INVESTIGADORES
BARDACH Ariel Esteban
artículos
Título:
Osteochondral grafting effectiveness in ankle lesions
Autor/es:
PICHON-RIVIERE A,; AUGUSTOVSKI, F; ALCARAZ A; BARDACH, ARIEL; GARCIA MARTÍ, SEBASTIAN; LOPEZ, A; GLUJOVSKY, D; REGUEIRO, A
Revista:
Documentos de Evaluación de Tecnologías Sanitarias
Editorial:
IECS
Referencias:
Año: 2006 p. 1 - 30
ISSN:
1668-2793
Resumen:
The purpose of the present report is to assess the efficacy of the osteochondral transplant for the treatment of ankle bone-cartilage lesions.Most evidence for osteochondral autografts comes from retrospective case series trials and there are no controlled trials comparing the results of this technique with other conventional treatments. While the patients inclusion criteria are not well defined in the literature, the age limit usually proposed for this type of grafting is 50 because joint cartilage quality decreases after this age. Some studies such as the one proposed by Schottle et al in 2001 conclude that OATS renders promising results for osteochondral defects of the talar dome, even for previously operated osteochondral defects. But, although the results of retrospective case series using OATS are promising, the follow-up periods are short and there are no well-designed prospective trials with longer follow-ups to prove the durability of the repair as well as the efficacy of the procedure in preventing degenerative arthritis. Regarding mosaicplasty, Jakob et al. (2002) concluded that the autologous transplant is a valid option for the treatment of osteochondral defects, but the method is limited by the size of the defect and the number of grafts needed from the donor site. Once again, the retrospective study lacks a control group or comparison and does not include long-term assessment of results. In a more recent publication, Bentley et al. (2003) compared the autologous chondrocytes implantation (ACI) and mosaicplasty in a total of 100 patients randomized to one of the two treatments. The follow-up was 19 months long average. The trial showed excellent or good results in 88% of the patients after ACI, compared with 69% of mosaicplasty. An arthroscopy performed at one year showed excellent or good repairs in 82% of the cases after ACI and only 34% after mosaicplasty. The authors concluded that results for ACI are comparable to those obtained from other trials, but the use of mosaicplasty should be questioned. Hangody reported several trials with mosaicplasty, concluding that autologous osteochondral mosaicplasty is a valid alternative for the treatment of small to middle size focal chondral or osteochondral defects of the joint surfaces bearing weight. In 2004 Kolker et al carried out a retrospective revision of 13 patients who had received autologous bone grafting of the talus due to symptomatic osteochondral defects of the talar dome. The patients mean age was 38.4 years. Six patients (46%) failed medical treatment and needed surgery. Of the other 7, the functional results were obtained at an average of 51.9 months after surgery. The overall satisfaction rate of the patients was 46.2%, concluding that the autologous grafting technique should be used with extreme caution when considered as the primary treatment for advanced osteochondral defects of the ankle. The main international health sponsors do not cover osteochondral grafting for they consider it an experimental procedure or at research stage, or they cover it in very specific cases using strict inclusion criteria.