Subchondral drilling for articular cartilage repair: a systematic review of translational research
Articular cartilage defects may initiate osteoarthritis. Subchondral drilling, a widely applied clinical technique to treat small cartilage defects, does not yield cartilage regeneration. Various translational studies aiming to improve the outcome of drilling have been performed; however, a robust s...
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The Company of Biologists
2018-06-01
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doaj-a399a2b1941341e2a273cb12d553076e2020-11-24T21:47:26ZengThe Company of BiologistsDisease Models & Mechanisms1754-84031754-84112018-06-0111610.1242/dmm.034280034280Subchondral drilling for articular cartilage repair: a systematic review of translational researchLiang Gao0Lars K. H. Goebel1Patrick Orth2Magali Cucchiarini3Henning Madry4 Center of Experimental Orthopedics, Saarland University, D-66421 Homburg, Germany Center of Experimental Orthopedics, Saarland University, D-66421 Homburg, Germany Center of Experimental Orthopedics, Saarland University, D-66421 Homburg, Germany Center of Experimental Orthopedics, Saarland University, D-66421 Homburg, Germany Center of Experimental Orthopedics, Saarland University, D-66421 Homburg, Germany Articular cartilage defects may initiate osteoarthritis. Subchondral drilling, a widely applied clinical technique to treat small cartilage defects, does not yield cartilage regeneration. Various translational studies aiming to improve the outcome of drilling have been performed; however, a robust systematic analysis of its translational evidence was still lacking. Here, we performed a systematic review of the outcome of subchondral drilling for knee cartilage repair in translational animal models. A total of 12 relevant publications studying 198 animals was identified, detailed study characteristics were extracted, and methodological quality and risk of bias were analyzed. Subchondral drilling led to improved repair outcome compared with defects that were untreated or treated with abrasion arthroplasty for cartilage repair in multiple translational models. Within the 12 studies, considerable subchondral bone changes were observed, including subchondral bone cysts and intralesional osteophytes. Furthermore, extensive alterations of the subchondral bone microarchitecture appeared in a temporal pattern in small and large animal models, together with specific topographic aspects of repair. Moreover, variable technical aspects directly affected the outcomes of osteochondral repair. The data from this systematic review indicate that subchondral drilling yields improved short-term structural articular cartilage repair compared with spontaneous repair in multiple small and large animal models. These results have important implications for future investigations aimed at an enhanced translation into clinical settings for the treatment of cartilage defects, highlighting the importance of considering specific aspects of modifiable variables such as improvements in the design and reporting of preclinical studies, together with the need to better understand the underlying mechanisms of cartilage repair following subchondral drilling.http://dmm.biologists.org/content/11/6/dmm034280Articular cartilage repairSubchondral drillingSystematic reviewTranslational researchAnimal model |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Liang Gao Lars K. H. Goebel Patrick Orth Magali Cucchiarini Henning Madry |
spellingShingle |
Liang Gao Lars K. H. Goebel Patrick Orth Magali Cucchiarini Henning Madry Subchondral drilling for articular cartilage repair: a systematic review of translational research Disease Models & Mechanisms Articular cartilage repair Subchondral drilling Systematic review Translational research Animal model |
author_facet |
Liang Gao Lars K. H. Goebel Patrick Orth Magali Cucchiarini Henning Madry |
author_sort |
Liang Gao |
title |
Subchondral drilling for articular cartilage repair: a systematic review of translational research |
title_short |
Subchondral drilling for articular cartilage repair: a systematic review of translational research |
title_full |
Subchondral drilling for articular cartilage repair: a systematic review of translational research |
title_fullStr |
Subchondral drilling for articular cartilage repair: a systematic review of translational research |
title_full_unstemmed |
Subchondral drilling for articular cartilage repair: a systematic review of translational research |
title_sort |
subchondral drilling for articular cartilage repair: a systematic review of translational research |
publisher |
The Company of Biologists |
series |
Disease Models & Mechanisms |
issn |
1754-8403 1754-8411 |
publishDate |
2018-06-01 |
description |
Articular cartilage defects may initiate osteoarthritis. Subchondral drilling, a widely applied clinical technique to treat small cartilage defects, does not yield cartilage regeneration. Various translational studies aiming to improve the outcome of drilling have been performed; however, a robust systematic analysis of its translational evidence was still lacking. Here, we performed a systematic review of the outcome of subchondral drilling for knee cartilage repair in translational animal models. A total of 12 relevant publications studying 198 animals was identified, detailed study characteristics were extracted, and methodological quality and risk of bias were analyzed. Subchondral drilling led to improved repair outcome compared with defects that were untreated or treated with abrasion arthroplasty for cartilage repair in multiple translational models. Within the 12 studies, considerable subchondral bone changes were observed, including subchondral bone cysts and intralesional osteophytes. Furthermore, extensive alterations of the subchondral bone microarchitecture appeared in a temporal pattern in small and large animal models, together with specific topographic aspects of repair. Moreover, variable technical aspects directly affected the outcomes of osteochondral repair. The data from this systematic review indicate that subchondral drilling yields improved short-term structural articular cartilage repair compared with spontaneous repair in multiple small and large animal models. These results have important implications for future investigations aimed at an enhanced translation into clinical settings for the treatment of cartilage defects, highlighting the importance of considering specific aspects of modifiable variables such as improvements in the design and reporting of preclinical studies, together with the need to better understand the underlying mechanisms of cartilage repair following subchondral drilling. |
topic |
Articular cartilage repair Subchondral drilling Systematic review Translational research Animal model |
url |
http://dmm.biologists.org/content/11/6/dmm034280 |
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