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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 67 - 67
1 May 2017
Bhattacharjee A McCarthy H Tins B Kuiper J Roberts S Richarson J
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Background. Structural and functional outcome of bone graft with first or second generation autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) in osteochondral defects has not been reported. Methods. Seventeen patients (mean age of 27±7 years, range 17–40), twelve with osteochondritis dissecans (OD) (ICRS Grade 3 and 4) and five with isolated osteochondral defect (OCD) (ICRS Grade 4) were treated with a combined implantation of a unicortical autologous bone graft with ACI (the Osplug technique). Functional outcome was assessed with Lysholm scores. The repair site was evaluated with the Oswestry Arthroscopy Score (OAS), MOCART score and ICRS II histology score. Formation of subchondral lamina and lateral integration of the bone grafts were evaluated from MRI scans. Results. The mean defect size was 4.5±2.6SD cm. 2. (range 1–9) and depth was 11.3±5SD mm (range 5–18). The pre-operative Lysholm score improved from 45 (IQR 24, range 16–79) to 77 (IQR 28, range 41–100) at 1 year (p-value 0.001) and 70 (IQR 35, range 33–91) at 5 years (p-value 0.009). The mean OAS of the repair site was 6.2 (range 0–9) at a mean of 1.3 years. The mean MOCART score was 61 ± 22SD (range 20–85) at 2.6 ± 1.8SD years. Histology demonstrated generally good integration of the repair cartilage with the underlying bone. Poor lateral integration of the bone graft on the MRI scan and a low OAS were significantly associated with a poor Lysholm score and failure. Conclusion. Osplug technique shows significant improvement of functional outcome for up to 5 years in patients with a high grade OD or OCD. This is the first report describing association of bone graft integration with functional outcome after such a procedure. It also demonstrates histological evidence of integration of the repair cartilage with the underlying bone graft. Level of Evidence. III


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVI | Pages 12 - 12
1 Aug 2012
Shekkeris A Perera J Bentley G Flanagan A Miles J Carrington R Skinner J Briggs T
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Articular cartilage implantation (ACI) and associated procedures (MACI = Matrix-assisted cartilage implantation) are now established treatments for osteochondral defects in the knee. The quality of repair in terms of histological appearance is frequently not known, whilst the correlation of histology results with functional outcomes remains undefined. Histological data of the quality of the repair tissue is sparse and a precise classification proved difficult.

This was a single-centre, prospective study. Over 12 years (1998-2010) 406 patients that underwent articular cartilage implantation procedures at our institution (ACI = 170, MACI = 205) had biopsies taken at the 1-2 year interval, in order to assess whether these contained ‘hyaline-like’ cartilage, ‘mixed hyaline-like with fibrocartilage’, fibrocartilage or fibrous tissue alone.

Histological sections of the biopsies were prepared and stained with haematoxylin, eosin and proteoglycan stains and viewed under polarised light. All biopsies were studied by a single histopathologist in a specialist, dedicated musculoskeletal laboratory.

All patients were assessed by the Cincinnati, Bentley and Visual Analogue scores both pre-operatively and at the time of the review.

The findings revealed that 56 patients healed with ‘hyaline-like’ cartilage (14.9%), 103 with ‘mixed’ (27.5%), 179 with fibrocartilage (47.7%) and 37 with fibrous tissue (9.9%).

These findings showed that 42.4% of defects were filled with ‘hyaline-like’ or ‘mixed’ cartilage, with 70% of these achieving a ‘fair’ to ‘excellent’ functional outcome. This was also observed in the fibrocartilage group, where 72% achieved similar results. Predictably 89% of the patients that healed by fibrous tissue had a poor functional outcome.

This study shows that 71% of patients whose osteochondral defects healed by either ‘hyaline-like’, ‘mixed’ or fibrocartilage experienced an improvement in the function. In contrast, only 11% of the patients whose defects filled with fibrous tissue, showed some functional improvement. Additionally, this data indicates the advantage of biopsies in assessing the overall results of cartilage implantation procedures.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 76 - 76
17 Apr 2023
Hulme C Roberts S Gallagher P Jermin P Wright K
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Stratification is required to ensure that only those patients likely to benefit, receive Autologous Chondrocyte Implantation (ACI); ideally by assessing a biomarker in the blood. This study aimed to assess differences in the plasma proteome of individuals who respond well or poorly to ACI. Isobaric tag for relative and absolute quantitation (ITRAQ) mass spectrometry and label-free proteomics analyses were performed in tandem as described previously by our group (Hulme et al., 2017; 2018; 2021) using plasma collected from ACI responders (n=10) compared with non-responders (n=10) at each stage of surgery (Stage I, cartilage harvest and Stage II, cell implantation). iTRAQ using pooled plasma detected 16 proteins that were differentially abundant at baseline in ACI responders compared with non-responders (n=10) (≥±2.0 fold; p<0.05). Responders demonstrated a mean Lysholm (patient reported functional score from 0–100) improvement of 33±13 and non-responders a mean worsening of −13±13 points. The most pronounced plasma proteome shift was seen in response to Stage I surgery in ACI non-responders, with 48 proteins being differentially abundant between the two surgical procedures. We have previously noted this marked shift in response to initial surgery in the SF of ACI non-responders, several of these proteins were associated with the Acute Phase Response. One of these proteins, clusterin, could be confirmed in patients’ plasma using an independent immunoassay using individual samples. Label-free proteomic data from individual samples identified only cartilage acidic protein-1 (known to associate with osteoarthritis progression) to be significantly more abundant at Stage I in the plasma of non-responders. This study indicates that proteins can be identified within the plasma that have potential use in ACI patient stratification. Further work is required to validate the findings of this discovery-phase work in larger ACI cohorts


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 75 - 75
17 Apr 2023
Tierney L Kuiper J Williams M Roberts S Harrison P Gallacher P Jermin P Snow M Wright K
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The objectives of the study were to investigate demographic, injury and surgery/treatment-associated factors that could influence clinical outcome, following Autologous Chondrocyte Implantation (ACI) in a large, “real-world”, 20 year longitudinally collected clinical data set. Multilevel modelling was conducted using R and 363 ACI procedures were suitable for model inclusion. All longitudinal post-operative Lysholm scores collected after ACI treatment and before a second procedure (such as knee arthroplasty but excluding minor procedures such as arthroscopy) were included. Any patients requiring a bone graft at the time of ACI were excluded. Potential predictors of ACI outcome explored were age at the time of ACI, gender, smoker status, pre-operative Lysholm score, time from surgery, defect location, number of defects, patch type, previous operations, undergoing parallel procedure(s) at the time of ACI, cell count prior to implantation and cell passage number. The best fit model demonstrated that for every yearly increase in age at the time of surgery, Lysholm scores decreased by 0.2 at 1-year post-surgery. Additionally, for every point increase in pre-operative Lysholm score, post-operative Lysholm score at 1 year increased by 0.5. The number of cells implanted also impacted on Lysholm score at 1-year post-op with every point increase in log cell number resulting in a 5.3 lower score. In addition, those patients with a defect on the lateral femoral condyle (LFC), had on average Lysholm scores that were 6.3 points higher one year after surgery compared to medial femoral condyle (MFC) defects. Defect grade and location was shown to affect long term Lysholm scores, those with grade 3 and patella defects having on average higher scores compared to patients with grade 4 or trochlea defects. Some of the predictors identified agree with previous reports, particularly that increased age, poorer pre-operative function and worse defect grades predicted poorer outcomes. Other findings were more novel, such as that a lower cell number implanted and that LFC defects were predicted to have higher Lysholm scores at 1 year and that patella lesions are associated with improved long-term outcomes cf. trochlea lesions


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 11 - 11
1 Dec 2021
Hulme C Gallacher P Jermin P Roberts S Wright K
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Abstract. Purpose. Stratification is required to ensure that only patients likely to benefit, receive Autologous Chondrocyte Implantation (ACI). At Stage I (SI), healthy cartilage is harvested from the joint and chondrocytes culture expanded before being implanted into a chondral/osteochondral defect at Stage II (SII). In ACI non-responders, there is a marked shift in the profile and abundance of proteins detectable in the synovial fluid (SF) at SII, many being associated with an acute phase response (APR). However, clinical biomarkers are easier to measure in blood than SF, so we have now performed this investigation in plasma. Methods. Isobaric tag for relative and absolute quantitation mass-spectrometry was used to assess the proteome in plasma pooled from ACI responders (mean Lysholm improvement of 33, n=10) or non-responders (mean: −13 points, n=10), collected at SI or SII surgeries. Interactome networks were generated using STRING. Plasma proteome data were compared to matched SF data, previously analysed, to identify any proteins that changed across the fluids. Clusterin concentration was quantitated (ELISA; Biotechne). Results. The most pronounced plasma proteome shift was seen in response to SI surgery in ACI non-responders (50 proteins; ±2.0FC; p<0.05). An interactome network was generated based on these proteins. Functions associated with this network included complement and coagulation cascade (FDR= 5.99×10-. 25. ). Sixteen matched proteins were differentially abundant between SI and SII in both the SF and plasma, 75% of which were APR associated proteins. These included clusterin, which was confirmed by ELISA (p=0.001). Conclusions. Changes in APR signalling between SI and SII surgeries in non-responders to ACI can be identified in plasma and SF. The APR is the body's first systemic response to trauma and surgery. Our data indicate that ACI non-responders may have a greater innate response to initial surgery, which is detectable in both their SF and plasma


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 77 - 77
1 Mar 2021
Wang J Roberts S McCarthy H Tins B Gallacher P Richardson J Wright K
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Abstract. Objectives. Meniscus allograft and synthetic meniscus scaffold (Actifit. ®. ) transplantation have shown promising outcomes for symptoms relief in patients with meniscus deficient knees. Untreated chondral defects can place excessive load onto meniscus transplants and cause early graft failure. We hypothesised that combined ACI and allograft or synthetic meniscus replacement might provide a solution for meniscus deficient individuals with co-existing lesions in cartilage and meniscus. Methods. We retrospectively collected data from 17 patients (16M, 1F, aged 40±9.26) who had ACI and meniscus allograft transplant (MAT), 8 patients (7M, 1F, aged 42±11) who underwent ACI and Actifit. ®. meniscus scaffold replacement. Other baseline data included BMI, pre-operative procedures and cellular transplant data. Patients were assessed by pre-operative, one-year and last follow-up Lysholm score, one-year repair site biopsy, MRI evaluations. Results. In the MAT group, the final post-operative evaluation was 7±4.5 years. The mean pre-operative Lysholm score was 49±17, rose to 66.6±16.4 1 year post-op and dropped to 58±26 at final evaluation. Four of the 17 patients had total knee replacements (TKRs) at average 6.4 years after treatment. In the Actifit. ®. group, the final post-operative assessment was 5.6±2.7years. The pre-operative Lysholm score was 53.7±21.3, increasing to 72.8±15.2 at 1 year and 70.4±27.6 at final clinical follow-up. None of the patients in the Actifit® group had received TKRs. Conclusions. Both MAT and Actifit. ®. groups were effective in improving patients symptoms and knee function according to one-year post-operative assessments. However, the knee function of patients in MAT group dropped at final follow-up, whereas the Actifit® group maintained their knee function. These preliminary findings warrant further investigations, to include more patients and alongside comparisons to ACI alone and allograft/Actifit. ®. alone as comparator groups before accurate conclusions may be drawn on the comparative efficacy of each technique. Declaration of Interest. (b) declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research reported:I declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research project


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 89-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1099 - 1109
1 Aug 2007
Munirah S Samsudin OC Chen HC Salmah SHS Aminuddin BS Ruszymah BHI

Ovine articular chondrocytes were isolated from cartilage biopsy and culture expanded in vitro. Approximately 30 million cells per ml of cultured chondrocytes were incorporated with autologous plasma-derived fibrin to form a three-dimensional construct. Full-thickness punch hole defects were created in the lateral and medial femoral condyles. The defects were implanted with either an autologous ‘chondrocyte-fibrin’ construct (ACFC), autologous chondrocytes (ACI) or fibrin blanks (AF) as controls. Animals were killed after 12 weeks. The gross appearance of the treated defects was inspected and photographed. The repaired tissues were studied histologically and by scanning electron microscopy analysis. All defects were assessed using the International Cartilage Repair Society (ICRS) classification. Those treated with ACFC, ACI and AF exhibited median scores which correspond to a nearly-normal appearance. On the basis of the modified O’Driscoll histological scoring scale, ACFC implantation significantly enhanced cartilage repair compared to ACI and AF. Using scanning electron microscopy, ACFC and ACI showed characteristic organisation of chondrocytes and matrices, which were relatively similar to the surrounding adjacent cartilage. Implantation of ACFC resulted in superior hyaline-like cartilage regeneration when compared with ACI. If this result is applicable to humans, a better outcome would be obtained than by using conventional ACI


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 68 - 68
1 May 2017
Masieri F Byles N
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Background. Microfracture (MF) and Autologous Chondrocyte Implantation (ACI) are used to repair symptomatic condylar cartilage defects (grade II-IV Outerbridge). Superiority of ACI to MF is still debated. The aim of the study was to conduct a systematic literature review, compare superiority of ACI versus MF in a meta-analysis and investigate the correlation between patient age and outcome of both treatments. Methods. Extended literature search was conducted (papers from January 2001 to present), looking at patient characteristics, pre- and post-operative scores and cartilage repair assessment evaluation. Methodological quality was verified through modified Coleman score and assessment bias. A fixed-effect meta-analysis was conducted, comparing post-operative standardised mean differences between ACI and MF. Pearson correlation coefficient between post-operative score and age was calculated against ACI and MF. Results. of 490 studies systematically analysed, 8 met the inclusion criteria, accounting for 255 patients treated with ACI and 259 with MF. Overall mean postoperative scores were 81.38±8.31 for ACI and 74.9±7.0 for MF, with no significant difference (p=0.13). The average modified Coleman score of the studies was 82.6, with low bias among them. The meta-analysis displayed an overall effect estimate of 0.3 favouring ACI treatment versus MF (95%CI=0.12–0.48, P=0.001). Significant heterogeneity was although observed (I2>70%). Pearson correlation coefficient calculated between mean post-operative score and mean age, surprisingly failed to indicate clear correlation for ACI (r=0.11) and MF (r=0.18) respectively. Conclusions. Minor statistically significant superiority of ACI intervention versus MF in knee cartilage repair was found, together with high levels of heterogeneity, halting the possibility to make full recommendation of ACI versus MF. Level of Evidence. Ia (systematic review and meta-analysis)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 108 - 108
1 Nov 2018
Spalding T
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Articular cartilage injury has a high prevalence in elite and recreational athletes. Articular cartilage repair remains a challenge due to cost effectiveness and clinical effectiveness issues. There are now several effective technologies and it is possible to return to competitive sports following many of the procedures available. The durability of repair tissue is variable and there remains extensive growth in the Scientific world. Evolving cartilage restoration technologies focus on increasing cartilage quality and quantity, while optimising surgery and rehabilitation. In UK ACI has undergone extensive cost effectiveness analysis and the in-depth review has shown that ACI is cost effective compared to microfracture. ACI is indicated for lesions >2cm sq but NICE has considered that it is not indicated for problems after microfracture. This presentation details the various options available to surgeons and examines the cost effectiveness


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVI | Pages 40 - 40
1 Aug 2012
Dhinsa B Nawaz S Gallagher K Carrington R Briggs T Skinner J Bentley G
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Introduction. Autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) is contra-indicated in a joint rendered unstable by a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). We present our experience of ACI repair with ACL reconstruction. Methods. Patients underwent arthroscopic examination and cartilage harvesting of the knee. A second operation was undertaken approximately six weeks later to repair the ruptured ACL with hamstring graft or Bone patella-Bone (BPB) and to implant the chondrocytes via formal arthrotomy. Three groups were assessed: Group 1: Simultaneous ACL Reconstruction and ACI; Group 2: Previous ACL Reconstruction with subsequent ACI repair; Group 3: Previously proven partial or complete ACL rupture, deemed stable and not treated with reconstruction with ACI procedure subsequently. Patients then underwent a graduated rehabilitation program and were reviewed using three functional measurements: Bentley functional scale, the modified Cincinnati rating system, and pain measured on a visual analogue scale. All patients also underwent formal clinical examination at review. Results. Those who underwent simultaneous ACL Reconstruction and ACI had a 47% improvement in Bentley functional scale, 36% improvement in visual analogue score and 38% improvement in the modified Cincinnati rating system. This is in contrast to only a 15% improvement in the modified Cincinnati rating system, 30% improvement in Bentley functional scale, and 32% improvement in visual analogue score in patients who had ACI repair after previous ACL reconstruction. 68% of patients who had the procedures simultaneously rated their outcome as excellent/good and 27% felt it was a failure. In contrast 38% of patients rated their outcome as a failure if they had ACI repair without reconstruction of ACL rupture. Conclusion. Symptomatic cartilage defects and ACL deficiency may co-exist in many patients and represent a treatment challenge. Our results suggest that a combined ACL and ACI repair is a viable option in this group of patients and should reduce the anaesthetic and operative risks of a two-stage repair. Patients with complete rupture of ACL despite being deemed stable performed poorly at review and our study suggests all complete ruptures regardless of stability should be treated with a reconstruction when performing an autologous chondrocyte implantation


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 87-B, Issue 1 | Pages 128 - 134
1 Jan 2005
Goldberg AJ Lee DA Bader DL Bentley G

An increasing number of patients are treated by autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI). This study tests the hypothesis that culture within a defined chondrogenic medium containing TGF-β enhances the reexpression of a chondrocytic phenotype and the subsequent production of cartilaginous extracellular matrix by human chondrocytes used in ACI. Chondrocytes surplus to clinical requirements for ACI from 24 patients were pelleted and cultured in either DMEM (Dulbecco’s modified eagles medium)/ITS+Premix/TGF-β1 or DMEM/10%FCS (fetal calf serum) and were subsequently analysed biochemically and morphologically. Pellets cultured in DMEM/ITS+/TGF-β1 stained positively for type-II collagen, while those maintained in DMEM/10%FCS expressed type-I collagen. The pellets cultured in DMEM/ITS+/TGF-β1 were larger and contained significantly greater amounts of DNA and glycosaminoglycans. This study suggests that the use of a defined medium containing TGF-β is necessary to induce the re-expression of a differentiated chondrocytic phenotype and the subsequent stimulation of glycosaminoglycan and type-II collagen production by human monolayer expanded chondrocytes


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVI | Pages 122 - 122
1 Aug 2012
Kumar KS Murakibhavi V Roberts S Guerra-Pinto F Robinson E Harrison P Mangam D McCall I Richardson J
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Background. Autologous Chondrocyte Implantation (ACI) is a procedure which is gaining acceptance for the treatment of cartilage defects in the knee with good results and a long term durable outcome. Its use in other joints has been limited, mainly to the ankle. We aimed to assess the outcome of ACI in the treatment of chondral and osteochondral defects in the hip. Methods. Fifteen patients underwent ACI for chondral or osteochondral defects in the femoral head with a follow up of upto 8 years (mean of 2 years) in our institution with a mean age of 37 years at the time of operation. Pre-operatively hip function was assessed by using the Harris Hip Score and MRI. Post-operatively these were repeated at 1 year and hip scores repeated annually. Failure was defined as a second ACI to the operated lesion or a conversion to a hip resurfacing or replacement. Results. The mean pre-op Harris Hip Score (HHS) was 55 which increased to 63 at 1 year and 70 at the latest follow up. Patients who underwent ACI for cartilage defects secondary to trauma (four) were better with a mean HHS of 69 at a mean follow up of 3.5 years. Six patients underwent THR at a mean of 32 months and were classed as failures. Five patients had evidence of avascular necrosis (AVN) of the femoral head post operatively of which four AVN pre-op. Conclusion. These early results suggest that ACI could be a viable option for the treatment of isolated chondral defects in the hip. The presence of AVN or bone cysts pre-op may be a predictor of failure


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVI | Pages 121 - 121
1 Aug 2012
Kumar KS Gilbert R Bhosale A Harrison P Richardson J
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Background. Autologous Chondrocyte Implantation (ACI) is frequently used to treat chondral defects in the knee with a good long-term outcome. This is contraindicatd in meniscal deficient knees. Allogenic Menicsal Transplantation (AMT) has been shown to give good symptomatic relief in meniscus deficient knees. However this is contraindicated in advanced cartilage degeneration. We hypothesized that combination of these two might be a solution for bone-on-bone arthritis in young individuals. Methods. We studied a consecutive series of 12 patients who underwent combined ACI and AMT between 1998 and 2005. Pre operative and post operative comparisons of lysholm scores were recorded. Magnetic Resonance Imaging was performed to assess the integration ACI & AMT. Arthroscopy was performed at one year for assessment and obtain biopsy for histological examination. Results. Out of the twelve patients only eleven were included as one had died at three months after surgery. The median pre-operative lysholm score was 45 which rose to 64 at one year. Magnetic Resonance Imaging showed good integration of both ACI and menisci. Most of the patients were able to lead an active lifestyle. Conclusion. The combination of both ACI & AMT could give a good result and defer a total knee replacement in young indi


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 75 - 75
1 Mar 2021
Mendes L Bosmans K Maréchal M Luyten F
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Joint surface restoration of deep osteochondral defects represents a significant unmet clinical need. Moreover, untreated lesions lead to a high rate of osteoarthritis. The current strategies to repair deep osteochondral defects such as osteochondral grafting or sandwich strategies combining bone autografts with ACI/MACI fail to generate long-lasting osteochondral interfaces. Herein, we investigated the capacity of juvenile Osteochondral Grafts (OCGs) to repair osteochondral defects in skeletally mature animals. With this regenerative model in view, we set up a new biological, bilayered, and scaffold-free Tissue Engineered (TE) construct for the repair of the osteochondral unit of the knee. Skeletally immature (5 weeks old) and mature (11 weeks old) Lewis rats were used. Cylindrical OCGs were excised from the intercondylar groove of the knee of skeletally immature rats and transplanted into osteochondral defects created in skeletally mature rats. To create bilayered TE constructs, micromasses of human periosteum-derived progenitor cells (hPDCs) and human articular chondrocytes (hACs) were produced in vitro using chemically defined medium formulations. These constructs were subsequently implanted orthotopically in vivo in nude rats. At 4 and 16 weeks after surgery, the knees were collected and processed for subsequent 3D imaging analysis and histological evaluation. Micro-computed tomography (µCT), H&E and Safranin O staining were used to evaluate the degree of tissue repair. Our results showed that the osteochondral unit of the knee in 5 weeks old rats exhibit an immature phenotype, displaying active subchondral bone formation through endochondral ossification, the absence of a tidemark, and articular chondrocytes oriented parallel to the articular surface. When transplanted into skeletally mature animals, the immature OCGs resumed their maturation process, i.e., formed new subchondral bone, partially established the tidemark, and maintained their Safranin O-positive hyaline cartilage at 16 weeks after transplantation. The bilayered TE constructs (hPDCs + hACs) could partially recapitulate the cascade of events as seen with the immature OCGs, i.e., the regeneration of the subchondral bone and the formation of the typical joint surface architecture, ranging from non-mineralized hyaline cartilage in the superficial layers to a progressively mineralized matrix at the interface with a new subchondral bone plate. Cell-based TE constructs displaying a hierarchically organized structure comprising of different tissue forming units seem an attractive new strategy to treat osteochondral defects of the knee


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 87-B, Issue 5 | Pages 730 - 735
1 May 2005
Sharpe JR Ahmed SU Fleetcroft JP Martin R

In this study a combination of autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) and the osteochondral autograft transfer system (OATS) was used and evaluated as a treatment option for the repair of large areas of degenerative articular cartilage. We present the results at three years post-operatively. Osteochondral cores were used to restore the contour of articular cartilage in 13 patients with large lesions of the lateral femoral condyle (n = 5), medial femoral condyle (n = 7) and patella (n = 1). Autologous cultured chondrocytes were injected underneath a periosteal patch covering the cores. After one year, the patients had a significant improvement in their symptoms and after three years this level of improvement was maintained in ten of the 13 patients. Arthroscopic examination revealed that the osteochondral cores became well integrated with the surrounding cartilage. We conclude that the hybrid ACI/OATS technique provides a promising surgical approach for the treatment of patients with large degenerative osteochondral defects


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 92-B, Issue 4 | Pages 602 - 608
1 Apr 2010
Drobnič M Radosavljevič D Cör A Brittberg M Stražar K

We compared the quality of debridement of chondral lesions performed by four arthroscopic (SH, shaver; CU, curette; SHCU, shaver and curette; BP, bipolar electrodes) and one open technique (OPEN, scalpel and curette) which are used prior to autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI). The ex vivo simulation of all five techniques was carried out on six juvenile equine stifle joints. The OPEN, SH and SHCU techniques were tested on knees harvested from six adult human cadavers. The most vertical walls with the least adjacent damage to cartilage were obtained with the OPEN technique. The CU and SHCU methods gave inferior, but still acceptable results whereas the SH technique alone resulted in a crater-like defect and the BP method undermined the cartilage wall. The subchondral bone was severely violated in all the equine samples which might have been peculiar to this model. The predominant depth of the debridement in the adult human samples was at the level of the calcified cartilage. Some minor penetrations of the subchondral end-plate were induced regardless of the instrumentation used. Our study suggests that not all routine arthroscopic instruments are suitable for the preparation of a defect for ACI. We have shown that the preferred debridement technique is either open or arthroscopically-assisted manual curettage. The use of juvenile equine stifles was not appropriate for the study of the cartilage-subchondral bone interface


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVI | Pages 31 - 31
1 Aug 2012
McCarthy H Roberts S
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Autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) has been used for many years for the treatment of symptomatic defects in articular joints, predominantly the knee. Traditionally, cells were implanted behind a periosteal membrane, but in more recent times Chondrogide, a membrane consisting of porcine collagens I and III, has been used. There have been trials comparing the clinical outcome of these two groups of patients; in this study we compare the histological outcome using the two different patch types. In a study of 100 patients having received ACI treatment of cartilage defects in the knee, 41 received Chondrogide (ACI-C) and 59 received periosteum (ACI-P). All of these patients had a post-operative biopsy taken at a mean of 16.9±9.2 months and 20.8±23.2 months for ACI-C and ACI-P respectively for histology using the ICRS II scoring system. Lysholm scores, a measure of knee function, were obtained pre- and post-operatively at the time of biopsy and statistical differences tested for via a Mann-Whitney U-test. The mean age of the two groups at treatment was 37±8 and 35±10 years, the size of defect treated was 6.1±5.4 and 4.4±2.7 cm2 and the biopsy follow-up time was 50.6±22.2 and 81.2±34.8 months for ACI-C and ACI-P patients respectively. Both groups exhibited a significant improvement in Lysholm score from pre-operative to the time of biopsy (14.3±25.7; n=100), although there was no significant difference in improvement in Lysholm score between the two patch types. There was no significant difference between the histology score of the two groups, nor was the score found to correlate with the Lysholm score at that time. The individual components of the ICRS II score did not differ significantly with patch type (even for the surface architecture) apart from cellular morphology which was 6.5±3 and 8.2±1.6 for ACI-C and ACI-P respectively. The histological quality of repair tissue formed with ACI-C differed little from that seen with ACI-P, despite the former group being biopsied ∼4 months sooner after treatment and being used to treat defects which were 39% larger. Hence Chondrogide appears just as suitable as periosteum for use as a patch in the procedure of ACI


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 15 - 15
1 Apr 2017
Timur U van der Windt A Caron M Welting T Emans P Jahr H
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Background. Treatment of cartilage defects requires in vitro expansion of human articular chondrocytes (HACs) for autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI). During standard expansion culture (i.e. plasma osmolarity, 280 mOsm) chondrocytes inevitably lose their specific phenotype (i.e. collagen type II (COL2) expression). This de-differentiation makes them inappropriate for ACI. Physiological osmolarity (i.e. 380 mOsm) improves COL2 expression in vitro, but the underlying reason is unknown. However, an accepted key regulator of chondrocyte differentiation, transforming growth factor beta (TGFβ), is known to stimulate COL2 production. In this study we aimed to elucidate if TGFβ signaling could potentially be driving the COL2 expression under physiological culture conditions. Material and methods. After informed consent was obtained, HACs were isolated from five osteoarthritis (OA) patients and cultured in cytokine-free medium of 280 or 380 mOsm, respectively, under standard 2D in vitro conditions with or without lentiviral TGFβ2 knockdown (RNAi). Expression of TGFβ isoforms, superfamily receptors and chondrocyte marker genes was evaluated by qRT-PCR, TGFβ2 protein secretion by ELISA and TGFβ bioactivity using luciferase reporter assays. Statistical significance was assessed by a student's t-test. Results. TGFβ isoform expression was differentially altered by physiological osmolarity. Specifically, 380 mOsm increased TGFβ2 expression and protein secretion, as well as TGFβ activity. Upon TGFβ2 isoform-specific knockdown COL2 expression was induced. Physiological osmolarity and TGFβ2 RNAi also induced TGFβ1, TGFβ3 and their type I receptor ALK5. Conclusions. We showed that TGFβ2 knockdown increases COL2 expression in human osteoarthritic chondrocytes in vitro, possibly through a regulatory feedback loop involving TGFβ1, TGFβ3 induction and an increased ALK5/ALK1 ratio. This study indicates that TGFβ signalling is involved in osmolarity-induced chondrocyte marker gene expression. Pharmacological targeting of this pathway holds potential to further improve future osmolarity-mediated phenotypic stabilisation in advanced cell-based cartilage repair strategies. Level of Evidence. preclinical. Disclosure. We have nothing to disclose


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 21 - 21
1 Mar 2013
RAHMAN J KAYANI B GILLOTT E BENTLEY G SKINNER J MILES J CARRINGTON R BRIGGS T
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The Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital has completed an extensive trial of ACI versus MACI in the treatment of symptomatic osteochondral defects of the knee. A new technique has now been proposed which is quicker and easier to perform. This is the Gel-Type Autologous Chondrocyte Transplantation, CHONDRONTM. At Stanmore CHONDRON has been used for the past 17 months. Our aim was to assess the short term functional outcome of patients who have undergone CHONDRONTM using validated outcome scoring questionnaires. We retrospectively reviewed the notes of 43 patients that had undergone CHONDRONTM over one year ago and scored them using the Modified Cincinnati Score, the Visual Analogue Score and the Benltey Stanmore Functional Rating Score. RESULTS. The mean pre-operative Modified Cincinnati Score was 39.9, which improved to a mean of 59.8 post-operatively. The mean Visual Analogue Score improved from 6.7 to 5.1 post-operatively. The median Bentley Functional Rating Score was 3 pre-operatively and 2 post-operatively. CONCLUSIONS. These early results show that 76% of the patients who were treated with CHONDRONTM experienced a reduction in pain and improvement in post-operative function. In the patients in whom the symptoms were worse, the deterioration in score could be partly explained by numerous previous procedures on the same site, presence of early osteoarthritis or the presence of multiple osteochondral lesions. This highlights the importance of careful patient selection in order to gain maximum benefit from the procedure


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVI | Pages 69 - 69
1 Aug 2012
Picardo N Nawaz Z Gallagher K Whittingham-Jones P Parratt T Briggs T Carrington R Skinner J Bentley G
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The aim of this study was to determine whether the clinical outcome of autologous chondrocyte transplantation was dependent on the timing of a high tibial osteotomy in tibio-femoral mal-aligned knees. Between 2000 and 2005, forty-eight patients underwent autologous chondrocyte implantation with HTO performed at varying times relative to the second stage autologous chondrocyte implantation procedure. 24 patients had HTO performed simultaneously with their second stage cartilage transplantation, (the HTO Simultaneous Group). 5 patients had HTO prior to their cartilage procedure, (the HTO pre-ACI Group) and 19 had HTO performed between 1 to 4 years after their second stage cartilage implantation, (the HTO post-ACI Group). There were 29 men and 19 women with a mean age of 37 years (Range 28 to 50) at the time of their second stage procedure. With average follow-up of 72 months we have demonstrated a significant functional benefit in performing the HTO either prior to or simultaneously with the ACI procedure in the mal-aligned knee. The failure rate in the Post-ACI group was 45% compared to the Pre-ACI and Simultaneous group, with failure rates of 20% and 25%, respectively. An HTO performed prior to or simultaneously with an autologous chondrocyte implantation procedure in the mal-aligned knee, provides a significant protective effect by reducing the failure rate by approximately 50%