Biomedicines (May 2024)

Long-Term Structural Changes in the Osteochondral Unit in Patients with Osteoarthritis Undergoing Corrective Osteotomy with Platelet-Rich Plasma or Stromal Vascular Fraction Post-Treatment

  • Aleksey Prizov,
  • Elena Tchetina,
  • Aleksey Volkov,
  • Ilya Eremin,
  • Nikolay Zagorodniy,
  • Fedor Lazko,
  • Andrey Pulin,
  • Evgeniy Belyak,
  • Konstantin Kotenko,
  • Gulnora Eshmotova,
  • Svetlana Glukhova,
  • Aleksandr Lila

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines12051044
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 5
p. 1044

Abstract

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This pilot study examined the long-term structural changes in the osteochondral unit of 20 patients with knee osteoarthritis (KOA) who underwent high tibial osteotomy (HTO) and received post-treatment with either platelet-rich plasma (PRP) or stromal vascular fraction (SVF). Ten patients were injected with autologous PRP (PRP subgroup), while another ten patients received autologous SVF (SVF subgroup) six weeks after surgery and were monitored for 18 months. Histological samples of bone and cartilage (2 mm in diameter and 2 cm long) were taken from tibial and femoral sites during surgery and 18-month post-HTO, and morphometric analyses were conducted using Mega-Morf12 software. Both post-treatment resulted in an increase in articular cartilage height at both sites (p p p = 0.004 for the femur), subchondral bone height (p p = 0.014 for the femur), trabecular bone volume (p p = 0.009 for the tibia and p = 0.007 for the femur). This pilot study, for the first time, demonstrates that HTO surgery combined with PRP and SVF post-treatments can lead to significant enhancements in knee articular cartilage and bone architecture in KOA patients, with SVF showing higher regenerative potential. These findings may contribute to improving treatment strategies for better clinical outcomes in HTO therapy for patients with KOA.

Keywords