial and/or ulnar fracture X-ray, CT scan | Elbow Dose: 700 cGy single fraction dose at 6-MeV photons), Mean follow-up: 7.5 months (range: 6–26 months) Mean time to treatment: 72 h Indications for treatment: seating problems, loss of functions, decubitus, pressure sore, pain Preoperative ROM: 21.95° (range: 0–80°) Postoperative ROM: 82.68° (range: 0–120°) | Trial was terminated early due to high non-union rate observed in the radiation treatment group Recurrence: 0 Complications: infection (2), non-union (8) |
| Stein et al.[ | 11 patients with elbow trauma, 28–78 years, mean: 51 years, 3 M, 8 F 3 elbow trauma-HO patients, 54–78, mean: 63 years, 1 M, 2 F 3 lesions | Fracture/dislocation of the elbow Radiographs | 11 patients Dose: 700 cGy single non-fractionated at unreported MeV Mean follow-up: 12 months (range: 9–24 months) Mean time to treatment: 5 days (range: 0–16 days) Indications for treatment: NR Preoperative ROM: NR Postoperative ROM: 114.5° (range: 0–135°) | Recurrence: 0 Complications: decreased sensation along ulnar nerve |
| Müseler et al.[ | 244 SCI-NHO patients, 18–81 years, mean: 46.4 years, 207 M, 37 F, 444 lesions AIS A—12 patients (4 tetraplegic 8 paraplegic) AIS B—1 patient (1 tetraplegic) | SCI CT scan or MRI | Radiation therapy (7 Gy, single dose accompanied by 15MV or 6MV) Mean follow-up: 89.4 days Mean time to treatment: 3.7 days Indications for treatment: NR | Recurrence: 13 patients (26 joints) Complications: NR |
| Cipriano et al.[ | 60 NHO-patients, mean: 36.7 years, 47 M, 13 F 72 lesions | TBI, SCI, TBI + SCI, TBI + local trauma | 30 patients Dose: 700 cGy dose of radiation Mean follow-up: 12.7 months (range: 6–33 months) Mean time to treatment: 1.18 days (range: 0–4 days) Indications for treatment: limited ROM, nerve impingement, reduced quality of life and functions Preoperative ROM: Postoperative ROM: Hip—4.23°, Hip—67.2° Knees—81.3°, Knees—117.5° Elbows—4.0°, Elbows—140.0° | Recurrence: 6 joints Complications: NR |
| NSAIDs | ||||
| Banovac et al.[ | 33 SCI-NHO patients AIS A—13 (5 tetraplegics, 7 paraplegic) AIS B—1 (1 tetraplegic) AIS C—2 (2 paraplegic) AIS D—1 (1 tetraplegic) | SCI Bone scintigraphy (early stage) X-ray (later stage) | 16 patients Oral indomethacin 75 mg daily, IV disodium etidronate, 300 mg daily for 3 days, oral etidronate, 20 mg·kg−1 per day for 6 months Mean follow-up: 1.5 months Mean time to treatment: 21 days Indications for treatment: local erythema, swelling, loss of joint ROM and fever | Recurrence in 2 patients Complications: upper abdominal discomfort |
| Banovac et al.[ | 76 SCI patients, 65 M, 11 F AIS A—28 patients AIS B—8 patients AIS C—1 patient | SCI Bone scintigraphy, radiograph | 37 patients Oral rofecoxib 25 mg daily, IV disodium etidronate 300 mg daily for 3 days, oral etidronate, 20 mg·kg−1 per day for 6 months Mean time to treatment: 25 days Indications for treatment: local oedema, fever and decreased joint ROM | Recurrence in 5/37 patients Complications: NR |
| Romano et al.[ | 400 THA patients, mean: 61.2 years 24 excluded (due to side effects) | Coxarthrosis, femoral head necrosis Radiograph | 250 patients Rectal indomethacin 50 mg daily for 2 days, a day post-surgery followed by oral indomethacin 50 mg daily for 18 days 150 patients Celecoxib 200 mg daily for 2 days, starting 2 days post-surgery for 20 days Mean follow-up: 12 months Mean time to treatment: 1 and 2 days respectively | Indomethacin: 40 patients, Celecoxib: 21 patients Complications: (Indomethacin) gastrointestinal side effects, excessive bleeding, mental confusion (Celecoxib), nausea and gastrointestinal pyrosis |
| Schmidt et al.[ | 201 THA patients, 28–89, mean: 67.5 years | Total hip replacement Radiograph | 102 patients Oral indomethacin 25 mg, thrice daily, for 6 weeks, starting on first postoperative day Mean follow-up: 12 days Mean time to treatment: 1 day | Recurrence in 13 patients Complications: NR |
| Bedi et al.[ | 616 patients after hip arthroscopy, mean: 31.3 years, 342 M, 274 F 29 HO patients, 15–57 years, mean: 30.6 years, 21 M, 8 F | Hip arthroscopy Radiographs, CT scan | 277 patients Naproxen (500 mg, twice daily for 30 days, starting a day post-surgery) 339 patients Indomethacin 75 mg daily for 4 days, Naproxen 500 mg, twice daily for 30 days Mean follow-up: 13.2 months (range: 2.9–16.5 months) Mean time to treatment: 1 day 7 patients HO surgical excision, radiation therapy 700 cGy, single dose Mean time to treatment: 11.6 months (range: 5.2–16.2 months) | Naproxen + Indomethacin: 6 patients Complications: NR |
| Beckmann et al.[ | 106 patients after hip arthroscopy, mean: 35 years, 40 M, 66 F Excluded from study: | Hip arthroscopy Radiographs | 52 patients Naproxen 500 mg, twice daily for 3 weeks, post-surgery Mean time to treatment: 1 day Indications for treatment: pain, radiographic abnormalities and evidence of labral tear on MRI | Recurrence: 2 Complications: Gastrointestinal discomfort, rash, blood clot, heartburn, headache and pain |
| Neal et al.[ | 2 649 THA patients, mean: 65.5 years, 1 311 M, 1 338 F 601 excluded 627 lesions | Hip arthroplasty Radiograph | 1 039 patients Aspirin 162 mg·d−1 for 35 days post-surgery Mean follow-up: 22 months | Recurrence: 627 patients Complications: hip pain (with the need for analgesia), difficulty or restriction of mobility |
| Bisphosphonates | ||||
| Schuetz et al.[ | 7 patients in total, 47–68 years, mean: 54.8 years, 7 M 5 patients with HO, 47–68 years, mean: 54.8 years, 5 M Number of lesions: 8 | Caisson disease, tetraplegia, e.coli sepsis, osteoarthritis, FOP Radiographs | IV pamidronate 680 mg/850 mg/1200 mg Mean follow-up: 19.6 months (range: 4–54 months) Indications for treatment: pain, hardening at operation site and decreased ROM | Recurrence in 1 patient Complications: need for pain medication, lower back pain |
| Orzel and Rudd[ | 50 patients 43 NHO patients, 18–56 years, 30 M, 13 F 81 lesions | SCI paraplegia, closed head injury, peripheral trauma, cerebral vascular insult, burn Bone scintigraphy | 14 patients Oral etidronate disodium 20 mg·kg−1 for first 2 weeks followed by 10 mg·kg−1 for remainder of study Mean follow-up: 22.5 months Indications for treatment: Radiograph evidence | No response to therapy in 4/14 Complications: NR |
| Banovac[ | 40 SCI-NHO patients, mean: 23 years, 39 M, 1 F AIS A—37 patients (16 are tetraplegic, 21 are paraplegic) AIS B—3 patients (2 are tetraplegic, 1 is paraplegic) | SCI Radiograph and bone scintigraphy | 40 patients IV etidronate sodium 300 mg, 3 doses for 3 days followed by oral etidronate sodium 20 mg·kg−1 per day for 6 months Mean follow-up: 35 months Indications for treatment: oedema, reduced ROM, fever, positive scintigraphy | Recurrence in 2 patients, Complications: NR |
| Banovac et al.[ | 27 SCI patients, 16–54 years, mean: 36 years, 25 M, 2 F 11 SCI-NHO patients 3 excluded | SCI Bone scintigraphy | 24 patients IV etidronate disodium (300 mg for 3 h, 3 doses for 3 days/5 days) followed by oral etidronate sodium (20 mg·kg−1 per day for 6 months) Indications for treatment: acute swelling, reduced ROM, increased body temperature, laboratory test (increased serum alkaline phosphatase, accelerated erythrocyte sedimentation rate) and positive bone scintigraphy | Recurrence: 11 patients |
| Garland et al.[ | 75 SCI-patients 14 SCI-NHO patients, 17–30 years, mean: 25 years 5 excluded 14 lesions | SCI Radiograph, bone scintigraphy | 9 patients Sodium etidronate 20 mg·kg−1 per day for 2 weeks followed by 10 mg·kg−1 per day for 2 years Mean follow-up: 14 months (range: 5–19 months) Mean time to treatment: 26.7 days (range: 0–55 days) Indications for treatment: swelling, reduced ROM | Recurrence: none Complications: none |
F female, M male, NR not reported, TBI traumatic brain injury, SCI spinal cord injury, NHO neurological heterotopic ossification, ROM range of motion, TBSA total body surface area (%), THA total hip arthroplasty, FOP fibrodysplasia ossificans progressive
Fig. 3Key pathways/mechanisms implicated in the development of NHO highlighting potential and existing therapeutic targets to mitigate NHO. a Substance P receptor (NK-1R) antagonists (e.g. RP67580) have been found to reduce NHO volume in murine models. b Downstream of the BMP pathway, RAR-γ agonists such as palovarotene have been reported to prevent early stages of NHO development by disrupting OPC differentiation, chondrogenesis and osteogenesis by downregulating mRNA expression of SOX-9 and RUNX2. c OSM is a potential therapeutic target and may serve as a biomarker for NHO. Blocking OSM has been found to reduce NHO likely by inhibiting downstream transcription factor, STAT3, which is known to trigger bone formation. d NSAID, indomethacin is currently the preferred prophylaxis for NHO/HO. It targets COX-1 and COX-2 non-selectively, inhibiting the production of prostaglandins and osteogenesis (created with BioRender.com)