AI Article Synopsis

  • Emerging data indicates that human cells from extraembryonic tissues, like the placenta, may be effective in repairing musculoskeletal injuries, particularly in tendon healing.
  • In a study with male rats, the injection of placental expanded cells (PLX-PAD) after collagenase-induced tendon damage resulted in significantly improved tendon strength after 2 weeks compared to controls given saline.
  • Although the PLX-PAD treatment showed a temporary increase in tendon load capacity and an early inflammatory response, there were no significant long-term differences in tendon stiffness or collagen organization by the end of the study.

Article Abstract

Background: Emerging data suggest that human cells derived from extraembryonic tissues may have favorable musculoskeletal repair properties. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the injection of human placenta-derived mesenchymal-like stromal cells, termed placental expanded cells (PLX-PAD), would improve tendon healing in a preclinical model of tendinopathy.

Methods: Sixty male Sprague-Dawley rats underwent bilateral patellar tendon injection with either saline solution (control) or PLX-PAD cells (2 × 10 cells/100 µL) 6 days after collagenase injection to induce tendon degeneration. Animals were killed at specific time points for biomechanical, histological, and gene expression analyses of the healing patellar tendons.

Results: Biomechanical testing 2 weeks after the collagenase injury demonstrated better biomechanical properties in the tendons treated with PLX-PAD cells. The load to failure of the PLX-PAD-treated tendons was higher than that of the saline-solution-treated controls at 2 weeks (77.01 ± 10.51 versus 58.87 ± 11.97 N, p = 0.01). There was no significant difference between the 2 groups at 4 weeks. There were no differences in stiffness at either time point. Semiquantitative histological analysis demonstrated no significant differences in collagen organization or cellularity between the PLX-PAD and saline-solution-treated tendons. Gene expression analysis demonstrated higher levels of interleukin-1β (IL-1β) and IL-6 early in the healing process in the PLX-PAD-treated tendons.

Conclusions: Human placenta-derived cell therapy induced an early inflammatory response and a transient beneficial effect on tendon failure load in a model of collagenase-induced tendon degeneration.

Clinical Relevance: Human extraembryonic tissues, such as the placenta, are an emerging source of cells for musculoskeletal repair and may hold promise as a point-of-care cell therapy for tendon injuries.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2106/JBJS.15.01381DOI Listing

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