Pathfinder: How do cartilage injuries heal naturally? An experimental study in humans

Lead Research Organisation: Keele University
Department Name: Inst for Science and Tech in Medicine

Abstract

Osteoarthritis is a very common disease of the joints, for which in the United Kingdom alone almost 9 million people have sought treatment. Osteoarthritis causes severe pain, stiffness and makes the patient less able to go about their daily physical activities. Osteoarthritis is a disease of the joint and affects the cartilage inside the joint and the bone at the joint. Many factors are known to increase the risk of getting osteoarthritis, or the rate at which it gets worse. Very important among these factors is an injury or a defect of the cartilage. More than 250 years ago, a famous surgeon presented a paper at the Royal Society of London explaining that cartilage, once injured, does not heal. Since those days, doctors and scientists have thought that this is indeed the case. Nobody was therefore surprised that having a cartilage injury or defect is so dangerous when it comes to osteoarthritis.

Research from the past 10 years is now throwing doubt on this old certainty. Researchers who took regular scans of volunteers over time noted that sometimes these defects come and then go. Surgeons often see these defects when they reconstruct a ruptured knee ligament, a common sports injury. A Japanese group of surgeons decided to look again after a year to see what had happened to these defects, and noted that about half of them had got better! Cartilage defects in human therefore can heal, but nobody knows how this works. A large number of doctors and surgeons are therefore trying to find out how it works, using animal experiments. But a human is not an animal. Besides the fact that we walk on two instead of four legs, the healing of these defects in humans seems far better than in animals.

For many years, our Centre has helped patients who have knee cartilage damage by using the patients' own cartilage cells to help repair areas of damaged cartilage. This form of treatment using the body's own cells is known as "cell therapy". The treatment starts by taking a piece of cartilage about the size of a peanut (10 mm) from the patient's knee. We never treat this defect, but if we look again after a year, this 10 mm defect has always healed, all by itself. This is therefore another example of a naturally healing cartilage defect. Because we create the defect and can then follow how it heals over time, it will form an ideal way to study cartilage healing in humans.

Our proposal is therefore to use our cell therapy patients as a human experimental model of natural cartilage healing. We plan to use a wide range of techniques to study, identify and quantify the way in which cartilage heals. These techniques include Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), Positron Emission Tomography (PET), Computed Tomography (CT), visual inspection of the joint itself during knee joint surgery, examining biopsies of repair tissue down the microscope and measuring various kinds of molecules researchers think are important. MRI, PET and CT can show us where the cells that make new cartilage are active, how much new cartilage and bone have formed, if the new tissue fills the whole damaged area, how smooth the surface of the cartilage is and how well attached it is to the adjacent normal cartilage. Histology using the microscope and other specialised techniques can show the actual molecules which are present, how they are arranged and how the cells are behaving. Besides our cell therapy patients, where all defects heal, we will also study a group of ligament reconstruction patients with cartilage defects. Only half of those will heal, so we can compare between the groups and perhaps understand more about what controls natural cartilage healing.

Technical Summary

Cartilage defects play an important role in the pathogenesis of osteoarthritis. This fits the conventional wisdom that cartilage, once injured, does not heal. However, conflicting evidence is emerging from longitudinal MRI studies showing that cartilage defects do sometimes heal naturally in humans. We have observed this ourselves in cell-therapy patients, in whom we create a fresh cartilage defect to harvest chondrocytes for cell-expansion, and invariably find this defect healed at repeat arthroscopy a year later. Such natural cartilage healing in humans is poorly explored and understood.

This study aims to fill the current gap in our understanding of mechanisms whereby knee cartilage defects heal naturally in humans. It will do so by fully characterising the natural repair process of articular cartilage, from the early inflammatory response, via the cell proliferation phase to the matrix maturation and remodelling phase.

The overall research plan is an experimental study in humans using two patient groups: experimental and control. In the experimental group a fresh chondral defect will be created, whereas patients in the control group will have an established chondral defect. The study will therefore compare natural cartilage healing between an acute and an established defect. The proposed study will build a complete picture of the healing response using an innovative mix of techniques, namely biomechanical assessment (gait analysis and joint stability), imaging (MRI and PET/CT), synovial fluid and plasma biomarkers, arthroscopy, immunohistochemistry, biochemistry and mathematical modelling. Taken together, these techniques will provide the pattern over time of the biomechanical, inflammatory, proliferative/apoptotic, cartilage tissue and bone tissue status during natural cartilage repair.

Planned Impact

The most direct future beneficiaries from the research will be patients with cartilage and bone defects and/or early osteoarthritis. We expect that the data from the research will help to develop better strategies to either prevent the disease from progressing or to treat it at an early stage.

Practising surgeons and doctors will also benefit from the proposed research. Details on the natural healing process of cartilage injuries and defects will assist them in deciding on treatments, such as the need for an operative treatment, and help them explain to patients what happened to their knee.

The public bodies NICE (National Institute for Health and Care Excellence) and the NHS will also be beneficiaries of this work. Our team has contributed to past NICE assessments of Autologous Cell Implantation (ACI) and is contributing to the currently ongoing NICE assessment of this technique ("ID686: Autologous chondrocyte implantation for repairing symptomatic articular cartilage defects of the knee"). The NICE committee meetings have brought up an urgent need for more knowledge on the natural healing process of cartilage defects. The NICE committee feels that insight in the natural healing process is essential to properly assess the cost-effectiveness of ACI, or for that matter any cartilage repair technique. The advice from NICE has national weight, because it effectively decides which types of cartilage treatments the NHS will provide. However, increasingly NICE advice also carries international weight, because many countries are facing the same questions around cost-effectiveness without having a similar body to provide the required evidence.

Business and industry can benefit from the knowledge of natural cartilage healing that will arise from the proposed study. Although developing new treatments is not a direct objective of the study, the knowledge from it will hopefully help to develop innovative ways of promoting natural healing.

Another sector to benefit will be charities involved with patients with joint disorders. Arthritis Research UK, one of those charities, funds a clinical trial of cell therapy to treat cartilage defects at our Institution, involving many members of the proposed research team. Part of the investigative work in this trial is funded by the MRC, and the experimental group in the proposed study is made up of patients in this trial. Arthritis Research UK also funds the Arthritis Research UK Tissue Engineering centre, of which our Institution is part. Arthritis Research UK is very interested in cartilage healing and cartilage repair strategies. The proposed research will help the charity in advising the public and in devising their research strategy. Arthritis Care, another charity supporting people with arthritis, will also be interested in the results of our proposed research. These will help the charity in advising the public.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Giving evidence to the NICE commitee who assessed the clinical and cost-effectiveness of autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI)
Geographic Reach Multiple continents/international 
Policy Influence Type Participation in a guidance/advisory committee
Impact We (Prof. James Richardson and Dr Jan Herman Kuiper) provided evidence around our hospital-based cell manufacturing facility OsCell at the meetings of the NICE committee that assessed the clinical and cost-effectiveness of autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI). Our evidence contributed to the decision of NICE to approve ACI as a treatment for chondral defects, and to set up a funding mechanism for it in the NHS. The NICE approval had an obvious direct effect on the health of patients with cartilage defects, who can now be helped with a treatment that gives them long-term health benefits. However, the influence of the NICE decision reaches well beyond this direct effect on health because NICE guidance has a significant influence on the adoption of new technologies globally. ACI was the first cell therapy to be approved by NICE, and doing so demonstrated to the wider world that treatments based on regenerative medicine can be cost-effective and can be reimbursed via a national health service.
URL https://www.nice.org.uk/Guidance/TA477
 
Description Assessing and Measuring the Quality of RNA for Research Studies in the RJAH Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
Amount £21,983 (GBP)
Organisation Institute of Orthopaedics 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 09/2019 
 
Description Biomedical Catalyst: DPFS
Amount £2,398,118 (GBP)
Funding ID MR/V027670/1 
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start  
 
Description Cell Therapies for Chondral and Osteochondral defects in the Knee
Amount £53,425 (GBP)
Funding ID RPG143 
Organisation The Orthopaedic Institute 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 11/2016 
End 03/2020
 
Description Cell therapy for the ankle
Amount £79,560 (GBP)
Organisation Institute of Orthopaedics 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 01/2021 
End 12/2023
 
Description Keele University Academic Returners' Fund
Amount £3,256 (GBP)
Organisation Keele University 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start 06/2020 
End 08/2020
 
Description MICROSCOPIC ASSESSMENT OF PATIENT SAMPLES FOR RESEARCH STUDIES CONDUCTED AT THE RJAH ORTHOPAEDIC HOSPITAL NHS FOUNDATION TRUST
Amount £16,000 (GBP)
Funding ID OL41 
Organisation Institute of Orthopaedics 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 03/2021 
End 08/2021
 
Description Transcriptomic, Proteomic and Bioinformatics Analyses of Cell-Based Therapies for Cartilage Injuries in Humans
Amount £144,418 (GBP)
Funding ID 22921 
Organisation Versus Arthritis 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2022 
End 10/2026
 
Description Collaboration with OA Tech Network 
Organisation Cardiff University
Department Ireland-Wales Research Network
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution As part of the OA Tech Network, we have started collaborate work focused on measuring pain based on physiological signals. We are also exploring future grant applications.
Collaborator Contribution Our partners have expertise in gait analysis, measurement of physioly-related pain signals and describing and quantifying subjective pain.
Impact None yet, the work has been delayed due to COVID
Start Year 2020
 
Description Collaboration with OA Tech Network 
Organisation University of Edinburgh
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution As part of the OA Tech Network, we have started collaborate work focused on measuring pain based on physiological signals. We are also exploring future grant applications.
Collaborator Contribution Our partners have expertise in gait analysis, measurement of physioly-related pain signals and describing and quantifying subjective pain.
Impact None yet, the work has been delayed due to COVID
Start Year 2020
 
Description A presentation at the RJAH Research Day on predicting the outcome of autologous chondrocyte therapy for ankle cartilage defects 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an open day or visit at my research institution
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Approximately 75 surgeons, registrars, students and patients attended the talk, which won the prize for the best presentation. It invited questions around the reasons why results of cell therapy are worse in ankles and how this relates to natural healing of cartilage.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description A talk on the RJAH Research Day on the evidence for natural cartilage repair in humans 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an open day or visit at my research institution
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Approximately 75 surgeons, registrars, students and patients attended the talk. It invited questions around the evidence that cartilage can heal.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
 
Description Participation in organising the 12th Oswestry/Keele Cartilage Symposium 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Helping to organise a conference of international influence on Cartilage repair.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://oskor.netlify.app/project/events/cartilage-symposium/
 
Description Patient & Public Research Panel 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Patients, carers and/or patient groups
Results and Impact We presented our research plans and sent our protocol and Participant Information Sheet (PIS) to our Patient & Public Research Panel. This panel is made up of patients from our hospital and members of the public, interested in research, from the region. The feedback from the panel was positive, and they suggested changes to the protocol and the PIS which we incorporated.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017
 
Description Presentation for seminar debate on Regenerative Medicine 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact My presentation was part of a seminar debate called "Regenerative Medicine - Changing the Paradigm of Treatment Outcomes - For the Many or the Few?". The audience was a group of undergraduate and postgraduate pharmacology students, with some of the postgraduate students practising pharmacists. My contribution sparked much interest from the audience in the subject of regenerative medicine, not something pharmacy students are normally taught about.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2018
 
Description Presentation on "Regenerative Medicine: Promises and Challenges in the Treatment of Musculoskeletal Conditions" 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Undergraduate students
Results and Impact 150 Year-1 medical students attended this activity at each occasion, which introduced them to the idea that articular cartilage can heal itself and that the healing response can be restarted using cell-based therapies. It led to a number of questions around the impact of regenerative medicine in orthopaedics, and the module leader fed back that the students felt inspired to learn or do more around this area of medicine.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021,2022,2023
 
Description Presentation on Regenerative Medicine in lecture series on musculoskeletal diseases 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Undergraduate students
Results and Impact 120 Year-1 medical students attended this activity, which introduced them to the concept that articular cartilage can heal and that the healing response can be restarted using cell-based therapies. It sparked a discussion around the future of regenerative medicine, and the module leader fed back that the students felt inspired to learn or do more around this area of medicine.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
 
Description Presentation on the Possibility of Natural Healing of Cartilage at the RJAH Research Day 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact We presented the relevant background and our research plans to an audience of other researchers, consultants, allied health workers and members of the public at our Annual Research Day
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017
 
Description Public Reseach Event 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an open day or visit at my research institution
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact We presented our planned research at our annual open day, which takes place end April. More than 100 people attended, including children from local secondary schools. The schools reported an increased interest around the subject area.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017,2018
 
Description Talk on immunology and wound healing at Chester University 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Undergraduate students
Results and Impact Around nine students attended a lecture on wound healing, including natural cartilage healing, which formed part of a module "Advanced Immunology". The talk led to a discussion with the students.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019