Overview
This clinical trial aims to evaluate and compare the efficacy and safety of CartiPRO, an approved intra-articular atelocollagen injection, versus Synovian injection for the relief of knee pain in patients with knee osteoarthritis. The investigational device is administered intra-articularly, with a second injection given 24 weeks after the first dose. Primary and secondary endpoints include changes in pain scores (VAS), functional assessments (WOMAC, SF-36), and safety evaluations over a 36-week period.
Description
Knee osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common joint disorder, primarily caused by the destruction of articular cartilage. Symptoms typically include joint pain, stiffness, and muscle contraction. According to the World Health Organization, in 2013, an estimated 10-15% of adults over the age of 60 were affected by OA, significantly impacting their quality of life.
Collagen degradation is a key feature of cartilage damage in OA. Collagen-based injectable materials, such as atelocollagen, are being explored as potential therapeutic options to restore collagen and improve clinical outcomes. Unlike other injectable substances like hyaluronic acid or corticosteroids, collagen's stable triple helix structure and long half-life make it more resistant to enzymatic degradation, offering a potentially longer-lasting effect.
Despite this, long-term and repeated use data for atelocollagen injections in knee OA are limited both domestically and internationally. This study aims to provide robust clinical evidence on the efficacy and safety of repeated intra-articular atelocollagen injections for knee pain relief in patients with knee OA.
This is a randomized, single-blind, active-controlled study comparing CartiPRO with Synovian. Subjects with knee OA and symptomatic knee pain will receive the investigational device intra-articularly. A second dose will be administered at 24 weeks. The primary outcome is the change in 100-mm weight-bearing pain (WBP) VAS score at 12 weeks compared to baseline.
Secondary outcomes include VAS changes in WBP, resting pain (RP), motion pain (MP), and night pain (NP) at multiple time points, as well as changes in WOMAC and SF-36 scores. Long-term efficacy will be assessed after re-injection. Safety assessments include adverse events, local reactions, physical examination, vital signs, and laboratory tests.
Study Visits:
Visit 1: Screening Visit 2: First injection (baseline) Visit 3: 2 weeks after injection Visit 4: 4 weeks after injection Visit 5: 12 weeks after injection Visit 6: 24 weeks after injection (second dose) Visit 7: 36 weeks after first injection
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria
- Age 19 years and older
- Diagnosed with unilateral or bilateral knee osteoarthritis according to American College of Rheumatology (ACR) criteria, with at least 3 of the following 6 features:
- Age ≥50 years
- Morning stiffness \<30 minutes
- Crepitus on active motion
- Bony tenderness
- Bony enlargement
- No palpable warmth
- Radiographic evidence of Kellgren-Lawrence grade I, II, or III osteoarthritis within 6 months prior to screening or at screening visit
- Weight-bearing pain Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) score ≥40 mm in at least one knee joint at screening
- Able to walk without assistive devices (walkers or canes), OR if using a walking aid routinely for past 6 months, able to continue using the same device throughout the study
- Able to understand and complete efficacy assessment questionnaires
- Willing and able to provide written informed consent
Exclusion Criteria
- Body Mass Index (BMI) ≥32 kg/m²
- Chronic inflammatory joint disease (e.g., rheumatoid arthritis)
- Inflammatory joint disease (e.g., septic arthritis)
- Secondary knee osteoarthritis due to ochronosis, hemochromatosis, or systemic disease
- Painful musculoskeletal conditions (e.g., Sudeck's atrophy, Paget's disease, herniated intervertebral disc)
- Polyarticular disease with severe osteoarthritis in other joints (e.g., hip) that may affect knee pain evaluation
- Radiographic evidence of definite loss of patellofemoral joint space
- Moderate to severe joint effusion confirmed by positive patellar tap test or equivalent
- History of myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, other serious cardiac disease, or uncontrolled hypertension (≥140/90 mmHg despite treatment with ≥3 antihypertensive agents)
- History of autoimmune disease
- Active infection requiring parenteral antibiotics
- History of psychiatric disorder or epilepsy
- Cancer diagnosis within 5 years prior to screening
- Uncontrolled type 1 or type 2 diabetes mellitus (HbA1c \>7%)
- Surgical procedures (including arthroscopy) on target knee within 1 year (surgery on contralateral knee or hip may be exclusionary if it could affect target knee assessment)
- Intra-articular corticosteroid injection into target knee within 12 weeks
- Systemic corticosteroid use within 4 weeks (topical and inhaled corticosteroids permitted)
- Surgery or radiation therapy to knee joint within 12 weeks, or not fully recovered from side effects
- Immunosuppressive therapy (e.g., Cyclosporine A, Azathioprine) within 6 weeks
- Intra-articular injections (e.g., hyaluronic acid) into knee joint within 6 months
- Prohibited concomitant medications within 2 weeks (unless washout period is adequate)
- Anticoagulants (e.g., warfarin, NOACs), antiplatelet agents (e.g., aspirin \>100 mg/day, clopidogrel; low-dose aspirin ≤100 mg/day permitted), thrombolytic agents (e.g., urokinase, alteplase), or Vitamin E \>1000 IU/day within 2 weeks (unless adequate washout)
- Habitual use (≥3 months) of psychoactive drugs or narcotic analgesics that may affect pain perception
- History of cell therapy or gene therapy to target joint
- Planned cell therapy or gene therapy to target joint
- Abnormal laboratory values at screening:
- ALT, AST, BUN, or serum creatinine \>2× upper limit of normal
- Engaged in high-intensity aerobic or heavy anaerobic exercise that may affect the knee joint
- Dermatological disease at injection site or site deemed unsuitable for injection
- Ligament instability of Grade II or higher in target knee (Grade 0: none; Grade I: 0-5 mm; Grade II: 5-10 mm; Grade III: \>10 mm)
- Known hypersensitivity to investigational product or its components
- Pregnant or breastfeeding women
- Women or men of childbearing potential unwilling to use acceptable contraception during study (acceptable methods: intrauterine device, tubal ligation, sterilization surgery, condom or diaphragm with spermicide, natural family planning)
- Participation in another clinical trial within 4 weeks
- Cognitive impairment or dementia preventing informed consent
- Any other condition that makes the subject unsuitable for study participation per investigator judgment