The Open Transplantation Journal

2008, 2 : 21-28
Published online 2008 July 11. DOI: 10.2174/1874418400802010021
Publisher ID: TOTRANSJ-2-21

Cell and Tissue Transplant Strategies for Joint Lesions

I.M. Fuentes-Boquete , S.M. Díaz Prado , T. Hermida Gómez , F.J. de Toro Santos and F.J. Blanco
Unidad de Investigación del Envejecimiento Osteoarticular, Instituto de Investigacion Biomedica de A Coruña (Inibic), Complejo Hospitalario Universitario Juan Canalejo, C/ Xubias, 84, 15006-A Coruña, Spain.

ABSTRACT

Articular cartilage lesions that do not disrupt the integrity of subchondral bone are not capable of spontaneous repair. The asymptomatic nature of these lesions leads to articular cartilage degeneration and development of the osteoarthritic process. To avoid joint replacement surgery, several cellular therapies have been developed. These therapies focus on the regeneration of a new tissue, whose structure, biochemistry composition and function should be the same as those of endogenous articular cartilage.

Current approaches for interrupting the osteoarthritic process produce a fibrocartilaginous tissue, not articular cartilage. The implantation of autologous chondrocytes and autologous mosaicplasty induces a better quality of articular cartilage; however, both techniques damage the existing cartilage because of the need to harvest large numbers of chondrocytes or to extract an osteochondral cylinder for implantation. While stem cells are a promising tool for repairing articular cartilage, their use is in an early experimental stage at this time. Although studies of cell therapy have shown clinical and functional improvement in joints, the ability to regenerate articular cartilage that resists the degeneration process remains elusive.