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Allogeneic Umbilical Cord Blood-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cell Implantation Versus Microfracture for Large, Full-Thickness Cartilage Defects in Older Patients: A Multicenter Randomized Clinical Trial and Extended 5-Year Clinical Follow-up

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Abstract
Background:

There is currently no optimal method for cartilage restoration in large, full-thickness cartilage defects in older patients.

Purpose:

To determine whether implantation of a composite of allogeneic umbilical cord blood-derived mesenchymal stem cells and 4% hyaluronate (UCB-MSC-HA) will result in reliable cartilage restoration in patients with large, full-thickness cartilage defects and whether any clinical improvements can be maintained up to 5 years postoperatively.

Study Design:

Randomized controlled trial; Level of evidence, 1.

Methods:

A randomized controlled phase 3 clinical trial was conducted for 48 weeks, and the participants then underwent extended 5-year observational follow-up. Enrolled were patients with large, full-thickness cartilage defects (International Cartilage Repair Society [ICRS] grade 4) in a single compartment of the knee joint, as confirmed by arthroscopy. The defect was treated either with UCB-MSC-HA implantation through mini-arthrotomy or with microfracture. The primary outcome was proportion of participants who improved by >= 1 grade on the ICRS Macroscopic Cartilage Repair Assessment (blinded evaluation) at 48-week arthroscopy. Secondary outcomes included histologic assessment; changes in pain visual analog scale (VAS) score, Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC), and International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) score from baseline; and adverse events.

Results:

Among 114 randomized participants (mean age, 55.9 years; 67% female; body mass index, 26.2 kg/m(2)), 89 completed the phase 3 clinical trial and 73 were enrolled in the 5-year follow-up study. The mean defect size was 4.9 cm(2) in the UCB-MSC-HA group and 4.0 cm(2) in the microfracture group (P = .051). At 48 weeks, improvement by >= 1 ICRS grade was seen in 97.7% of the UCB-MSC-HA group versus 71.7% of the microfracture group (P = .001); the overall histologic assessment score was also superior in the UCB-MSC-HA group (P = .036). Improvement in VAS pain, WOMAC, and IKDC scores were not significantly different between the groups at 48 weeks, however the clinical results were significantly better in the UCB-MSC-HA group at 3- to 5-year follow-up (P < .05). There were no differences between the groups in adverse events.

Conclusion:

In older patients with symptomatic, large, full-thickness cartilage defects with or without osteoarthritis, UCB-MSC-HA implantation resulted in improved cartilage grade at second-look arthroscopy and provided more improvement in pain and function up to 5 years compared with microfracture.

Registration:

NCT01041001, NCT01626677 (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier).
Author(s)
김명구박용범빈성일빈성일유재두윤정로이범구임홍철정준용정화재최종혁최충혁하철원Brian J Cole
Issued Date
2021
Type
Article
Keyword
ArthritisCartilageClinical trialsOsteoarthritisPainUmbilical cord
DOI
10.1177/2325967120973052
URI
https://oak.ulsan.ac.kr/handle/2021.oak/8663
https://ulsan-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/primo-explore/fulldisplay?docid=TN_cdi_proquest_miscellaneous_2480741243&amp;context=PC&amp;vid=ULSAN&amp;lang=ko_KR&amp;search_scope=default_scope&amp;adaptor=primo_central_multiple_fe&amp;tab=default_tab&amp;query=any,contains,Allogeneic%20Umbilical%20Cord%20Blood-Derived%20Mesenchymal%20Stem%20Cell%20Implantation%20Versus%20Microfracture%20for%20Large,%20Full-Thickness%20Cartilage%20Defects%20in%20Older%20Patients:%20A%20Multicenter%20Randomized%20Clinical%20Trial%20and%20Extended%205-Year%20Clinical&amp;offset=0&amp;pcAvailability=true
Publisher
ORTHOPAEDIC JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE
Location
미국
Language
영어
ISSN
2325-9671
Citation Volume
9
Citation Number
9
Citation Start Page
0
Citation End Page
0
Appears in Collections:
Medicine > Medicine
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