Bone marrow aspirate concentrate, hyaluronan-based scaffold effective for cartilage lesions in older patients
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Results from this study demonstrated bone marrow aspirate concentrate and a hyaluronan-based scaffold is viable and effective for the treatment of cartilage lesions, and its efficacy is not impacted by patient age.
Researchers compared 20 patients older than 45 years (study group) with 20 patients who were younger than 25 years (control group). All patients had full-thickness cartilage lesions of the knee joint and underwent cartilage implantation with bone marrow aspirate concentrate that was harvested from autologous, adult mesenchymal stem cells and placed on a hyaluronan-based scaffold. Investigators prospectively evaluated patients for 4 years. With MRI, KOOS, IDKC, VAS and Tegner scores, patients were assessed preoperatively and at the final follow-up.
Results at the final follow-up showed KOOS, Tegner and IKDC scores improved significantly for both groups. Investigators noted the lesion size and number of lesions impacted the results; however, concomitant surgical procedures did not alter outcomes. Findings from the MRI demonstrated 80% of study patients and 71% of control patients had complete filling. Good tissue repair with a changeable amount of hyaline-like tissue was seen in three patients from the study group and in two patients from the control group– by Monica Jaramillo
Disclosure : Gobbi reports he is a scientific consultant for Anika Therapeutics Inc.