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The purpose of this investigator-initiated study is to assess the efficacy of treating patellofemoral osteoarthritis with an Advanced Therapy Medicinal Product (ATMP), autologous nasal chondrocyte tissue engineered cartilage (N-TEC), in comparison with a standard therapy using platelet rich plasma injections.
The engineered cartilage graft is obtained by culturing expanded autologous nasal chondrocytes within a collagen type I/III membrane.
Full description
Knee osteoarthritis (OA) is one of the most common causes for pain and disability with over 260 million people affected worldwide. Recent studies found that knee OA often starts in the patello-femoral compartment of the knee (PFOA) and is diagnosed in ~39% of people with knee pain aged above 30 years. Thus, PFOA and progression to full OA plays a crucial role in the reduction of quality of life of many people and in the raise of healthcare costs.
The goal of this phase II trial is to (i) evaluate the efficacy of autologous Nasal Chondrocytes Tissue Engineered Cartilage (N-TEC) in comparison to an active comparator (Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP) injections) based on patients' self-assessed outcome scores (Knee Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS Pain), and to (ii) verify tissue regeneration as the postulated mode of action and thus the disease-modifying properties of the graft, as previously indicated in animal studies (x-ray, MRI). This proposed phase II trial will evaluate whether N-TEC improves the clinical efficacy, leading to an increase of at least 15 points higher in the main primary outcome (KOOS (pain) change at 24 months) than the comparator group. Secondary endpoints will include amongst others KOOS subscales (symptoms, pain, activity of daily living (ADL), sports, Quality of Life (QOL)), Kujala Anterior Knee Pain Scale, Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis score (WOMAC), Marx Activity Rating Scale (MARS) and EQ-5d assessment at 6, 12 and 24 months compared to baseline and between groups. Further secondary endpoints will be the number of subjects non-responding to treatment (i.e., improvement in KOOS Pain below 13 units on a scale of 0-100) and treatment failures (deterioration of more than 13 points compared to baseline or switching to other regenerative treatments or joint replacement to evaluate efficacy). Adverse events will be recorded during the full course of the trial to assess safety. This will require enrolling a total of 75 patients in a multicenter, prospective study involving 9 clinical centers.
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75 participants in 2 patient groups
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Marcus Mumme, Dr
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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