4.7 Article

Intra-articular injection of rapamycin microparticles prevent senescence and effectively treat osteoarthritis

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/btm2.10298

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autophagy; intra-articular therapy; microparticles; osteoarthritis; PLGA; rapamycin; senescence

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Trauma to the knee joint can lead to cartilage degeneration and bone erosion, causing osteoarthritis. Current treatments focus on symptom relief. Modulating autophagy and targeting senescence pathways show potential as treatment strategies. A study found that rapamycin-loaded microparticles can effectively mitigate cartilage damage and inflammation, potentially preventing the progression of post-traumatic osteoarthritis.
Trauma to the knee joint is associated with significant cartilage degeneration and erosion of subchondral bone, which eventually leads to osteoarthritis (OA), resulting in substantial morbidity and healthcare burden. With no disease-modifying drugs in clinics, the current standard of care focuses on symptomatic relief and viscosupplementation. Modulation of autophagy and targeting senescence pathways are emerging as potential treatment strategies. Rapamycin has shown promise in OA disease amelioration by autophagy upregulation, yet its clinical use is hindered by difficulties in achieving therapeutic concentrations, necessitating multiple weekly injections. Rapamycin-loaded in poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) microparticles (RMPs) induced autophagy, prevented senescence, and sustained sulphated glycosaminoglycans production in primary human articular chondrocytes from OA patients. RMPs were potent, nontoxic, and exhibited high retention time (up to 35 days) in mice joints. Intra-articular delivery of RMPs effectively mitigated cartilage damage and inflammation in surgery-induced OA when administered as a prophylactic or therapeutic regimen. Together, the study demonstrates the feasibility of using RMPs as a potential clinically translatable therapy to prevent the progression of post-traumatic OA.

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