4.6 Article

Comparison of Growth Factor and Platelet Concentration From Commercial Platelet-Rich Plasma Separation Systems

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE
Volume 39, Issue 2, Pages 266-271

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0363546510387517

Keywords

platelet-rich plasma; growth factors; platelet-rich plasma separation system

Funding

  1. Arteriocyte
  2. MTF Sports Medicine
  3. Biomet Orthopaedics

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Background: Clinical studies claim that platelet-rich plasma (PRP) shortens recovery times because of its high concentration of growth factors that may enhance the tissue repair process. Most of these studies obtained PRP using different separation systems, and few analyzed the content of the PRP used as treatment. Purpose: This study characterized the composition of single-donor PRP produced by 3 commercially available PRP separation systems. Study Design: Controlled laboratory study. Methods: Five healthy humans donated 100 mL of blood, which was processed to produce PRP using 3 PRP concentration systems (MTF Cascade, Arteriocyte Magellan, Biomet GPS III). Platelet, white blood cell (WBC), red blood cell, and fibrinogen concentrations were analyzed by automated systems in a clinical laboratory, whereas ELISA determined the concentrations of platelet-derived growth factor alpha beta and beta beta (PDGF-alpha beta, PDGF-beta beta), transforming growth factor beta 1 (TGF-beta 1), and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Results: There was no significant difference in mean PRP platelet, red blood cell, active TGF-beta 1, or fibrinogen concentrations among PRP separation systems. There was a significant difference in platelet capture efficiency. The highest platelet capture efficiency was obtained with Cascade, which was comparable with Magellan but significantly higher than GPS III. There was a significant difference among all systems in the concentrations of WBC, PDGF-alpha beta, PDGF-beta beta, and VEGF. The Cascade system concentrated leukocyte-poor PRP, compared with leukocyte-rich PRP from the GPS III and Magellan systems. Conclusion: The GPS III and Magellan concentrate leukocyte-rich PRP, which results in increased concentrations of WBCs, PDGF-alpha beta, PDGF-beta beta, and VEGF as compared with the leukocyte-poor PRP from Cascade. Overall, there was no significant difference among systems in the platelet concentration, red blood cell, active TGF-beta 1, or fibrinogen levels.

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