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Research

CLINICAL TRIAL WITH EXPANDED BONE MARROW MSC FOR LONG BONE NONUNIONS: CLINICAL AND BIOCHEMICAL STUDY

The Italian Orthopaedic Research Society (IORS) Meeting, Bologna, Italy, 10–11 June 2022.



Abstract

Fracture nonunion is a severe clinical problem for the patient, as well as for the clinician. About 5-20% of fractures does not heal properly after more than six months, with a 19% nonunion rate for tibia, 12% for femur and 13% for humerus, leading to patient morbidity, prolonged hospitalization, and high costs.

The standard treatment with iliac crest-derived autologous bone filling the nonunion site may cause pain or hematoma to the patient, as well as major complications such as infection.

The application of mesenchymal autologous cells (MSC) to improve bone formation calls for randomized, open, two-arm clinical studies to verify safety and efficacy.

The ORTHOUNION * project (ORTHOpedic randomized clinical trial with expanded bone marrow MSC and bioceramics versus autograft in long bone nonUNIONs) is a multicentric, open, randomized, comparative phase II clinical trial, approved in the framework of the H2020 funding programme, under the coordination of Enrique Gòmez Barrena of the Hospital La Paz (Madrid, Spain).

Starting from January 2017, patients with nonunion of femur, tibia or humerus have been actively enrolled in Spain, France, Germany, and Italy.

The study protocol encompasses two experimental arms, i.e., autologous bone marrow-derived mesenchymal cells after expansion (‘high dose’ or ‘low dose’ MSC) combined to ceramic granules (MBCP™, Biomatlante), and iliac crest-derived autologous trabecular bone (ICAG) as active comparator arm, with a 2-year follow-up after surgery.

Despite the COVID 19 pandemic with several lockdown periods in the four countries, the trial was continued, leading to 42 patients treated out of 51 included, with 11 receiving the bone graft (G1 arm), 15 the ‘high dose’ MSC (200x106, G2a arm) and 16 the ‘low dose’ MSC (100x106, G2b arm).

The Rizzoli Orthopaedic Institute has functioned as coordinator of the Italian clinical centres (Bologna, Milano, Brescia) and the Biomedical Science and Technologies and Nanobiotechnology Lab of the RIT Dept. has enrolled six patients with the collaboration of the Rizzoli’ 3rd Orthopaedic and Traumatological Clinic prevalently Oncologic.

Moreover, the IOR Lab has collected and analysed the blood samples from all the patients treated to monitor the changes of the bone turnover markers following the surgical treatment with G1, G2a or G2b protocols.

The clinical and biochemical results of the study, still under evaluation, are presented.

* ORTHOUNION Horizon 2020 GA 733288


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