| Literature DB >> 35509070 |
Apurba Barman1, Mithilesh K Sinha2, Jagannatha Sahoo3, Debasish Jena3, Vikas Patel3, Suman Patel3, Souvik Bhattacharjee3, Debanjan Baral3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The objective of the study was to assess the efficacy of autologous platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injections in the treatment of patellar tendinopathy.Entities:
Keywords: Athletic injuries; Injections; Knee; Meta-analysis; Pain; Patella; Patellar tendinopathy; Platelet-rich plasma
Year: 2022 PMID: 35509070 PMCID: PMC9066802 DOI: 10.1186/s43019-022-00151-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Knee Surg Relat Res ISSN: 2234-0726
Fig. 1PRISMA (preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analysis) flowchart of study inclusion in the systematic literature review
Summary: the characteristics of included studies
| Trial and location | Participants | Average age (years) | Male:female ratio | Design | Minimum follow-up (months) | Intervention/treatment details | PRP injection site | Co-intervention | Outcome measured | Adverse events |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Scott et al. 2019 [ Multicenter: [USA, Norway, and Italy | 57 persons (athletes) with patellar tendinopathy (Blazina stage IIIB) with symptoms ≥ 6 month | 32 | 6:1 | Randomized, multicenter, prospective, single-blind | 12 | Group 1: Single injection of 3.5 ml of LR-PRP (USG) ( Group 2: Single injection of 3.5 ml of LP-PRP (USG) ( Group 3: Single injection of 3.5 ml of NS (USG) ( | Patellar tendon (at the site of the lesion) | All persons, irrespective of group, received strengthening exercises (concentric and eccentric) in a gym-based rehabilitation program: 3 times per week for 6 weeks | VISA-P (knee function and activities), NPRS (pain intensity); GRoC | No serious adverse events However, in Group 2, 1 person reported increased localized patellar tendon pain that prevented the person from participating in the rehabilitation program following injection |
Dragoo et al. 2014 [ California, USA | 23 persons with patellar tendinopathy with symptoms ≥ 6 weeks | 34 | 19:1 | Randomized, single-center, prospective, double-blind | 6 | Group 1: Single injection of US-guided LR-PRP (6 ml) with dry needling ( Group 2: Single episode of US-guided dry needling ( | Patellar tendon (at the site of the lesion) | All persons, irrespective of group, received strengthening exercises (eccentric) and flexibility training throughout the study period | VISA (knee function and activities); VAS (pain intensity); SF-12 (QoL); Tegner scale (activity score); Lysholm scale (function and stability) | No adverse events |
Vetrano et al. 2013 [ Rome, Italy | 46 persons (athletes) with patellar tendinopathy with symptoms ≥ 6 months (mean 18.9 months), un-responsive to previous non-operative treatment | 26.9 | 4:1 | Randomized, single-center, prospective, double-blind | 12 | Group 1: Two injections (2 ml / injection) of PRP over 2 weeks, both injections under USG ( Group 2: Three sessions of ESWT at 48–72 h interval under USG ( | Patellar tendon (at the site of the lesion) | All persons, irrespective of group, received strengthening (isometric and eccentric) and stretching exercises for 2 weeks | VISA-P (knee function and activities); VAS (pain intensity) Modified Blazina scale (treatment response) | No serious adverse events However, in Group 1, 3 persons reported increased localized patellar tendon pain and discomfort that gradually subsided following injection In Group 2, persons reported transient reddening (no bruising) of the skin following treatment sessions |
Rodas et al. 2021 [ Barcelona, Spain | 20 persons with patellar tendinopathy with symptoms ≥ 4 months (mean 23.6 months) unresponsive to previous non-operative treatment | 33.9 years | All males | Randomized, single-center, prospective, double-blind | 12 | Group 1: Two injections at an interval of 23 days [1st injection: NS; 2nd injection: BM-MSC suspended in 6 ml solution of Ringer lactate, 2% human albumin, and 5 Mm glucose) ( Group 2: Two injections at an interval of 23 days [6 ml each] of LP-PRP (USG) ( | Patellar tendon (at the site of the lesion) and peritendinous (medial and external zone) | All persons, irrespective of group, received the same post-intervention rehabilitation protocol | VISA-P (knee function and activities); VAS (pain intensity); dynamometry (muscle function);000 USG (tendon thickness and vascularity); UTC; MRI | No serious adverse events However, 1 person from each group reported increased pain (gradually subsided) following injection |
Kaux et al. 2019 [ Belgium | 33 sports persons with patellar tendinopathy with symptoms > 3 months, unresponsive to previous non-operative treatment | 29.4 | All males | Randomized, single-center, prospective study | 3 | Group 1: Single injection of US-guided LP- PRP (6 ml) ( Group 2: Two episodes (1 week apart) of US-guided hyaluronic acid injections ( | Patellar tendon (at the site of the lesion) | All persons, irrespective of group, received the same rehabilitation program [strengthening and activity exercises (bicycle training) | VAS (Pain intensity); VISA-P (knee function and activities); aAlgometric scores; IKDC scores | No adverse events |
Filardo et al. 2010 [ Bologna, Italy | 31 persons with patellar tendinopathy (Blazina stage IIIB) with symptoms > 3 months and unresponsive to previous non-operative treatment | 27.1 | All males | Non-randomized, single-center, prospective, open level | 6 | Group 1: Three injections (5 ml each) of PRP at an interval of 15 days ( Group 2: No active interventions, only PT (exercise program) ( | Patellar tendon (at the site of the lesion) | All persons, irrespective of group, received the same rehabilitation program [stretching, strengthening, and activity exercises (bicycle training) | VAS (pain intensity); EQ-VAS (QoL); Tegner scale (activity score) | No adverse events |
Abdelbary et al. 2018 [ Cairo, Egypt | 20 persons with patellar tendinopathy with symptoms ≥ 3 months and unresponsive to previous non-operative treatment | 35.8 | 1:3 | Non-randomized, single-center, prospective, double-blind | 12 | Group 1: Single injection (6 ml) of PRP under USG Group 2: Single injection of high-volume injection treatment (10 ml of 0.5% lidocaine + 25 mg hydrocortisone + 30 ml NS under USG guidance | Patellar tendon (at the site of the lesion) | All persons, irrespective of group, received the same structured rehabilitation program | VAS (pain intensity) | No adverse events |
Abate et al. 2018 [ Chieti, Italy | 54 persons with patellar tendinopathy with symptoms ≥ 3 months (mean 11 months) | 38.3 | 1:1 | Non-randomized, retrospective, cohort study, open level | 6 | Group 1: Two injections (4-5 ml each) of PRP, at an interval of 2 weeks, under USG ( Group 2: Two injections of high-volume injection treatment (10 ml of 2% mepivacaine + 30 ml NS), at an interval of 2 weeks under USG ( Group 3: Two injections of high-volume injection treatment (10 ml of 2% mepivacaine + 30 ml NS) and 4-5 ml of PRP injections, at an interval of 2 weeks, under USG ( | Patellar tendon (at the site of the lesion) | All persons, irrespective of group, received the same rehabilitation program (stretching and strengthening [eccentric] for 3 months | VAS (pain intensity); VISA-P (knee function and activities); | No significant adverse |
BM-MSC Bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells, EQ VAS EuroQol VAS, GRoC Global Rating of Change Score, ESWT extracorporeal shock wave therapy, HVIGI high-volume image-guided injection, IKDC International Knee Documentation Committee , LP-PRP leukocyte-poor PRP, LR-PRP leucocyte-rich PRP, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, NS normal saline, PRP platelet-rich plasma, PRS Numeric Pain Rating Scale, PT physio/physical therapy, SF-12 Short Form-12 questionnaire, USG ultrasound guidance, UTC ultrasound tissue characterization, VAS visual analog scale, VISA-P Victorian Institute of Sport Assessment for Pain
Characteristics of the platelet-rich plasma injection used in each trial
| References | PRP kit | PRP preparation | Anticoagulant used | Centrifugation technique | Leucocyte concentration in PRP solution/types of PRP (LR- or LP-PRP) | Platelets concentration (in PRP solution) | Increase (fold) in platelet counts (PRP) compared to baseline (whole blood) | Activating agent |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scott et al. 2019 [ | Angel Cytomedix System (ABS-10060; Arthrex Inc, USA) | 52 ml venous blood resulted in 3.5 ml PRP | Citrate dextrose Solution A | NR | LR-PRP (details not reported) LP-PRP (Details not reported) | 230 × 103 (LR-PRP); 227 × 103 (LP-PRP) | LR-PRP: 3.8 fold LP-PRP: 3.0 fold | NR |
| Dragoo et al. 2014 [ | GPS III (Biomet Inc, Warsaw, IN, USA) PRP Kit | 55 ml venous blood resulted in 6 ml LR-PRP | NR | NR | LR-PRP (details not reported) | NR | NR | NR |
| Kaux et al. 2019 [ | Apheresis machine (CCM TEC and Kit CS5, Fresenius-Kabi, Bad-I Iomburg, Germany) | 6 ml PRP was prepared and injected | NR | NR | LP-PRP (details not reported) | 850 × 103 (LP-PRP) | NR | Calcium chloride |
| Filardo et al. 2010 [ | NR | 150 ml venous blood resulted in 20 ml PRP | NR | Double centrifugations; 1800 RPM for 15 min followed by 3500 RPM for 10 min | NR | NR | 6 fold | 10% Calcium chloride |
| Rodas et al. 2021 [ | NR | 36 ml venous blood resulted in 6 ml PRP | Citrate | Single centrifugation; 1800 RPM for 8 min | LP-PRP (details not reported) | 563 × 103/mm3 | LP-PRP: 2.5 fold | 5% Calcium chloride |
| Vetrano et al. 2013 [ | The Recover Platelet Separation Kit (Kaylight Ltd, Israel) | 10 ml venous blood resulted in 6–7 ml PRP | Acid-citrate-dextrose | Single centrifugation; 1500 RPM for 10 min | NR | 0.89–1.1 × 109 ml | 3–5 fold | NR |
| Abdelbary et al. 2018 [ | Arthrex Double Syringe System (Arthrex Inc, USA) | 15 ml venous blood resulted in 6 ml of PRP | NR | Single centrifugation, 1700 RPM for 6 min | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Abate et al. 2018 [ | Regen Lab A-PRP Kit (Regenlab, Switzerland) | 8 ml venous blood resulted in 6 ml of PRP | Citrate | Single centrifugation, 3400 RPM for 5 min | LP-PRP (leucocytes nil; details not reported) | NR | 1.6 fold | Nil |
NR Not reported, RPM revolutions per minute
Fig. 2Summary of the risk of bias of each study
Fig. 3The efficacy of PRP injections (pain relief) in comparison with other interventions. Forest plot of mean improvement in pain relief (VAS pain score) in the short term (8–12 weeks). CI Confidence interval, IV weighted mean difference, SD standard deviation
Fig. 4The efficacy of PRP injections (pain relief) in comparison with other interventions. Forest plot of mean improvement in pain relief (VAS pain score) in the medium term (6 months)
Fig. 5The efficacy of PRP injections (pain relief) in comparison with other interventions. Forest plot of mean improvement in pain relief (VAS pain score) in the long term (1 year)