4.5 Review

Meniscal repair: The current state and recent advances in augmentation

Journal

JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH
Volume 39, Issue 7, Pages 1368-1382

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jor.25021

Keywords

biologics; materials; meniscectomy; meniscus; repair

Categories

Funding

  1. Orthopaedic Research Society Meniscus Section

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Meniscal injuries are common in orthopedics, with treatment options ranging from resection to suture repair. Current research focuses on biological and material-based approaches to enhance meniscal healing and repair.
Meniscal injuries represent one of the most common orthopedic injuries. The most frequent treatment is partial resection of the meniscus, or meniscectomy, which can affect joint mechanics and health. For this reason, the field has shifted gradually towards suture repair, with the intent of preservation of the tissue. Save the Meniscus is now a prolific theme in the field; however, meniscal repair can be challenging and ineffective in many scenarios. The objectives of this review are to present the current state of surgical management of meniscal injuries and to explore current approaches being developed to enhance meniscal repair. Through a systematic literature review, we identified meniscal tear classifications and prevalence, approaches being used to improve meniscal repair, and biological- and material-based systems being developed to promote meniscal healing. We found that biologic augmentation typically aims to improve cellular incorporation to the wound site, vascularization in the inner zones, matrix deposition, and inflammatory relief. Furthermore, materials can be used, both with and without contained biologics, to further support matrix deposition and tear integration, and novel tissue adhesives may provide the mechanical integrity that the meniscus requires. Altogether, evaluation of these approaches in relevant in vitro and in vivo models provides new insights into the mechanisms needed to salvage meniscal tissue, and along with regulatory considerations, may justify translation to the clinic. With the need to restore long-term function to injured menisci, biologists, engineers, and clinicians are developing novel approaches to enhance the future of robust and consistent meniscal reparative techniques.

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