Journal of Cartilage & Joint Preservation (Mar 2023)

Cell transplantation techniques for cartilage restoration

  • Tristan J. Elias,
  • Vince Morgan,
  • Jimmy Chan,
  • Andreas H. Gomoll,
  • Adam B. Yanke

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
p. 100103

Abstract

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Background: Focal articular chondral lesions are a common finding among patients presenting with knee pain. If symptomatic and unresponsive to conservative treatment, cell transplantation techniques offer a unique solution to address larger defects by engineering chondrocytes to integrate within the subchondral bone of the lesion and regenerate cartilage. Objectives: The purpose of this article is to review the evaluation of, and clinical decision making for, patients being considered for cell transplantation and the available techniques an orthopaedic surgeon has at their disposal. Methods: A review of recent literature regarding cartilage defects in the knee and cell transplantation techniques was performed to provide strategies for evaluating and treating chondral defects with matrix-induced autologous chondrocyte implantation (MACI) or particulated juvenile allograft cartilage (PJAC) procedures. Results: Chondral defects in the knee can be treated with patients’ own chondrocytes embedded into a collagen membrane as a MACI procedure, or minced autologous donor cartilage that is then implanted onto a scaffold as a PJAC procedure. These cell transplantation techniques offer advantages compared to bone marrow stimulation or mosaicplasty, and have shown clinically significant improvements in outcome scores with low rates of complications. Conclusion: Cell transplantation techniques such as MACI and PJAC offer treatment options that can effectively address large full-thickness chondral defects in the tibiofemoral joint or patellofemoral joint that may respond poorly to bone marrow stimulation or mosaicplasty.

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