Platelet-Rich
Plasma in Orthopedics
Jennifer E. Woodell-May1
and William S. Pietrzak2
Abstract: Autologous
platelet-rich plasma (PRP) has become a popular
clinical
treatment in a variety of soft tissue and hard tissue applications.
Clinicians use
PRP to harvest the platelets’ natural ability to promote hemostasis
and to release
cytokines into the wound bed with hopes of stimulating
the rate of
healing and improving tissue quality. Platelet-derived growth factor,
transforming
growth factor β1, vascular endothelial growth factor, basic
fibroblast
growth factor, epidermal growth factor, insulin-like growth factor
and connective
tissue growth factor are among the more notable cytokines
released from
platelets. To understand the utility of PRP in orthopedics, a
review of the
preclinical studies with PRP reveals a wide breadth of models
where PRP
enhances the outcomes. However, it is apparent that PRP is most
successful when
paired with the appropriate matrices and/or cell therapies for
optimal results.
Reviews of peer-reviewed clinical studies, ranging from Level
I evidence
clinical trials to Level IV case series reports, also reveal a wide
range of
clinical utility for PRP. Future clinical trials should attempt to refine
the clinical
application of PRP for each indication for use. These studies must
be designed with
the appropriate outcome measures and follow-up time-points
to capture the
benefits of PRP. Given the data published to date, PRP appears
to be a powerful
autologous therapy for surgeons looking to enhance bone and
soft tissue
formation. Future investigations will further define PRP’s optimal
role in
medicine.
Keywords: Platelet-rich
plasma, PRP, platelet concentrate, platelet gel, AGF,
growth factors,
platelets, PDGF, TGF-β, orthopedics, wound healing.
26.1.
Introduction
The healing
response to injury has evolved over millions of years to promote
survival of a
species. While humans possess sufficient healing potential to
survive a
variety of injuries, healing may take a long time to complete or the
regenerated
tissue may consist primarily of nonfunctional scar. A complex
healing process
at a tissue injury site is initiated by platelets, which are
responsible for
arresting bleeding and providing hemostasis. These same
platelets, upon
activation by mediators at the injury site, release bioactive
proteins that
signal wound healing cells to clean the wound and form new
tissue. Recent
attempts have been made to increase the healing rate and functionality
of deposited
tissue by augmenting the natural healing process and
harnessing the
healing potential of platelets.
An emerging
clinical technology attempts to harvest the body’s natural healing
capacity by
collecting platelets from a patient, concentrating them in a small
amount of plasma
and administering the platelets to the patient at the injury site.
This
concentrated platelet product is known as platelet-rich plasma (PRP). Other
names include
platelet concentrate and autologous growth factor (AGF). Once
activated to
form a gel, it can also be called platelet gel or autologous platelet
gel.
PRP has been
used in many fields of surgery. Applications in orthopedics
include spine,
joint arthroplasty, dental, craniomaxillofacial, sports medicine and
foot and ankle
procedures [1–6]. PRP has also been useful in other fields such
as
cardiovascular, plastic surgery and ulcer wound healing [7–9]. While many of
these studies
attempt to determine if an autologous platelet approach does enhance
wound healing
mechanisms, a definitive conclusion has not been reached. First,
many nuances in
the production of PRP include the level of platelet concentration
and the ability
to not prematurely activate the platelets and lose the active factors
during the
platelet processing [10]. Second, many of the commercially available
PRP systems have
not been well characterized, which makes interpretation of
results
difficult [11]. Finally, few prospective, randomized clinical studies have
been performed
from which to draw unambiguous conclusions.
Despite these
limitations, a growing body of evidence – taken collectively –
seems to support
a clinical role for PRP in wound healing. The purpose of this
chapter is to
provide a basic background of platelets, their role in wound healing,
methods of
concentration and administration and an objective summary
of animal and
human studies that investigate the role of PRP in wound healing
for orthopedics.
26.2. Basic
Science
26.2.1. Platelet
Biology
Platelets are
fragments of large bone marrow cells called megakaryocytes and
are formed
during hematopoiesis. They are approximately 2 to 4 μm in diameter
with a volume of
10×10−9 mm3 [12, 13]. Platelets lack a nucleus, but do contain
organelles such
as mitochondria, dense bodies, α-granules and lysosomal granules.
The dense bodies
contain adenosine diphosphate (ADP), adenosine triphosphate
(ATP), Ca2+,
serotonin, histamine, dopamine and catecholamines [14]. The
α-granules,
which number about 50 to 80 per platelet, contain adhesive proteins, coagulation factors, fibrinolytic factors, antiproteases,
mitogenic growth factors,
cytokines
and bactericidal proteins [10, 14]. The phospholipid bilayer platelet
membrane
is covered with glycoprotein receptors that mediate interactions
with
surfaces, bioactive molecules and other platelets [13, 14]. Conformational
changes
in platelets, which are integral to their function, are mediated by actin
and
myosin fibers within the platelets [14].
Normal
human platelet concentration is 200,000 to 400,000 platelets per microliter,
and
they typically circulate for a 10-day lifespan [10, 12]. Platelet physiologic
function
is two-fold: 1) hemostasis and 2) initiation of wound healing [10].
26.2.2.
Hemostasis
Platelets
maintain hemostasis by formation of a platelet plug and by modulating
fibrin
formation via the coagulation cascade [13]. When a blood vessel
is
injured, collagen becomes exposed. The exposed collagen interacts with
the
glycoprotein receptors of the platelet membrane, resulting in a signal
transduction
cascade that causes the platelets to adhere to each other and to
undergo
conformational change [13]. These conformational changes, including
pseudopodia
formation, are associated with release of internal stores of
Ca2+
within the platelet, which in turn stimulates the released of the contents
of
the α-granules and dense granules outside of the platelet [12]. This process
is known as
platelet activation (Fig. 26.1) [15]. The substances released from
the activated platelets and into the surrounding plasma,
specifically ADP
and thrombin, activate adjacent platelets. These activated
platelets aggregate
together, forming the platelet plug [12, 13].
Along with the platelet plug formation, another major component of
a blood
clot is the fibrin mesh, which is derived through the coagulation
cascade. The
coagulation cascade is the process through which a series of
normally inactive
plasma proteins become activated, either by the intrinsic pathway
through
interactions with a surface, or extrinsically by the presence of
tissue factor
[16]. These activated factors continue a feed-forward loop that
results in the
formation of a three-dimensional fibrin matrix.
Both pathways converge at the activation of Factor X, which
prompts the
conversion of prothrombin to thrombin. Thrombin catalyzes the
formation of
fibrin from fibrinogen, which first forms a fibrin thread and then
ultimately
cross-links into a stable three-dimensional mesh [13]. The fibrin
matrix,
platelet plug and trapped white and red blood cells together make
up the
thrombus, a clot that stops bleeding at an injured site. Figure 26.2 details
the schematic of the coagulation cascade and illustrates the
multiple levels
within the coagulation cascade during which activated platelets
can directly
participate in the process.
As can be seen from Fig.
26.2 several steps in the cascade
require the
presence of calcium ions. The presence of calcium forms the basis
for citratebased
anticoagulants, or blood preservatives, such as
citrate-phosphatedextrose
(CPD) and acid-citrate-dextrose (ACD) [10]. The added citrate ions
chelate the calcium ions, essentially disabling the calcium
ion-dependent steps
of the
cascade, which can be reversed by adding a calcium salt, e.g., CaCl2.
26.2.3. Wound Healing
The
wound healing cascade is a temporal series of events that begins within
seconds
of the injury and continues with remodeling for months following the
event.
The basic nature of the cascade is similar, whether the injury occurs
in
hard or soft tissue, with local signaling of precursor cells to ensure the
appropriate
tissue-specific phenotype modulation. The general healing process
can
be divided into three stages, including inflammatory, proliferative and
remodeling
phases [10, 17, 18].
The
inflammatory phase (beginning immediately after the injury) includes
initial
hemostasis that involves platelet activation, aggregation and formation
of a
fibrin matrix, as described above. During degranulation, or release of the
á-granule contents during platelet activation, platelets initiate
the coagulation
cascade
and release cytokines that are responsible for cueing the wound
healing
process. The cytokines released are chemotactic for circulating white
blood
cells (WBC), recruiting them to marginate out of nearby blood vessels
and
migrate into the wound bed. Neutrophils, the first WBC responders, start
cleaning
the site by removing bacteria and cell debris [17, 18].
During
the proliferative phase (days) an influx of monocytes migrates to
the
site, signaled by the growth factors released from the platelets. These
circulating
monocytes differentiate into macrophages. As the platelets are
removed
from the wound site, the activated macrophages take over the
signaling-modulation
role from the platelets. Macrophages remove debris
by
phagocytosis and also secrete factors that promote further wound healing
events.
Following the macrophages, fibroblasts begin to lay down collagen
granulation
tissue. New capillaries begin to feed the repair area, marking the
start
of angiogenesis. During this time undifferentiated stem cells migrate to
the
injury site. Depending on the signals present in the wound, the stem cells
can
differentiate into tissue-specific cells such as bone, cartilage or new blood
vessels
[17, 18].
The
final phase of wound healing is the remodeling phase (months).
During
this phase the collagen tissue contracts, bringing the edges of the
wound
together. Cell density and vascularity decrease, excess repair matrix
is
removed and the collagen fibers orient along lines of stress to maximize
strength
[10]. The granulation tissue itself accumulates and remodels into scar
tissue
or is turned over to specific tissue types like skin or bone [17, 18]. In
general,
soft tissue heals by scar formation, although some components of the
original
tissue may have re-formed within the scar. Bone is unique in that it
typically
heals without scar; that is, healed bone cannot be distinguished from
uninjured
bone [10].
26.2.4. Growth Factors Released from Platelets
The
cytokines released from activated platelets signal wound healing events
to
occur. Among the releasate is platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)
(isoforms
AA, AB, BB), transforming growth factor â (TGF-â1 and TGF-â2),
vascular
endothelial growth factor (VEGF), basic fibroblast growth factor
(bFGF),
epidermal growth factor (EGF), insulin-like growth factor (IGF),
connective
tissue growth factor (CTGF) and others [10, 14; 19; 20]. Several
of
these signaling proteins, in particular PDGF and TGF-â, are transformed
into
active states during platelet degranulation by the addition of histones and carbohydrate side chains [10]. Table 26.1 gives an example
of a growth factor
profile in whole blood and delivered in a commercial PRP
preparation [19].
Since platelets modulate wound healing in every tissue in the
body, it is not
expected that tissue-specific morphogens would be contained within
platelet
releasate. Specifically, large amounts of bone morphogenetic
proteins, capable
of differentiating mesenchymal stem cells into osteoblasts and
chondrocytes,
are not found in platelets. However, small amounts of BMP-2, BMP-4
and
BMP-6 have been identified in washed platelet releasate, detected
by western
blot [21]. In our laboratory we were able to detect, using the
enzyme linked
immunosorbant assay method (ELISA), small amounts of BMPs from PRP
releasate, i.e., 23 pg/ml of BMP-2 and 46 pg/ml of BMP-4
(unpublished data).
No detectable amount of BMP-7 was found. These are negligible
amounts
compared to the BMP content of human demineralized bone matrix
(DBM),
where we found, on average per gram of DBM powder, 21 ng of BMP-2,
5 ng
of BMP-4 and 84 ng of BMP-7 [22].
The effects of many growth factors on cell behavior and wound
healing
have been studied. Release of PDGF into a wound bed can have a
chemotatic
effect on monocytes, neutrophils, fibroblasts, mesenchymal stem
cells and
osteoblasts. PDGF is also a powerful mitogen for fibroblasts and
smooth
muscle cells, and is involved in all three phases of wound
healing, including
angiogenesis, formation of fibrous tissue and reepithelilization
[23]. In a clinical
study pressure ulcers that were treated daily (100 ìg/g or 300 ìg/g) with a
PDGF-BB wound healing gel showed significantly decreased ulcer
volume,
compared to ulcers treated with a gel lacking PDGF-BB [24].
TGF-â1
is a mitogen for fibroblasts, smooth muscle cells and osteoblasts.
Additionally, it promotes angiogenesis and extracellular matrix
production
[23, 25]. In a rat tibial fracture model, injections of TGF-â (4 and 40 ng) every
other day for 40 days resulted in a dose-dependent increase in
bone thickness,
with the 40 ng dose additionally increasing mechanical strength
[26].
As with many growth factors, dosing is critical. Broderick, et al.
injected a
much higher dose (335 ìg of TGF-â) in a canine humeral model and found a
decrease in bone mineralization [27].
Additionally, actions of other growth factors present in platelet
releasate
have been described. VEGF promotes angiogenesis and can promote
healing
of chronic wounds and facilitate endochondral ossification [25,
28]. However,
as seen with high doses of TGF-â, high doses of VEGF (0.5 ìg into rat
segmental defect) inhibited bone formation [29]. EGF, another
platelet-derived growth factor, is a mitogen for fibroblasts,
endothelial cells and keratinoctyes,
and
is also useful in healing chronic wounds [25]. IGF, also found in platelets,
regulates
bone maintenance, is an important modulator of cell apoptosis and,
in
combination with PDGF, can promote bone regeneration [30, 31]. CTGF,
found
in concentrations 20-fold higher than other growth factors, promotes
angiogenesis,
cartilage regeneration, fibrosis and platelet adhesion [20].
Furthermore,
many synergistic effects between these growth factors have
been
found. In a rabbit limb ischemia model the combined administration of
VEGF
and bFGF significantly increased angiogenesis in the ischemic limb
over
either factor given alone [32]. Another synergistic mitogenic effect was
seen
in vitro with
the addition of bFGF, TGF-â and IGF-2
to osteoblasts [33],
while
chemotactic effects were seen with the addition of TGF-â1 and PDGFBB
to
osteoblasts [34]. Additionally, in a porcine wound healing model,
increased
collagen content and maturity, increased angiogenesis and increased
connective
tissue volume were found without an increase in inflammation
when
PDGF was used in combination with IGF-1 or with TGF-á [35].
These
factors are actively secreted from the á-granules
within 10 minutes of
clotting,
with more than 95 percent of the presynthesized growth factors secreted
within
the first hour [10]. In addition the secreted growth factors remain bound
to
the fibrin clot and are slowly released during clot degradation. Therefore, the
platelets
local to the wound site continue to directly signal and modulate wound
healing
for several days.
26.2.5. PRP Procurement Methods
Normal
whole blood contains approximately 94 percent red blood cells (RBC),
0.06
percent white blood cells (WBC), and 5.9 percent platelets, by number.
A
typical PRP can alter this concentration, as an example, to 52.1 percent RBC,
0.26
percent WBC and 47.6 percent platelets. These elements are collected
in
the buffy coat, a layer of WBC and platelets that form between the RBC
and
plasma during centrifugation. The buffy coat is suspended in a volume of
plasma
and delivered back to the patient. Depending on the system used to
prepare
the PRP, the concentration of platelets can typically range from four
to
eight times greater than the levels in whole blood (11;36). In addition, many
systems
allow the collection of a plasma layer, called the platelet poor plasma
(PPP).
The platelet poor plasma (PPP) can also be delivered to the patient as
an
autologous fibrin product for topical hemostasis [1].
Several
commercial systems to produce PRP are commercially available.
These
systems can be divided into three basic categories: the apheresis
technique,
the single-spin tabletop technique and the double-spin tabletop technique.
The
first and oldest technology is the creation of a PRP from the output
of
an apheresis device (plateletpheresis). In these systems, whole, anticoagulated
blood
is introduced into a bowl that is spinning inside of a centrifuge.
The
blood separates along the walls of the bowl into the fractions described
above.
Each layer is then transferred to different collection bags. In many
cases
the PRP apheresis devices further concentrate the PRP with additional
centrifugation
and/or filtration to remove water. These systems usually
process
an entire unit of blood, so the volume of PRP produced is typically
greater
than with the other methods. Additionally, the RBCs can typically be
re-infused to the
patient.
The other two types of systems are considered
tabletop devices requiring
only 50 to 100 cc or less of blood. With the
double-spin technologies, whole
blood is introduced into a disposable unit
and placed into a centrifuge. The
first centrifugation spin, called the soft
spin, runs for a relatively short time at
low revolutions per minute (rpm). This spin
divides the blood into the components
of RBC, buffy coat and plasma. Depending on
the device, the plasma
and buffy coat are transferred, manually or
automatically, into a new chamber
for the second centrifugation cycle, or hard
spin. The hard spin runs for a
longer time period and at a higher rpm. This
spin will create a platelet pellet
at the bottom of the chamber which, once
re-suspended in plasma, becomes
the PRP.
Single-spin technologies only use one
centrifugation cycle that separates the
blood into RBC, buffy coat and plasma. These
devices then have methods to
capture the buffy coat from this disposable,
such as a tuned density buoy that
captures the buffy coat and allows it to be
extracted from the device.
Table 26.2 summarizes these three types of
devices, comparing the amount
of blood drawn for processing, the volume of
PRP produced, whether the
packed cell layer can be re-infused into the
patient, the fold-increase in platelet
concentration in the PRP over baseline and
the percent platelet recovery, which
refers to the percentage of all platelets
present in the initial blood draw that are
contained in the final PRP produced. As can
be seen, within a given class of
device, a wide range in values exists for
most of these characteristics, especially
the fold-increase in platelet concentration
and the percent platelet recovery.
The following table provides several
parameters to consider when comparing
platelet concentration devices, divided into
parameters associated with the
quality of the PRP product produced, the ease
of use of the system and options
available with the system.
Quality of Product Ease of Use Options
• Platelet concentration • Time of
preparation • Operator input
• Growth factor profile delivered • Number of
steps • Volume of blood
draw
• Volume of PRP produced • Sterile barrier
steps • PPP collection
availability
• Percent recovery of platelets • RBC
re-infusion
capability
• Concentration of white blood
cells
• Cost
• Reproducibility of product
• Activation of platelets during
processing
One of the main challenges in characterizing
a PRP is to accurately determine
the platelet concentration since levels can
be much higher than most
hematology analyzers are designed to count.
Woodell-May, et al. devised
a protocol for validating high PRP platelet
counts made with a hematology
analyzer (Cell-Dyn 3700, Abbott Labs) using
manual counts for reference,
and established a general method to ensure
accuracy of the platelet count
[11].
While utilization of PRP is still being investigated, the addition of a means to expeditiously and accurately determine platelet
counts can bolster
the relevance of future study conclusions [39].
The last step in platelet application is to prepare the delivery
system. Typically,
activation solution must be made, which generally consists of a
solution of
thrombin in 10 percent CaCl2
solution [10]. When added to PRP,
calcium
ions reverse the effects of the citrate-based anticoagulant, as
explained above,
while the thrombin activates the platelets as well as catalyzes
the formation of
the fibrin mesh. The most common delivery system uses a dual
syringe spray
apparatus [1]. The PRP is drawn into a 10 cc syringe and the
activation solution
is drawn into a 1 cc syringe. Both are connected, in tandem, to
the dual spray
apparatus (Fig. 26.3). Both syringe plungers are advanced in unison, with
the
solutions mixed in a 1:10 volume ratio and a combined spray
exiting a single
orifice. In this way the PRP becomes activated as it is applied to
the wound. The
PPP can be delivered in a similar fashion. In bone grafting
applications, PRP
can be mixed with bone grafting material such as demineralized
bone matrix,
allograft bone chips or synthetic bone void fillers.
26.3. Review of Preclinical Studies
PRP has been studied in a variety of preclinical models including
orthopedics,
spine, dental, craniomaxillofacial and sports medicine. A summary
of selected
published preclinical studies using PRP can be found in Table 26.3. A (+) was
assigned to the study if any positive result was seen with the
PRP, a (o) was
given if no difference was found between the test and control
groups, and a (−)
was given when the PRP caused an inhibitory effect.
The varied studies described in Table 26–3 illustrate the nonspecific
response
of the body to PRP application, with the local tissue environment
modulating
the effect to ensure that the appropriate site-specific tissue is
regenerated.
Although open to interpretation, 15 of the 18 studies (83%) appear
to show
a positive influence of PRP on wound healing and tissue
regeneration, two
(11%) show a neutral effect, and one (6%) shows an inhibitory
effect Upon
closer inspection, however, it can be seen that some of the
studies that reported
positive PRP results used PRP in conjunction with osteoconductive
matrices,
so the effects of PRP in isolation may not have been tested. This
is not necessarily
a limitation, however, since a multifaceted approach is often
required to
attempt to match the combined osteoconductivity, osteoinductivity
and osteogenicity
of the “gold standard” autograft
in bone healing applications.
It
appears that the mixture of PRP with an osteoconductive carrier, such as
allograft
bone or ceramic bone void fillers, can enhance bone formation over
the
carrier alone [45, 49, 52–53, 55]. However, in more challenging models
for
bone formation, such as in a gap model around an implant or in a posterolateral
spine
fusion, PRP mixed with an osteoconductive matrix could not
significantly
improve the outcome [47, 55]. To overcome these challenges,
adding
bone marrow aspirate or cultured mesenchymal stem cells to the graft
in addition to the PRP performed as well as
autograft [41–43, 51, 54–55].
In vitro support of the
combination of PRP with bone marrow was shown with
a dose-dependent increase in stem
cell proliferation with the addition of PRP
[43]. This composite approach
avoids the donor site morbidity associated with
autograft harvest.
Applications that take advantage
of the angiogenic effect of PRP are illustrated
by the increased tissue repair
seen after injection of PRP into an ACL
or Achilles tendon [56, 57].
Additionally, adding PRP to a bone repair model
with compromised vascularity,
such as in a diabetic animal, improved fracture
healing [48]. In a critically
sized segmental defect model, increased vascular
invasion was seen in groups
implanted with PRP, cultured stem cells and allograft
bone, over groups implanted with
the allograft alone [43].
The proliferative and angiogenic
growth factors delivered in PRP,
when combined with DBM, might be
expected to accelerate bone healing
compared to DBM alone. Ranly, et
al. added the single growth factor,
PDGF, to DBM powder in an ectopic
bone formation model in a nude
mouse [44]. An insignificant
increase in DBM osteoinductivity was seen
with the lowest dose, 0.1 μg
PDGF/10 mg DBM implant, but there was an
inhibition of osteoinductivity
with the two higher doses of 1 μg PDGF/10 mg
DBM implant and 10 μg PDGF/10 mg
DBM implant. The low dose compares
to that which may be present in a
typical 6 cc PRP preparation [19]
( approximately 100 ng), while
the inhibitory doses are one and two orders of
magnitude greater than that found
in a typical PRP. In the same study, PRP
was added to DBM. After a 56-day
implantation no difference in the bone
induction histology score
appeared with or without PRP, but an increase in
DBM resorption with the addition
of PRP was detected. Ossicles formed in
this model will remodel over
time, so it may be expected that the addition of
PRP would accelerate the natural
remodeling process, which would include
the resorption of the DBM
particles. In a similar study a more physiologic
dose of 50 ng of PDGF was added
to 25 mg of DBM in an aged rat ectopic
model and was implanted for 14
days [58]. The PDGF addition to the DBM
increased mRNA production of
collagen Type II, alkaline phosphatase
activity and calcium content,
which are all indicative of bone formation.
These studies illustrate the
complex nature of the effect of PRP on osseous
healing, and that important study
design considerations include the animal
model, dosage, outcome measures
and time intervals.
While the in vivo ectopic osteoinduction
model has become a standard
method and enables comparison
among studies, an orthotopic model may be
more predictive of expected
clinical outcomes. When DBM was mixed with
PRP in a porcine cranial defect
and healing was compared to autograft, PRP
enhanced bone formation compared
to autograft at the earliest time-point of two
weeks. However, at later
time-points PRP had no effect on mineralization [50].
Animal studies utilize
species-specific PRP. Since blood cell size varies
from species to species, it is
possible that the ability for PRP systems to
concentrate platelets might also
be species-dependent. In the majority of animal
studies, the actual platelet dose
was not quantified, which can confound
attempts to compare studies. In
our laboratory we compared the platelet concentration
and growth factor profile in
various species, and compared it to
humans using a single-spin,
table-top platelet concentration system that had
been previously characterized for
processing human blood [19]. Table 26.4
(unpublished data) summarizes the
multi-species results.
Whole blood platelet counts for all species
were essentially within the
normal range of human platelet counts of
200,000 platelets/μl to 400,000
platelets/μl [12]. However, the ability of
the platelet concentration system
to collect platelets varied five to eight
times over baseline, depending on
species. This is probably due to variances in
cell size and density. Similarly,
the amount of the growth factors PDGF and
TGF-β1 also varied with the
different species preparations. It is
interesting to note that the fold increase in
growth factors did not necessarily match the
corresponding fold increase in
platelet concentration, a result also noted
by others [19]. We were unable to
count goat platelets accurately because there
is less size difference between
red blood cells and platelets than for other
species, which limits usefulness of
the goat model.
From the vast range of preclinical studies
using PRP in orthopedic applications,
the results appear to predict that PRP used
in clinical orthopedic applications will
be successful. The next section will address
the clinical use of PRP to date.
26.4. Clinical Review
The best evidence to support clinical use of
PRP is prospective, randomized
and controlled studies (Level of Evidence I
(blinded) or II (not-blinded))
[59]. A search has revealed only one Level I
study and five Level II studies
published in orthopedic applications, with
the balance being retrospective and
case studies (Level III (retrospective,
controlled studies) and Level IV (case
series with no controls) ) as summarized in
Table 26.5. As with the preclinical
studies a (+) was assigned to the study if
any positive result was seen with the
PRP, a (o) was given if no difference was
found between the test and control
groups and a (−) indicates when the PRP
caused an inhibitory effect.
As seen in the preclinical studies, PRP as an
adjuvant to other treatments
has resulted in excellent clinical outcomes.
For example, a case series of
patients treated with PRP and cultured
mesenchymal stem cells in distraction
osteogenesis had successful outcomes without
taking an autograft harvest
[61].
PRP has also been used with autograft and has increased bone maturation over
autograft alone [2, 70, 74, 77]. However, more surprisingly, PRP in
combination
with allograft has demonstrated clinical outcomes equivalent
to
autograft in a spine fusion study [4]. PRP, in combination with osteoconductive
matrices,
has also improved the clinical results compared to the
osteoconductive
material alone [3, 6, 60, 73, 78]. In the only Level I evidence
trial
using PRP, PRP mixed with xenograft in periodontal intrabony defects
significantly
increased defect fill over the xenograft alone [3].
While
many favorable outcomes with PRP have been demonstrated
clinically,
not all published results support the use of PRP. Specifically, in
clinically
challenging spine fusion cases, three studies have published no
difference
between PRP and the control groups [63–65], and one study found
increased
bone resorption when PRP was used [67]. However, two of these
studies
did show a decrease in pseudoarthrodesis and a faster fusion rate in the
PRP
groups, though the results were not significant [64–65]. The comparisons
between
PRP and control groups were compared at a 24-month follow-up time
in
the Hee, et al. [65] study, and at 34 months in the Castro, et al. [64] study.
Given
that the effects of PRP are suggested to speed up healing processes,
it
should be expected that groups compared at this late follow-up time-point
would
be equal. Similarly, in the Carreon, et al. study, no difference was found
with
the addition of PRP mixed with autograft with instrumented lumbar spine
fusion
at 32- to 37-month follow-up [63]. Any effect the PRP had on healing
would
more likely be seen early on in the healing process, but not in the overall
amount
of bone formation once the fusion is complete. In the Weiner and
Walker
study the fusion rate was much lower in the PRP with autograft group
than
the autograft alone [67]. As this procedure was uninstrumented, it was a
very
challenging spine fusion model. Without instrumentation, micromotion
can
occur more freely at the fusion site. Since PRP contains angiogenic growth
factors,
one might expect that micromotion would increase fibrosis tissue formation
preferentially
over bone, increasing the pseudoarthrodesis. In contrast,
a
case series published with PRP mixed with autograft in an instrumented
spine
fusion demonstrated 58 out of 60 patients fusing [68], and yet another
case
series with PRP and autograft in an instrumented spine fusion showed no
pseuodoarthrosis
[66].
In a
prospective, randomized trial (Level II) comparing PRP and allograft
to
autograft in spine fusions, the groups were compared at six months
postoperation
and
found to be equivalent [4]. These results are promising in that
PRP
might find clinical utility as an adjuvant with other matrices to reduce
the
need for a painful autograft harvest. However, both preclinical and clinical
results
suggest that PRP can enhance biologic repair and, in conjunction with
adequate
bone matrices and/or cells, can be effective in spine fusion at a much
lower
cost, both in terms of material costs when compared to recombinant
BMPs,
and in morbidity of the donor site when compared to an autograft
harvest.
In
the field of dental and craniomaxillofacial surgery, many procedures are
bilateral.
This permits PRP to be added unilaterally, allowing each patient to
be
his or her own control. As mentioned earlier, in the only published Level I
evidence
trial (with double-blinding), PRP mixed with xenograft in periodontal
intrabony
defects significantly increased defect fill over the xenograft alone
[3].
In several other studies PRP showed enhanced results over control groups
in bilateral intrabony defects [3, 73–74].
Only in one series of three patients
in a
bilateral defect did PRP show no difference when mixed with xenograft
in a
sinus lift [75]. However, in a prospective, randomized study comparing
PRP
with a synthetic bone void filler (â-TCP)
in a sinus lift, PRP was shown
to increase
bone formation [6].
In
the only soft tissue application reviewed, PRP injections improved chronic
elbow
tendinosis (or tennis elbow) [72]. Mishra and Pavelko found statistically
significant
improvement in visual analog pain scores in patients that received
injections
of buffered PRP into the tendon area of maximum tenderness. The
treatment
groups received PRP that was 5.4-fold higher concentration than
their
whole blood. The control groups received the same injection technique
with
bupivacaine, but did not see the improvement that the PRP group did. It
can,
therefore, be concluded that the injection into the tendon alone was not
enough
to stimulate healing. The authors hypothesize that the concentrated
growth
factors in PRP work together to initiate the healing response. Tendon
improvement
could be due to increased collagen Type I production from the
tendon
fibroblasts [79], or from increased angiogenesis into the site [80].
As
with the preclinical studies, the actual dose of platelets delivered or the
concentration
of growth factors is not always reported in the clinical studies.
This
makes it difficult to determine the correct platelet dose for each surgical
application.
In vitro experiments
have shown a dose-dependent increase in
stem
cell proliferation with a dose of up to a 10-fold increase in platelets over
baseline
[81–82]. Combined with DBM in an ectopic implantation model,
a
dose-dependent inhibition of bone formation was seen with recombinant
PDGF
[44]. However, as mentioned earlier, at doses normally found in a PRP,
a
slight increase in bone formation was seen. Many growth factors exhibit this
biphasic
response, with stimulatory effects on bone formation at lower doses
and
inhibitory effects at high doses [25–29].
One
study evaluated the dose-dependent response of bone formation with
PRP
around an implant in a rabbit model [46]. In this study, three levels of
platelet
concentration were compared. The lowest concentration was 164,000
to
373,000 platelets/ìl (0.5–1.5X fold
increase over whole blood), an intermediate
dose
was 503,000 to 1,729,000 platelets/ìl
(2-6X fold increase over
whole
blood) and a high dose was 1,845,000 to 3,200,000 platelets/ìl (9–11X
fold
increase over whole blood). At four weeks only the intermediate group had
significant
increase of bone. From this study the authors draw the conclusion
that
the optimum dose of PRP concentration is 1,000,000 platelets/ìl [46].
26.5. Future Trends and Needs
Clinical
utilization of PRP will continue to evolve. Future devices will provide
PRP
faster and more efficiently, with more customization of end level products
such
as fibrinogen concentration or output volume. Development of better
delivery
devices and methods to combine PRP with various matrices will also
continue
to emerge. Concurrently, more Level I and Level II evidence studies
will
need to be completed to further refine the uses of PRP, matching clinical
indications
with the right matrix and cell technologies. Additionally, designing
these
studies with the appropriate follow-up time-points will be critical to
capture
the clinical benefits of PRP. It is clear from the review of the studies
to date that a one-size-fits-all solution for
all PRP applications does not exist.
The
choice of the appropriate matrix and, when required, fixation technique,
will
need to be coupled to each application that PRP finds utility. In addition
to
defining the clinical utilizations, better characterization of the PRP products
should
be included in the studies to help elucidate the correct platelet
concentration
for each application.
26.6. Conclusions
PRP
has demonstrated numerous clinical benefits to patients [1, 3–4, 6]. Better
matching
of clinical indication to the right matrices and/or requirement of cell
delivery
will need to be determined in future evaluations. Better characterization
of
the product delivered and further refinement in clinical utility will
better
elucidate the dose of platelets that is optimal for each application. The
working
hypothesis is that the optimal platelet dose is 1,000,000 platelets/ìl
[46].
This number was determined from one clinical indication. It is reasonable
to
consider that this type of dosing study would be needed for each new
indication
for use, and that each indication would have a discrete optimal
platelet
dose.
PRP
remains a potentially powerful autologous therapy for surgeons that
want
to enhance bone formation. The addition of growth factors such as
PDGF,
TGF-â1 and VEGF will promote cellular bioactivity
by increasing
cell
proliferation, chemotaxis and angiogenesis. The benefits seen to date with
PRP’s
use will continue to encourage researchers to actively investigate the
use of PRP in orthopedics and in other fields
of medicine [72].
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