Wylie James D, Hartley Melissa K, Kapron Ashley L, Aoki Stephen K, Maak Travis G
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Utah, 590 Wakara Way, Salt Lake City, UT, 84108, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2015 May;473(5):1673-82. doi: 10.1007/s11999-015-4141-0.
Articular cartilage has minimal endogenous ability to undergo repair. Multiple chondral restoration strategies have been attempted with varied results.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: The purpose of our review was to determine: (1) Does articular chondrocyte transplantation or matrix-assisted articular chondrocyte transplantation provide better patient-reported outcomes scores, MRI morphologic measurements, or histologic quality of repair tissue compared with microfracture in prospective comparative studies of articular cartilage repair; and (2) which available matrices for matrix-assisted articular chondrocyte transplantation show the best patient-reported outcomes scores, MRI morphologic measurements, or histologic quality of repair tissue?
We conducted a systematic review of PubMed, CINAHL, and MEDLINE from March 2004 to February 2014 using keywords determined to be important for articular cartilage repair, including "cartilage", "chondral", "cell source", "chondrocyte", "matrix", "augment", "articular", "joint", "repair", "treatment", "regeneration", and "restoration" to find articles related to cell-based articular cartilage repair of the knee. The articles were reviewed by two authors (JDW, MKH), our study exclusion criteria were applied, and articles were determined to be relevant (or not) to the research questions. The Methodological Index for Nonrandomized Studies (MINORS) scale was used to judge the quality of nonrandomized manuscripts used in this review and the Jadad score was used to judge the quality of randomized trials. Seventeen articles were reviewed for the first research question and 83 articles were reviewed in the second research question from 301 articles identified in the original systematic search. The average MINORS score was 9.9 (62%) for noncomparative studies and 16.1 (67%) for comparative studies. The average Jadad score was 2.3 for the randomized studies.
Articular chondrocyte transplantation shows better patient-reported outcomes at 5 years in patients without chronic symptoms preoperatively compared with microfracture (p = 0.026). Matrix-assisted articular chondrocyte transplantation consistently showed improved patient-reported functional outcomes compared with microfracture (p values ranging from < 0.001 to 0.029). Hyalograft C(®) (Anika Therapeutics Inc, Bedford, MA, USA) and Chondro-gide(®) (Genzyme Biosurgery, Kastrup, Denmark) are the matrices with the most published evidence in the literature, but no studies comparing different matrices met our inclusion criteria, because the literature consists only of uncontrolled case series.
Matrix-assisted articular chondrocyte transplantation leads to better patient-reported outcomes in cartilage repair compared with microfracture; however, future prospective research is needed comparing different matrices to determine which products optimize cartilage repair.
Level IV, therapeutic study.
关节软骨的内源性修复能力极小。人们尝试了多种软骨修复策略,结果各异。
问题/目的:我们本次综述的目的是确定:(1)在前瞻性关节软骨修复比较研究中,与微骨折相比,关节软骨细胞移植或基质辅助关节软骨细胞移植是否能提供更好的患者报告结局评分、MRI形态学测量结果或修复组织的组织学质量;(2)用于基质辅助关节软骨细胞移植的现有哪种基质能显示出最佳的患者报告结局评分、MRI形态学测量结果或修复组织的组织学质量?
我们于2004年3月至2014年2月对PubMed、CINAHL和MEDLINE进行了系统综述,使用确定对关节软骨修复重要的关键词,包括“软骨”“软骨的”“细胞来源”“软骨细胞”“基质”“增强”“关节的”“关节”“修复”“治疗”“再生”和“恢复”,以查找与基于细胞的膝关节软骨修复相关的文章。文章由两位作者(JDW、MKH)进行评审,应用我们的研究排除标准,确定文章与研究问题相关(或不相关)。使用非随机研究方法学指数(MINORS)量表来评判本综述中使用的非随机手稿的质量,使用Jadad评分来评判随机试验的质量。从最初系统检索中确定的301篇文章中,对17篇文章进行了第一个研究问题的评审,对83篇文章进行了第二个研究问题的评审。非比较性研究的平均MINORS评分为9.9(62%),比较性研究的平均MINORS评分为16.1(67%)。随机研究的平均Jadad评分为2.3。
与微骨折相比,对于术前无慢性症状的患者,关节软骨细胞移植在5年时显示出更好的患者报告结局(p = 0.026)。与微骨折相比,基质辅助关节软骨细胞移植始终显示出患者报告的功能结局得到改善(p值范围从<0.001至0.029)。Hyalograft C®(美国马萨诸塞州贝德福德的Anika Therapeutics Inc公司)和Chondro - gide®(丹麦卡斯楚普的Genzyme Biosurgery公司)是文献中证据最多的基质,但没有比较不同基质的研究符合我们的纳入标准,因为文献仅包含非对照病例系列。
与微骨折相比,基质辅助关节软骨细胞移植在软骨修复中能带来更好的患者报告结局;然而,需要未来的前瞻性研究来比较不同基质,以确定哪种产品能优化软骨修复。
IV级,治疗性研究。