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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04310852
Other study ID # 528
Secondary ID
Status Recruiting
Phase
First received
Last updated
Start date June 6, 2018
Est. completion date January 31, 2022

Study information

Verified date March 2020
Source Istituto Clinico Humanitas
Contact Elizaveta Kon, MD
Phone +390282247523
Email elizaveta.kon@humanitas.it
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Observational

Clinical Trial Summary

Recently there has been a growing interest in the role of subchondral bone in knee arthritis, both in its etiology and evolution and in its clinical significance. It has now been widely demonstrated that changes in the subchondral bone can develop both as a cause and as a consequence of joint degeneration and it is now accepted in the scientific community that the presence of these changes is of clinical importance, causing pain and an inflammatory state that can contribute to the evolution of arthrosis arthropathy. Recently the use of mesenchymal cells obtained from the bone marrow has been proposed for the treatment of gonarthrosis by intra-articular injections. Even more recently, treatments have been studied and proposed for the treatment of the bone-cartilage interface in knees affected by osteoarthrosis, using autologous bone marrow concentrate, with promising results.


Description:

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a chronic degenerative and disabling disease of joint joints, in which metabolic impairment between the synthesis and degradation of cartilage and subchondral bone, involves progressive destruction of joint tissue accompanied by chronic pain and synovial inflammation. Currently, available therapies are mostly palliative and designed to mask symptoms. The study proposed here has been constructed on the basis of the scientific evidence reported in the literature regarding the etiology and the treatment of OA. As recently demonstrated, the use of mesenchymal cells obtained from the bone marrow was effective in the treatment of gonarthrosis by intra-articular injections. Even more recently, treatments aimed at treating the bone-cartilage interface in arthritic knees have been studied and proposed. In the 2016 Val et al. pilot study, stem cells from the tibial bone marrow injected into the percutaneous bone-cartilage interface were described as a new therapeutic approach to osteoarthritis of the knee. This procedure is able to repair cartilage by stimulating subchondral bone angiogenesis and alleviating ischemia associated with arthritic knee pain, generating extremely positive outcomes in patients with low-grade osteoarthritis and relieving long-term pain in patients with high-grade osteoarthritis. This treatment is also able to induce differentiation and proliferation of chondrocytes, leading to an increase in the size of the intra-articular matrix, demonstrating an effective and minimally invasive treatment for the resolution of OA. The study described here aims to evaluate the potential effectiveness of the synergistic effect of both injections, with the aim of improving the symptomatic picture of patients with OA of the knee. Combining percutaneous injections at the bone-cartilage interface with intra-articular injections will provide proven results for the use of stem cells such as cartilage repair, increased vascularity, and pain reduction, in both compartments of the knee affected by OA. The positive effects reported in the literature regarding intra-articular injections will be combined with those reported with respect to the use of percutaneous injections at the cartilage, in order to obtain a better outcome in the treatment of the disease than in previous studies.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 25
Est. completion date January 31, 2022
Est. primary completion date September 30, 2021
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 40 Years to 70 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

1. Male or female patients aged between 40 and 70;

2. Medial or lateral arthrosis (grade 2-3 according to Kellgren-Lawrence score);

3. Failure after at least 6 months of conservative treatment (patients not responding to drug therapy with NSAIDs and painkillers, no benefit from rehabilitation cycle in water or gym, no benefit after hyaluronic acid or platelet-rich plasma (PRP) infiltrations, or after at least one infiltration of corticosteroids);

4. Ability and consent of patients to participate actively in the rehabilitation and clinical and radiological follow-up protocol;

5. Signing of informed consent.

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Patients who are incapable of understanding and will;

2. Trauma patients within 6 months prior to surgery;

3. Patients with malignancies;

4. Patients with rheumatic diseases;

5. Patients with diabetes;

6. Patients with metabolic thyroid disorders;

7. Patients abusing alcoholic beverages, drugs or drugs;

8. Patients with lower limb impairment above 10°

9. Body Mass Index <18 or > 35;

10. Patients undergoing knee surgery during the 12 months prior to surgery;

11. Patients with pathology ascribable to patellofemoral pathology;

12. Untreated knee instability.

Study Design


Intervention

Device:
BioCue Concentration Kit
The treatment will be carried out in the operating room under ordinary hospitalization and involves the application of 9 ml of autologous bone marrow concentrate in the knee affected by arthrosis. Specifically, 3 ml will be applied at the level of the bone-cartilage interface of the femur, 3 ml at the level of the bone-cartilage interface of the tibia, and 3 ml will be injected into the joint for a simultaneous action also at the level of the cartilage. To obtain the necessary amount of bone marrow concentrate, an aspirate of bone marrow will be taken from the iliac crest (60 ml) and homolateral tibia (30 ml) of the patient and concentrated by BioCue Concentration Kit, company Zimmer biomet, and centrifuge. This autologous bone marrow concentrate will be injected by means of the Perfuse at the level of the tibial and femoral bone-cartilage interface of the percutaneous arthrosis affected compartment under radiographic control.

Locations

Country Name City State
Italy Humanitas Research Hospital Rozzano Milan

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Istituto Clinico Humanitas

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Italy, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Improvement of subjective International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) The IKDC subjective knee Form consists of questions, divided into four sections: Symptoms, Functionality during daily activities and sports, Current knee function, Participation in work and sports. The patient will fill the subjective IKDC questionnaire. up to 24 months
Secondary improvement according to the subscale Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) pain The KOOS score consists of 5 categories; Pain, Other symptoms, Functionality in daily activities, Functionality in sports and recreational activities, and Quality of life. The previous week shall be taken into account as a reference at the time of compilation. For each question, several answer options are provided within each category, corresponding to a score between 0-4 points; overall the score is between 100 and 0 (100 indicates absence of symptoms, 0 indicates total presence of symptoms). The patient will fill the KOOS questionnaire. up to 24 months
Secondary improvement of the overall KOOS The KOOS score consists of 5 categories; Pain, Other symptoms, Functionality in daily activities, Functionality in sports and recreational activities, and Quality of life. The previous week shall be taken into account as a reference at the time of compilation. For each question, several answer options are provided within each category, corresponding to a score between 0-4 points; overall the score is between 100 and 0 (100 indicates absence of symptoms, 0 indicates total presence of symptoms). The patient will fill the KOOS questionnaire. up to 24 months
Secondary improvement of the TEGNER score This score allows to estimate the level of motor activity of a subject with a score between 0 and 10 (0 represents 'incapacity' and 10 represents 'participation in competitive sports'). In the study the TEGNER Score will be compiled directly by the Investigator, through an interview to the patient. up to 24 months
Secondary Improvement according to Whole-Organ Magnetic Resonance Imaging Score (WORMS) MRI score The WORMS score is composed of seven voices that describe in the complex, the aspect of the joint, evaluating specifically the state of the cartilage with sequences T2-weighted FSE and FS-3D SPGR (taking into consideration thickness and signal) presence of subchondral cysts with suppressed fat sequences T2-weighted FSE, presence of subchondral edema with suppressed fat sequences T2-weighted FSE, joint profile (considering any flattening or depression of the articular surface compared to normal), the presence of osteophytes and their size, the state of the meniscus, both medial and lateral, the state of the synovia by distension of the synovial cavity. The radiologist will fill the WORMS score forms. up to 24 months
Secondary Improvement according to Kellgren-Lawrence (K/L) score The score K/L grading scale allows to classify and differentiate the degree of severity of osteoarthritis of the damaged knee. The score includes grade I to grade IV (the higher the grade, the more severe the OA). The radiologist will fill K/L score forms. up to 24 months
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