4.6 Review

Metformin as a potential disease-modifying drug in osteoarthritis: a systematic review of pre-clinical and human studies

Journal

OSTEOARTHRITIS AND CARTILAGE
Volume 30, Issue 11, Pages 1434-1442

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.joca.2022.05.005

Keywords

Metformin; Osteoarthritis; Pre-clinical; Human; Disease-modifying; Systematic review

Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Clinical Postgraduate Scholarship [1133903]
  2. Royal Australasian College of Physicians Woolcock Scholarship
  3. NHMRC Translating Research into Practice Fellowship [APP1168185]
  4. NHMRC Early Career Fellowship [APP1142198]
  5. Royal Australian College of Physicians Fellows Career Development Fellowship
  6. NHMRC Investigator Grant [APP1194829]

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Objective: This study systematically reviewed the potential disease-modifying effect of metformin in osteoarthritis based on evidence from pre-clinical and human studies. The results suggest that metformin has chondroprotective, immunomodulatory, and analgesic effects in osteoarthritis, supported by consistent findings in pre-clinical and human studies. Further high-quality clinical trials are needed to confirm these findings.
Objective: Osteoarthritis causes significant pain and disability with no approved disease-modifying drugs. We systematically reviewed the evidence from both pre-clinical and human studies for the po-tential disease-modifying effect of metformin in osteoarthritis. Methods: Ovid Medline, Embase and CINAHL were searched between inception and June 2021 using MeSH terms and key words to identify studies examining the association between metformin use and outcome measures related to osteoarthritis. Two reviewers performed the risk of bias assessment and 3 reviewers extracted data independently. Qualitative evidence synthesis was performed. This systematic review is registered on PROSPERO (CRD42021261052 and CRD42021261060).Results: Fifteen (10 pre-clinical and 5 human) studies were included. Most studies (10 pre-clinical and 3 human) assessed the effect of metformin using knee osteoarthritis models. In pre-clinical studies, metformin was assessed for the effect on structural outcomes (n 1/4 10); immunomodulation (n 1/4 5); pain (n 1/4 4); and molecular pathways of its effect in osteoarthritis (n 1/4 7). For human studies, metformin was evaluated for the effect on structural progression (n 1/4 3); pain (n 1/4 1); and immunomodulation (n 1/4 1). Overall, pre-clinical studies consistently showed metformin having a chondroprotective, immunomod-ulatory and analgesic effect in osteoarthritis, predominantly mediated by adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase activation. Evidence from human studies, although limited, was consistent with findings in pre-clinical studies.Conclusion: We found consistent evidence across pre-clinical and human studies to support a favourable effect of metformin on chondroprotection, immunomodulation and pain reduction in knee osteoarthritis. Further high-quality clinical trials are needed to confirm these findings as metformin could be a novel therapeutic drug for the treatment of osteoarthritis.(c) 2022 Osteoarthritis Research Society International. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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