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Advances in the use of stem cells in orthopedics

Abstracts

Primordial cells or stem cells are multipotent undifferentiated cells with the capacity to originate any type of cell in the organism. They may have their origins in the blastocyst and thus are classified as embryonic, or tissues developed in fetuses, newborns or adults and thus are known as somatic stem cells. Bone marrow is one of the main locations for isolating primordial cells, and there are two lineages: hematopoietic and mesenchymal progenitor cells. There are several uses for these undifferentiated cells in orthopedics, going from cartilaginous lesions in osteoarthrosis, osteochondritis dissecans and patellar chondromalacia, to bone lesions like in pseudarthrosis or bone losses, or nerve lesions like in spinal cord trauma. Studying stem cells is probably the most promising field of study of all within medicine, and this is shortly going to revolutionize all medical specialties (both clinical and surgical) and thus provide solutions for diseases that today are difficult to deal with.

Orthopedics; Stem Cells; Cartilage; Pseudarthrosis


As células primordiais, ou células-tronco, são células indiferenciadas multipotentes com a capacidade de originar qualquer tipo de tecido no organismo. Podem ter origem no blastocisto, sendo classificadas como embriônicas, ou em tecidos desenvolvidos de fetos, recém-nascidos ou adultos, conhecidas como célulastronco somáticas. Como um dos principais locais de isolamento da célula primordial está a medula óssea, tendo duas linhagens: células progenitoras hematopoéticas e mesenquimais. Existem diversos usos dessas células indiferenciadas na ortopedia, desde lesões cartilaginosas em patologias como osteoartrose, osteocondrite dissecante, condromalácia patelar, lesões ósseas como em pseudoartroses ou em perdas ósseas, ou em lesões nervosas como em trauma raquimedular. O estudo das células-tronco é provavelmente o campo de estudo mais promissor de toda a medicina que, em um espaço curto de tempo, irá revolucionar todas as especialidades médicas, tanto clínicas quanto cirúrgicas, solucionando patologias hoje de difícil abordagem.

Ortopedia; Células-tronco; Cartilagem; Pseudoartrose


UPDATING ARTICLE

Attending Physicians in the Spine Group, Institute of Orthopedics and Traumatology, Hospital das Clínicas, School of Medicine, University of São Paulo (FMUSP), São Paulo, Brazil

Correspondence

ABSTRACT

Primordial cells or stem cells are multipotent undifferentiated cells with the capacity to originate any type of cell in the organism. They may have their origins in the blastocyst and thus are classified as embryonic, or tissues developed in fetuses, newborns or adults and thus are known as somatic stem cells. Bone marrow is one of the main locations for isolating primordial cells, and there are two lineages: hematopoietic and mesenchymal progenitor cells. There are several uses for these undifferentiated cells in orthopedics, going from cartilaginous lesions in osteoarthrosis, osteochondritis dissecans and patellar chondromalacia, to bone lesions like in pseudarthrosis or bone losses, or nerve lesions like in spinal cord trauma. Studying stem cells is probably the most promising field of study of all within medicine, and this is shortly going to revolutionize all medical specialties (both clinical and surgical) and thus provide solutions for diseases that today are difficult to deal with.

Keywords: Orthopedics/trends; Stem Cells; Cartilage; Pseudarthrosis

INTRODUCTION

Primordial cells or stem cells are multipotent undifferentiated cells with the capacity to proliferate and originate cells of any lineage, thereby forming any tissue in the organism.

Stem cells can be classified as embryonic stem cells, which are found in the internal cellular mass of the blastocyst (embryo), or as somatic or adult stem cells, which are found in tissues developed by the fetus or newborn, or in adults. The somatic type can be obtained from bone marrow, peripheral blood, umbilical cord, fetal liver, neural tissue or a variety of mesenchymal cells in adults, such the synovium, periosteum, muscle tissue or adipose tissue.

In the bone marrow, there are at least two populations of progenitor stem cells: hematopoietic progenitor cells and mesenchymal progenitor cells(1).

Hematopoietic progenitor cells express a membrane glycoprotein that makes it possible to identify and quantify such cells: the CD34 antigen. Other cells that also express CD34 include endothelial cells, embryonic fibroblasts and some cells within the fetal and adult nerve tissue. On the other hand, mesenchymal progenitor cells do not present any known cell surface marker. They can also be found in several solid organs and are identified solely through cell culturing.

These two cell populations are present in bone marrow and, under normal conditions, only 0.1% of them circulate in the peripheral blood. This number may increase around 30 to 50-fold after administration of hematopoietic colony-stimulating factors, especially G-CSF (granulocyte colony-stimulating factor).

OBJECTIVES

The aim of this paper was to provide better understanding of the nature of stem cells and their importance in medicine as a whole and in orthopedics especially, by covering the subject from its history to the current research.

With advances in medicine, it is now possible to extract, cultivate and reinfuse these progenitor cells for therapeutic purposes, to form various tissue types, including bone, liver, neural or adipose tissue(2).

In orthopedics and traumatology, these cells can be used to form new tissues such as nerves, bone, cartilage and dense connective tissue (ligaments and tendons) (Figure 1).


NERVE TISSUE

The use of totipotent cells to form nerve tissue has importance in relation to degenerative diseases like Parkinson and in spinal cord injuries. In this section, we deal with the latter (Figure 2).


The first report of difficulties in treating patients with spinal cord injuries dates from 3000 BC, when it was believed that spinal cord injuries should not be treated. This description was made by Edwin Smith apud Barros Filho(3).

During the First World War, 80% of the patients with spinal cord trauma died within the first two weeks after the trauma(3).

During the Second World War, the concept of specialized spinal cord injury centers was developed in England. At these centers, with multidisciplinary teams, it was possible to dramatically reduce the mortality rate(3).

Spinal cord trauma used to be regarded as an untreatable disease. Until ten years ago, all that could be done was to stabilize the spine, treat infections and spasticity and prescribe physiotherapy(4,5). However, research developed within this field has indicated that acute lesions of the spinal cord can be minimized through using drugs, provided that they are administered shortly after the trauma(6-10).

At the start of this century, the first experiments on the physiopathology of spinal injuries were conducted(11,12). However, these studies were only taken up again later on in the past decade, by investigators who started to place value on time-dependent changes within the pathology of spinal cord injuries(13,14).

The immense neurological deficits that result from spinal cord injuries come from the sum of two distinct events: the initial mechanical injury and the secondary endogenous lesion that is consequent to the initial injury(15-20). This primary injury is produced directly by the trauma, and involves cell death and release of electrolytes, metabolites and enzymes. It is therefore a mechanical process that does not depend on cell control. Secondary lesions in the spinal cord involve complex biochemical changes that arise as a cascade of events comprising edema, inflammation, ischemia, reperfusion, growth factors, calcium metabolism and lipid peroxidase, and scientific investigative efforts have been concentrated on such events with the aim of controlling them(20-30). In pharmacological terms, drugs that modulate the endogenous response to primary injuries are being progressively introduced with the aim of limiting the tissue damage and improving the potential for functional recovery among such patients. These drugs aim to interrupt the physiopathological mechanisms of secondary neuronal lesions(31-34) (Figures 3 and 4).



Clinical and scientific advances have indicated that acute lesions in the spinal cord can be manipulated by means of pharmacological therapy if used within a short space of time. Methylprednisolone administered within the first eight hours after the trauma was the first agent to produce a significant improvement in the recovery from spinal cord trauma in human beings(4,35-46). Other drugs, like tirilazad(47-49) and GM-1(50-57) have presented promising preliminary results. These advances may provide a great improvement in the quality of life of patients with spinal cord injuries, if they are brought into clinical practice. After injuries to the central nervous system, there is a period of deficit followed by a period of varying degrees of functional recovery. This recovery is due mainly to changes to the uninjured circuits, but the exact process involved in the recovery remains incompletely understood.

The ideal treatment for spinal cord injuries would be one that not only diminished the lesion but also stimulated the repair process. Contrary to the concepts of ten years ago, it has now been proven that neurons outside of the central nervous system, in the immature spinal cord and in special culture media may regenerate(58).

Lines of research involving neurotransmitter use, fetal cell transplantation, undifferentiated cell transplantation, electrode implantation and use of remyelination-promoting substances have now been developed, but they have not yet presented definitive results.

Over the last ten years, use of stem cells in treatments for spinal cord injuries has been described in several experimental studies, with beneficial effects. The way in which these cells may act in repairing lesions of the nervous system is still a matter of controversy, but it certainly involves phenomena like functional reconstruction of neuronal circuits, with reestablishment of synapses or interconnections with host cells; production of neurochemical substances like neurotransmitters, growth factors and antibodies; and remyelination of undamaged axons that stopped producing electrical impulses because they were demyelinated.

Thus, at the Institute of Orthopedics and Traumatology, Hospital das Clínicas, School of Medicine of the University of São Paulo, a clinical trial was conducted to assess the effect of infusion of autogenous undifferentiated progenitor cells for treating patients with chronic spinal cord lesions(59).

Thirty-nine patients who had presented traumatic spinal cord injury with a complete deficit for at least two years were selected. All of them followed a protocol to obtain their informed consent. The following were then performed: hemogram, coagulogram, magnetic resonance imaging on the spine and somatosensory evoked potential. None of the 39 patients presented any registered transmission of impulses to the cerebral cortex after stimulation of the lower limbs.

To obtain progenitor cells from the patients' peripheral blood, they were administered G-CSF. Five days later, stem cells were collected from the patients by means of an apheresis technique, using a continuous-flow cell separator. Through this, we obtained 2.5 x 106 CD34+ cells per kilogram of patient weight, which were cryopreserved. Following this, these cells were cultured in a medium appropriate for developing cells of neuronal lineage.

These cells were infused by means of arterial angiography, which irrigated the lesion site and perfused the anterior spinal artery. We used dimethyl sulfoxide as the vehicle (Figure 5).


The patients were then followed up clinically, by means of somatosensory evoked potential and urodynamics.

The final result was that transmission of impulses in the cerebral cortex or improvement in the latency time for obtaining a cortical response after stimulation of the upper and lower limbs was registered in 26 patients. However, the sensory conduction took longer, with greater latency than in normal individuals (Figures 6 and 7).



Despite this response, the patients did not achieve any motor gains, clinically. Some showed nonspecific sensory improvement in the lower limbs. The complications observed with this therapeutic method included one case of pneumothorax consequent to passage of the double-lumen catheter to collect stem cells, and three cases of allergy to the contrast medium used in the arteriography(59).

CARTILAGINOUS TISSUE

The primordial cells have also been studied in relation to formation of joint cartilage. Diseases like traumatic chondral lesions, osteochondritis dissecans, patellar chondromalacia and osteoarthrosis are therapeutic targets for these cells(58).

When traumatic chondral lesions of the ankle and knee are small and in areas of low mechanical stress, they are usually treated conservatively, including restrictions on bearing the body weight, use of analgesics and anti-inflammatory drugs, and physiotherapy (Figure 8). When these lesions are extensive, they can be treated by means of perforation, autologous or homologous osteochondral grafts, replacement arthroplasty (partial or total prostheses) and arthrodesis.


Osteochondritis dissecans of the knee is a common disorder of unknown cause. It is thought that it may result from ischemia in a certain localized area of subchondral bone that is precipitated by infarction, trauma or other causes. The treatment for osteochondritis dissecans of the knee in children is conservative because the fragments are unstable. In adults too, the fragments are unstable, but can be excised when small and outside of the load-bearing area. When the fragments are bigger and in load-bearing areas, they should be treated by means of perforation or curettage in association with fixation of the fragment, and also by means of homologous osteochondral grafts or arthroplasty (Figures 9 and 10).


In cases of patellar chondromalacia, the treatment depends on the degree of injury. If the lesion is less extensive and shallower, it can be treated conservatively. If it is deep, often with exposure of subchondral bone, it can be treated by means of curettage, perforation and autologous grafting. The surgical results are worse than when the femur or tibia is affected.

In cases of hip and knee osteoarthrosis, both conservative and surgical treatment options exist (Figures 11 and 12). The current arsenal of conservative treatment methods includes chondroprotective agents (hyaluronic acid, glucosamine and chondroitin), which have presented satisfactory results in all studies on humans, albeit with short follow-up duration. When conservative treatment fails, osteotomy, replacement arthroplasty or arthrodesis can be indicated. Autologous and heterologous grafts have greater failure rates than seen in other joint cartilage diseases.


The importance of stem cells as a new method for treating chondral lesions is due to the fact that joint cartilage has little capacity for repair. The technique of transplanting cultures of autologous chondrocytes into chondral defects is restricted to small lesions in young individuals. On the other hand, recent studies have proven that mesenchymal progenitor cells may be able to repair larger defects, independent of age. The major problems are still the culturing, induction of differentiation and adherence at the lesion site(59-61).

In addition to stem cells, growth factors are needed in order to determine the proliferation and differentiation in cartilaginous tissue, both during in vitro culturing and at the time of implantation. One of these factors is prolactin, which induces cell proliferation, proteoglycan synthesis and cell interaction, and inhibits the formation of type II collagen. Other factors that determine chondrogenesis include the insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) and the transformer growth factor beta 1 (TGFβ1)(62,63).

With this new therapeutic technique, the morbidity in the donor area can be diminished in cases of mosaic grafting (removal of small mosaics of cartilage from an area of lower loading to another with an osteochondral defect); the passage of pathogens and deterioration of allografts can be avoided; and revisions due to loosening or worm material in cases of joint prostheses can be avoided(64).

Greater-impact studies on humans are needed in order to define the real purpose of stem cells in joint cartilaginous diseases.

BONE TISSUE

In traumatology, one of the major complications is the condition of so-called pseudarthrosis. This word means false articulation and is used to denote nonunion of the fragments of a mild fracture that leads to formation of a pseudocapsule with synovium and synovial fluid.

Pseudarthrosis can be divided into two main types: hypertrophic or hypervascular and atrophic or avascular. The main cause of the first type is movement at the fracture focus and main cause of the second type is a lack of local biological conditions for bone consolidation (Figure 13).


In hypertrophic pseudarthrosis, the treatment aims to improve the stability of the fracture, through plaster casts, orthoses, osteosynthesis or external fixators. The advantage of these last two is that as well as stabilizing the fracture, they can compress the focus.

Stem cells are applicable as a form of treatment in relation to the second type of pseudarthrosis, i.e. the atrophic type (Figures 13 and 14). Consolidation is known to consist of three phases: I-inflammation, in which infiltration of leukocytes occurs and causes chemotaxis of mesenchymal cells and fibroblasts, which become differentiated into osteoblasts; II-repair, in which a soft callus is formed (flaccid fibroblastic connective tissue) and then a hard callus (immature bone tissue); and III-remodeling, in which the mature bone tissue is formed. Thus, progenitor cells could have an influence in the first two phases(64).


Physical methods such as ultrasound and electromagnetic pulses can be used as treatment variations for atrophic pseudarthrosis, although the results are doubtful. Studies with a higher level of evidence (randomized controlled clinical trials) with a longer follow-up are needed in order to reach definitive conclusions.

Autologous grafts (from the iliac, tibia or distal radius) or homologous grafts (bone from a tissue bank) can also be used. The great advantage of autologous grafts is their osteogenic, osteoconductive and osteoinductive capacity. Osteogenesis occurs because of the microenvironment that is formed with trophic factors. These cause recruitment of mesenchymal cells and fibroblasts, and their differentiation into bone tissue. Osteoinduction relates to specific proteins that cause local bone growth. Osteoconduction relates to the substrate or framework within which bone can be formed. Grafts from a bank and bone substitutes like hydroxyapatite only have osteoconductive capacity.

Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) is another form of treatment for atrophic pseudarthrosis, with osteoinductive capacity.

One simple technique for local infiltration of totipotent cells is to use an aspirate from the bone marrow of the iliac. However, the low cellularity of this material makes the method questionable. Its action is perhaps due more to the presence of BMP than to the presence of totipotent cells(65).

For stem cell therapy to be successful, high cellularity in the collected material is needed, with adequate culturing to form bone lineage cells and trophic factors(63).

Use of stem cells to form bone tissue gives rise to diminished morbidity in the bone graft donor area and avoids disease transmission through homologous grafts(64,65).

There are very few studies on stem cells used for bone formation. An experimental study on rats showed that there was a benefit from using stem cells at osteotomy foci that were under treatment with relaxation using external fixators, thereby giving rise to improved local vascularization and faster consolidation, within one to two weeks(66).

DENSE CONNECTIVE TISSUE

Ligaments and tendons are formed by true connective tissue of dense type. For this to occur, traction forces are needed. This tissue is mainly composed of fibroblasts and types I and III collagen fibers.

The anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and medical collateral ligament (MCL) of the knee are the structures that are most often injured in sports practice, accounting for up to 90% of injured ligaments. The MCL is treated conservatively, but the ACL is preferentially treated by means of arthroscopic reconstructive surgery. Today, the options available for autologous grafting for the ACL consist mainly of the patellar, semitendinosus, gracilis and quadriceps tendons. Homologous grafts from the Achilles tendon form an alternative. The greatest criticism of these surgical procedures is the morbidity in the donor area. In such cases, stem cells would avoid this nuisance(64).

There are studies demonstrating different degrees of regeneration of intra-articular tissue in affected knees, including ACL, meniscal or chondral lesions, after injections of stem cells into the joint. This provides a new therapeutic option for these joint lesions(67) (Figure 15).


The Achilles tendon is one of the tendons most subjected to injury. The treatment can be conservative or surgical. The advantage of conservative treatment is that it avoids surgical complications like skin necrosis, infection or neurovascular lesions. The disadvantage is the lower resistance and consequently greater risk of renewed tearing. The inverse applies to surgical treatment. The surgical options consist of open repair using a Krackow suture, percutaneous repair using an "x" suture and various types of tendon reinforcement (long flexor of the hallux, short plantar ligament, short fibular ligament and aponeurosis of the sural triceps). Stem cells have become a new technique that in the future may be applied to cases of tendon failure without increasing the duration of surgery and without loss of function of the transferred tendons (Figure 16).


FINAL REMARKS

There are many studies on the topic of stem cells in the literature, both in the form of experimental studies and in the form of clinical trials. This topic appears to be one of the most promising fields within medicine, capable of providing solutions for diseases that so far have not had any solutions.

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  • Advances in the use of stem cells in orthopedics

    Alexandre Fogaça Cristante; Douglas Kenji Narazaki
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      18 Oct 2011
    • Date of issue
      2011

    History

    • Received
      08 June 2011
    • Accepted
      28 June 2011
    Sociedade Brasileira de Ortopedia e Traumatologia Al. Lorena, 427 14º andar, 01424-000 São Paulo - SP - Brasil, Tel.: 55 11 2137-5400 - São Paulo - SP - Brazil
    E-mail: rbo@sbot.org.br