Autologous blood and platelet-rich plasma injection therapy for lateral elbow pain

Teemu V Karjalainen, Michael Silagy, Edward O'Bryan, Renea V Johnston, Sheila Cyril, Rachelle Buchbinder, Teemu V Karjalainen, Michael Silagy, Edward O'Bryan, Renea V Johnston, Sheila Cyril, Rachelle Buchbinder

Abstract

Background: Autologous whole blood or platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injections are commonly used to treat lateral elbow pain (also known as tennis elbow or lateral epicondylitis or epicondylalgia). Based on animal models and observational studies, these injections may modulate tendon injury healing, but randomised controlled trials have reported inconsistent results regarding benefit for people with lateral elbow pain.

Objectives: To review current evidence on the benefit and safety of autologous whole blood or platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injection for treatment of people with lateral elbow pain.

Search methods: We searched CENTRAL, MEDLINE, and Embase for published trials, and Clinicaltrials.gov and the World Health Organization (WHO) International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (ICTRP) search portal for ongoing trials, on 18 September 2020.

Selection criteria: We included all randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and quasi-RCTs comparing autologous whole blood or PRP injection therapy to another therapy (placebo or active treatment, including non-pharmacological therapies, and comparison between PRP and autologous blood) for lateral elbow pain. The primary comparison was PRP versus placebo. Major outcomes were pain relief (≥ 30% or ≥ 50%), mean pain, mean function, treatment success, quality of life, withdrawal due to adverse events, and adverse events; the primary time point was three months.

Data collection and analysis: We used standard methodological procedures expected by Cochrane.

Main results: We included 32 studies with 2337 participants; 56% of participants were female, mean age varied between 36 and 53 years, and mean duration of symptoms ranged from 1 to 22 months. Seven trials had three intervention arms. Ten trials compared autologous blood or PRP injection to placebo injection (primary comparison). Fifteen trials compared autologous blood or PRP injection to glucocorticoid injection. Four studies compared autologous blood to PRP. Two trials compared autologous blood or PRP injection plus tennis elbow strap and exercise versus tennis elbow strap and exercise alone. Two trials compared PRP injection to surgery, and one trial compared PRP injection and dry needling to dry needling alone. Other comparisons include autologous blood versus extracorporeal shock wave therapy; PRP versus arthroscopic surgery; PRP versus laser; and autologous blood versus polidocanol. Most studies were at risk of selection, performance, and detection biases, mainly due to inadequate allocation concealment and lack of participant blinding. We found moderate-certainty evidence (downgraded for bias) to show that autologous blood or PRP injection probably does not provide clinically significant improvement in pain or function compared with placebo injection at three months. Further, low-certainty evidence (downgraded for bias and imprecision) suggests that PRP may not increase risk for adverse events. We are uncertain whether autologous blood or PRP injection improves treatment success (downgraded for bias, imprecision, and indirectness) or withdrawals due to adverse events (downgraded for bias and twice for imprecision). No studies measured health-related quality of life, and no studies reported pain relief (> 30% or 50%) at three months. At three months, mean pain was 3.7 points (0 to 10; 0 is best) with placebo and 0.16 points better (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.60 better to 0.29 worse; 8 studies, 523 participants) with autologous blood or PRP injection, for absolute improvement of 1.6% better (6% better to 3% worse). At three months, mean function was 27.5 points (0 to 100; 0 is best) with placebo and 1.86 points better (95% CI 4.9 better to 1.25 worse; 8 studies, 502 participants) with autologous blood or PRP injection, for absolute benefit of 1.9% (5% better to 1% worse), and treatment success was 121 out of 185 (65%) with placebo versus 125 out of 187 (67%) with autologous blood or PRP injection (risk ratio (RR) 1.00; 95% CI 0.83 to 1.19; 4 studies, 372 participants), for absolute improvement of 0% (11.1% lower to 12.4% higher). Regarding harm, we found very low-certainty evidence to suggest that we are uncertain whether withdrawal rates due to adverse events differed. Low-certainty evidence suggests that autologous blood or PRP injection may not increase adverse events compared with placebo injection. Withdrawal due to adverse events occurred in 3 out of 39 (8%) participants treated with placebo versus 1 out of 41 (2%) treated with autologous blood or PRP injection (RR 0.32, 95% CI 0.03 to 2.92; 1 study), for an absolute difference of 5.2% fewer (7.5% fewer to 14.8% more). Adverse event rates were 35 out of 208 (17%) with placebo versus 41 out of 217 (19%) with autologous blood or PRP injection (RR 1.14, 95% CI 0.76 to 1.72; 5 studies; 425 participants), for an absolute difference of 2.4% more (4% fewer to 12% more). At six and twelve months, no clinically important benefit for mean pain or function was observed with autologous blood or PRP injection compared with placebo injection.

Authors' conclusions: Data in this review do not support the use of autologous blood or PRP injection for treatment of lateral elbow pain. These injections probably provide little or no clinically important benefit for pain or function (moderate-certainty evidence), and it is uncertain (very low-certainty evidence) whether they improve treatment success and pain relief > 50%, or increase withdrawal due to adverse events. Although risk for harm may not be increased compared with placebo injection (low-certainty evidence), injection therapies cause pain and carry a small risk of infection. With no evidence of benefit, the costs and risks are not justified.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01851044 NCT01945528 NCT01668953 NCT02052089 NCT03072381 NCT03300531 NCT03504111 NCT03984955.

Conflict of interest statement

TK: none known. TK was co‐author in one of the included trials Linnanmäki 2020, and he did not perform data extraction or risk of bias assessments for this trial.

MS: none known

EO: none known

RJ: Renea Johnston is the Managing Editor of Cochrane Musculoskeletal but is not involved in editorial decisions regarding this review. She is the recipient of an NHMRC (Australia) Cochrane Collaboration Round 7 Funding Program Grant, which supports the Cochrane Musculoskeletal Australian Editorial base, but the funding source did not participate in the conduct of this review.

SC: none known

RB: Rachelle Buchbinder is the Co‐ordinating Editor of Cochrane Musculoskeletal but is not involved in editorial decisions regarding this review. She is the recipient of a National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Cochrane Collaboration Round 7 Funding Program Grant, which supports the activities of Cochrane Musculoskeletal ‐ Australia and Cochrane Australia, but the funding source did not participate in the conduct of this review. (RB) is the study investigator for an ongoing trial in this review (ACTRN12613000616774) and did not perform data extraction for this trial.

Copyright © 2021 The Cochrane Collaboration. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Figures

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1
Study flow diagram.
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2
Risk of bias summary: review authors' judgements about each risk of bias item for each included study.
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Risk of bias summary: review authors' judgements about each risk of bias item for each included study.
1.1. Analysis
1.1. Analysis
Comparison 1: Autologous blood or PRP injection versus placebo injection, Outcome 1: Pain relief ≥ 30% or ≥ 50%
1.2. Analysis
1.2. Analysis
Comparison 1: Autologous blood or PRP injection versus placebo injection, Outcome 2: Mean pain (VAS 0 to 10, PRTEE)
1.3. Analysis
1.3. Analysis
Comparison 1: Autologous blood or PRP injection versus placebo injection, Outcome 3: Function (DASH, MMCPIE, Roles‐Maudsley)
1.4. Analysis
1.4. Analysis
Comparison 1: Autologous blood or PRP injection versus placebo injection, Outcome 4: Treatment success (> 25% improvement in pain or function)
1.5. Analysis
1.5. Analysis
Comparison 1: Autologous blood or PRP injection versus placebo injection, Outcome 5: Withdrawal due to AEs
1.6. Analysis
1.6. Analysis
Comparison 1: Autologous blood or PRP injection versus placebo injection, Outcome 6: Adverse events
2.1. Analysis
2.1. Analysis
Comparison 2: Autologous blood or PRP injection versus glucocorticoid injection, Outcome 1: Pain relief ≥ 50%
2.2. Analysis
2.2. Analysis
Comparison 2: Autologous blood or PRP injection versus glucocorticoid injection, Outcome 2: Mean pain
2.3. Analysis
2.3. Analysis
Comparison 2: Autologous blood or PRP injection versus glucocorticoid injection, Outcome 3: Function (various scales)
2.4. Analysis
2.4. Analysis
Comparison 2: Autologous blood or PRP injection versus glucocorticoid injection, Outcome 4: Treatment success
2.5. Analysis
2.5. Analysis
Comparison 2: Autologous blood or PRP injection versus glucocorticoid injection, Outcome 5: Adverse events
2.6. Analysis
2.6. Analysis
Comparison 2: Autologous blood or PRP injection versus glucocorticoid injection, Outcome 6: Grip strength
3.1. Analysis
3.1. Analysis
Comparison 3: PRP and dry needling versus dry needling alone, Outcome 1: Pain
3.2. Analysis
3.2. Analysis
Comparison 3: PRP and dry needling versus dry needling alone, Outcome 2: Function
3.3. Analysis
3.3. Analysis
Comparison 3: PRP and dry needling versus dry needling alone, Outcome 3: Withdrawal due to adverse events
3.4. Analysis
3.4. Analysis
Comparison 3: PRP and dry needling versus dry needling alone, Outcome 4: Adverse events
4.1. Analysis
4.1. Analysis
Comparison 4: PRP versus autologous blood, Outcome 1: Mean pain
4.2. Analysis
4.2. Analysis
Comparison 4: PRP versus autologous blood, Outcome 2: Function (various scales)
4.3. Analysis
4.3. Analysis
Comparison 4: PRP versus autologous blood, Outcome 3: Treatment success
4.4. Analysis
4.4. Analysis
Comparison 4: PRP versus autologous blood, Outcome 4: Adverse events
5.1. Analysis
5.1. Analysis
Comparison 5: Autologous blood versus ESWT, Outcome 1: Pain relief > 50%
5.2. Analysis
5.2. Analysis
Comparison 5: Autologous blood versus ESWT, Outcome 2: Mean pain
5.3. Analysis
5.3. Analysis
Comparison 5: Autologous blood versus ESWT, Outcome 3: Function (various scales)
5.4. Analysis
5.4. Analysis
Comparison 5: Autologous blood versus ESWT, Outcome 4: Grip strength
5.5. Analysis
5.5. Analysis
Comparison 5: Autologous blood versus ESWT, Outcome 5: Adverse events
6.1. Analysis
6.1. Analysis
Comparison 6: PRP versus surgery, Outcome 1: Mean pain
6.2. Analysis
6.2. Analysis
Comparison 6: PRP versus surgery, Outcome 2: Function
6.3. Analysis
6.3. Analysis
Comparison 6: PRP versus surgery, Outcome 3: Grip strength
7.1. Analysis
7.1. Analysis
Comparison 7: Autologous blood plus tennis elbow strap and exercise versus tennis elbow strap and exercise, Outcome 1: Mean pain
7.2. Analysis
7.2. Analysis
Comparison 7: Autologous blood plus tennis elbow strap and exercise versus tennis elbow strap and exercise, Outcome 2: Mean function
7.3. Analysis
7.3. Analysis
Comparison 7: Autologous blood plus tennis elbow strap and exercise versus tennis elbow strap and exercise, Outcome 3: Hand grip strength
7.4. Analysis
7.4. Analysis
Comparison 7: Autologous blood plus tennis elbow strap and exercise versus tennis elbow strap and exercise, Outcome 4: Treatment success
8.1. Analysis
8.1. Analysis
Comparison 8: PRP versus laser applications, Outcome 1: Pain
8.2. Analysis
8.2. Analysis
Comparison 8: PRP versus laser applications, Outcome 2: Function
8.3. Analysis
8.3. Analysis
Comparison 8: PRP versus laser applications, Outcome 3: Treatment success
8.4. Analysis
8.4. Analysis
Comparison 8: PRP versus laser applications, Outcome 4: Adverse events
9.1. Analysis
9.1. Analysis
Comparison 9: Autologous blood versus polidocanol injection, Outcome 1: Function
9.2. Analysis
9.2. Analysis
Comparison 9: Autologous blood versus polidocanol injection, Outcome 2: Treatment success
10.1. Analysis
10.1. Analysis
Comparison 10: Sensitivity analysis (mean pain and function at 3 months), Outcome 1: Pain at 3 months (low vs high or unclear risk of selection bias)
10.2. Analysis
10.2. Analysis
Comparison 10: Sensitivity analysis (mean pain and function at 3 months), Outcome 2: Function at 3 months (low vs unclear or high selection bias)
10.3. Analysis
10.3. Analysis
Comparison 10: Sensitivity analysis (mean pain and function at 3 months), Outcome 3: Pain at 3 months (adequate vs inadequate participant blinding)
10.4. Analysis
10.4. Analysis
Comparison 10: Sensitivity analysis (mean pain and function at 3 months), Outcome 4: Function at 3 months (adequate vs inadequate participant blinding)
11.1. Analysis
11.1. Analysis
Comparison 11: Subgroup leukocyte‐rich vs leukocyte‐poor PRP at 3 months, Outcome 1: Mean pain
11.2. Analysis
11.2. Analysis
Comparison 11: Subgroup leukocyte‐rich vs leukocyte‐poor PRP at 3 months, Outcome 2: Function
11.3. Analysis
11.3. Analysis
Comparison 11: Subgroup leukocyte‐rich vs leukocyte‐poor PRP at 3 months, Outcome 3: Treatment success
11.4. Analysis
11.4. Analysis
Comparison 11: Subgroup leukocyte‐rich vs leukocyte‐poor PRP at 3 months, Outcome 4: Adverse events
12.1. Analysis
12.1. Analysis
Comparison 12: Subgroup PRP versus autologous blood at 3 months, Outcome 1: Mean pain at 3 months
12.2. Analysis
12.2. Analysis
Comparison 12: Subgroup PRP versus autologous blood at 3 months, Outcome 2: Mean function at 3 months
12.3. Analysis
12.3. Analysis
Comparison 12: Subgroup PRP versus autologous blood at 3 months, Outcome 3: Withdrawals due to adverse events

Source: PubMed

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