4.8 Review

Biosynthetic scaffolds for partial meniscal loss: A systematic review from animal models to clinical practice

Journal

BIOACTIVE MATERIALS
Volume 6, Issue 11, Pages 3782-3800

Publisher

KEAI PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bioactmat.2021.03.033

Keywords

Meniscal scaffold; Meniscectomy; Osteoarthritis; Regenerative medicine; Collagen; Polyurethane

Funding

  1. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [814444]

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Research focused on developing and studying meniscal scaffolds, emphasizing the importance of preserving the meniscus to prevent osteoarthritis. While positive results were seen in preclinical studies, limitations in clinical research point to the need for further innovation.
Acute or degenerative meniscus tears are the most common knee lesions. Meniscectomy provides symptomatic relief and functional recovery only in the short- to mid-term follow-up but significantly increases the risk of osteoarthritis. For this reason, preserving the meniscus is key, although it remains a challenge. Allograft transplants present many disadvantages, so during the last 20 years preclinical and clinical research focused on developing and investigating meniscal scaffolds. The aim of this systematic review was to collect and evaluate all the available evidence on biosynthetic scaffolds for meniscus regeneration both in vivo and in clinical studies. Three databases were searched: 46 in vivo preclinical studies and 30 clinical ones were found. Sixteen natural, 15 synthetic, and 15 hybrid scaffolds were studied in vivo. Among them, only 2 were translated into clinic: the Collagen Meniscus Implant, used in 11 studies, and the polyurethane-based scaffold Actifit (R), applied in 19 studies. Although positive outcomes were described in the short- to mid-term, the number of concurrent procedures and the lack of randomized trials are the major limitations of the available clinical literature. Few in vivo studies also combined the use of cells or growth factors, but these augmentation strategies have not been applied in the clinical practice yet. Current solutions offer a significant but incomplete clinical improvement, and the regeneration potential is still unsatisfactory. Building upon the overall positive results of these old technologies to address partial meniscal loss, further innovation is urgently needed in this field to provide patients better joint sparing treatment options.

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