Osteonecrosis of the Femoral Head Safely Healed with Autologous, Expanded, Bone Marrow-Derived Mesenchymal Stromal Cells in a Multicentric Trial with Minimum 5 Years Follow-Up

Enrique Gómez-Barrena, Norma G Padilla-Eguiluz, Philippe Rosset, Philippe Hernigou, Nicola Baldini, Gabriela Ciapetti, Rosa M Gonzalo-Daganzo, Cristina Avendaño-Solá, Hélène Rouard, Rosaria Giordano, Massimo Dominici, Hubert Schrezenmeier, Pierre Layrolle, On Behalf Of The Reborne Consortium, Enrique Gómez-Barrena, Norma G Padilla-Eguiluz, Philippe Rosset, Philippe Hernigou, Nicola Baldini, Gabriela Ciapetti, Rosa M Gonzalo-Daganzo, Cristina Avendaño-Solá, Hélène Rouard, Rosaria Giordano, Massimo Dominici, Hubert Schrezenmeier, Pierre Layrolle, On Behalf Of The Reborne Consortium

Abstract

Background: Osteonecrosis (ON) of the femoral head represents a potentially severe disease of the hip where the lack of bone regeneration may lead to femoral head collapse and secondary osteoarthritis, with serious pain and disability. The aim of this European, multicentric clinical trial was to prove safety and early efficacy to heal early femoral head ON in patients through minimally invasive surgical implantation of autologous mesenchymal stromal cells (MSC) expanded from bone marrow (BM) under good manufacturing practices (GMP). Methods: Twenty-two patients with femoral head ON (up to ARCO 2C) were recruited and surgically treated in France, Germany, Italy and Spain with BM-derived, expanded autologous MSC (total dose 140 million MSC in 7 mL). The investigational advanced therapy medicinal product (ATMP) was expanded from BM under the same protocol in all four countries and approved by each National Competent Authority. Patients were followed during two years for safety, based on adverse events, and for efficacy, based on clinical assessment (pain and hip score) and imaging (X-rays and MRIs). Patients were also reviewed after 5 to 6 years at latest follow-up for final outcome. Results: No severe adverse event was recalled as related to the ATMP. At 12 months, 16/20 per protocol and 16/22 under intention-to-treat (2 drop-out at 3 and 5 months) maintained head sphericity and showed bone regeneration. Of the 4 hips with ON progression, 3 required total hip replacement (THR). At 5 years, one patient (healed at 2 years visit) was not located, and 16/21 showed no progression or THR, 4/21 had received THR (all in the first year) and 1 had progressed one stage without THR. Conclusions: Expanded MSCs implantation was safe. Early efficacy was confirmed in 80% of cases under protocol at 2 years. At 5 years, the overall results were maintained and 19% converted to THR, all in the first year.

Keywords: bone regeneration; clinical trial; expanded MSC; femoral head osteonecrosis.

Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest. The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript, or in the decision to publish the results.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
CONSORT diagram of the ORTHO2 clinical trial. ON: Osteonecrosis; BM: Bone Marrow; IMP: Investigational Medical Product; hMSC: Human Mesenchymal Stems Cells (expanded).
Figure 2
Figure 2
T1 MRI of the femoral head, coronal section through the ON area; (a) preoperative, (b) 6 months after delivering the cells.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Late follow-up of ORTHO2 patients (last update, January 2020): One case with early progression to the next stage without collapse after five years (case 105). Three cases of THR during the first year of the clinical trial (cases 203, 312, 502). One case drop-out at 3 months (case 307), healing confirmed at 5 years. One case drop-out at 5 months (case 602), underwent THR in the first year. One case healed at 2 years (case 501), lost to follow-up at 5 years.

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Source: PubMed

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