Title

Autologous Adipose Stem Cells and Platelet Rich Plasma Therapy for Patients With Knee Osteoarthritis
Phase I/II Study of Transplantation of Autologous Adipose Stem Cells and Activated Platelet Rich Plasma in Knee Osteoarthritis Treatment
  • Phase

    Phase 1/Phase 2
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Study Participants

    30
Adipose stem cells and platelet rich plasma can regenerate the injured cartilage.
The proposed study is two centers, unblinded, non randomized, phase I/II trial in which the patients will be treated with a single dose of autologous stromal vascular cells (SVF) in combination with platelet rich plasma (PRP).

This study aimes to evaluate the clinical efficiency of autologous adipose tissue-derived MSC transplantation in patients with confirmed osteoarthritis at grade II and III. Adipose tissue is isolated from the belly, and used for extraction of the SVF. The SVF is mixed with activated platelet-rich plasma before injection. The clinical efficiencies are evaluated by the pain score (VAS), Lysholm score, and MRI findings. SVF is isolated from about 100 mL of adipose tissue, and PRP is prepared from 20 mL of peripheral blood. Total injection volume will be about 5-10 mL. The total number of SVF to be injected is 1.0 x 10(7) to 5 x 10(7).
Study Started
Apr 30
2013
Primary Completion
Dec 31
2015
Study Completion
Dec 31
2015
Last Update
Jan 22
2016
Estimate

Biological Autologous adipose tissue stromal vascular fraction and platelet rich plasma

Treatment Experimental

Autologous stromal vascular fraction (SVF) and platelet rich plasma (PRP) will be injected into joints of 16 patients with grade 2, 3 radiographic OA severity with 16 patients as control.

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Age >18 years and ability to understand the planned treatment.
Idiopathic or secondary osteoarthritis of the knee with grade 2, 3 radiographic severity

Ability and willingness to undergo liposuction

Exclusion Criteria:

Pregnant women or cognitively impaired adults.
Presence of large meniscal tears ("bucket handle" tears), as detected by clinical examination or by magnetic resonance imaging.
Inflammatory or postinfectious arthritis.
More than 5 degrees of varus or valgus deformity.
Kellgren Lawrence grade 4 osteoarthritis in two compartments (the medial or lateral compartments of the tibiofemoral joint or the patellofemoral compartment) in persons over 60 years of age.
Intraarticular corticosteroid injection within the previous 3 months.
A major neurologic deficit.
Serious medical illness with a life expectancy of less than 1 year.
Prior admission for substance abuse
Body Mass Index (BMI) of 40 kg/m2 or greater
Patient receiving experimental medication or participating in another clinical study within 30 days of signing the informed consent
In the opinion of the investigator or the sponsor the patient is unsuitable for cellular therapy
No Results Posted