Reihs Eva, Fischer Anita, Gerner Iris, Windhager Reinhard, Toegel Stefan, Zaucke Frank, Rothbauer Mario, Jenner Florien
Karl Chiari Lab for Orthopaedic Biology, Department of Orthopedics and Trauma Surgery, Medical University of Vienna, Währinger Gürtel 18 - 20, Vienna, 1090, Austria.
Faculty of Technical Chemistry, Technische Universität Wien, Vienna, Getreidemarkt 9/163, 1060, Austria.
Arthritis Res Ther. 2025 May 17;27(1):109. doi: 10.1186/s13075-025-03561-4.
Osteoarthritis (OA) is a highly prevalent and disabling condition lacking curative treatments, with only symptomatic relief available. Recognizing OA as a heterogenous disorder with diverse aetiologies and molecular foundations underscores the need to classify patients by both phenotypes and molecular pathomechanisms (endotypes). Such stratification could enable the development of targeted therapies to surmount existing treatment barriers. From a scientific, economic, and ethical perspective, it is crucial to employ animal models that accurately represent the endotype of the target patient population, not merely their clinical symptoms. These models must also account for intrinsic and extrinsic factors, like age, sex, metabolic status, and comorbidities, which impact OA's pathogenesis and its clinical and molecular variability and can profoundly influence not only structural and symptomatic disease severity and progression but also the underlying molecular pathophysiology. The molecular definition of the OA subpopulation must also be reflected in the read-outs, as the traditional methods-macroscopic and histological scoring, along with limited gene expression profiling of established biomarkers for cartilage degradation, extracellular matrix (ECM) turnover, and synovial inflammation-are inadequate for discovering new, phenotype- and endotype-specific biomarkers or therapeutic targets. Thus, animal model characterisation should evolve to include both clinically and pathophysiologically pertinent measures of disease progression and response to treatment. This review evaluates the utility and accuracy of current animal models in OA research, focusing on their capacity to replicate the disease's pathophysiological processes.
骨关节炎(OA)是一种高度流行且使人致残的疾病,缺乏治愈性疗法,目前仅有缓解症状的治疗方法。认识到OA是一种具有多种病因和分子基础的异质性疾病,这凸显了根据表型和分子发病机制(内型)对患者进行分类的必要性。这种分层有助于开发针对性疗法,以克服现有的治疗障碍。从科学、经济和伦理角度来看,使用能够准确代表目标患者群体内型而非仅仅其临床症状的动物模型至关重要。这些模型还必须考虑年龄、性别、代谢状态和合并症等内在和外在因素,这些因素会影响OA的发病机制及其临床和分子变异性,不仅会深刻影响结构和症状性疾病的严重程度及进展,还会影响潜在的分子病理生理学。OA亚群的分子定义也必须反映在检测指标中,因为传统方法——宏观和组织学评分,以及对软骨降解、细胞外基质(ECM)周转和滑膜炎症的既定生物标志物进行的有限基因表达谱分析——不足以发现新的、表型和内型特异性生物标志物或治疗靶点。因此,动物模型的表征应不断发展,纳入疾病进展和治疗反应的临床及病理生理学相关指标。本综述评估了当前动物模型在OA研究中的实用性和准确性,重点关注其复制疾病病理生理过程的能力。