Overview
Osteoarthritis (OA) is a highly prevalent degenerative musculoskeletal disease and a major cause of chronic disability worldwide. Its multifactorial origin contributes to determine the heterogeneous phenotypes and one unmet need is the lack of biomarkers to predict the individual response. Platelet-rich-plasma (PRP) injection is a minimally invasive autologous blood-derived approach for which we plan to define specific knee profiles predictive of response. We will take advantage of a unique multidisciplinary approach aimed at analysing clinics, imaging, and biomarkers of associated with clinical response. We will focus on inflammatory (Wnt system, IL1 pathway, PTX3) and antioxidant (primarily, DPP3/Keap1/Nrf2) pathways. We foresee that our results will allow a better allocation of immunomodulatory and regenerative therapies for a personalized approach in knee OA thus maximising the effectiveness of the healthcare allocation.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- men/women, aged >40 - <75 years), OA grade 2-3, BMI <40, baseline WOMAC PAIN >1.75 -<4, >1 conservative therapy failed. Diagnosis of knee OA according to the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) classification criteria (Altman, 1986) .
- Ability to give informed consent.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Presence of active infection or abnormal knee effusion on Day 1 at pre-injection of PRP
- Diagnosis of chronic inflammatory disease (i.e. rheumatoid arthritis, reactive arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, chondromalacia, arthritis secondary to other inflammatory diseases)
- Untreated acute traumatic injury, presence of a symptomatic meniscal tear, valgus/varus deformity judged by the investigator to be clinically significant, in the index knee
- Recent (within 3-6 months) arthroscopy, open surgery, intra-articular steroid injections, intra-articular hyaluronic acid (HA) injections, systemic steroid treatment, malignancy
- Any serious, non-malignant, significant, acute, or chronic medical condition or active psychiatric illness that, in the investigator's opinion, could compromise patient safety, limit the patient's ability to complete the study, and/or compromise the objectives of the study.
- Recent (within 30 days) use of any investigational drug or device prior to screening