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Completed
NCT01842477
Evaluation of Efficacy and Safety of Autologous MSCs Combined to Biomaterials to Enhance Bone Healing
Conditions: Delayed Union After Fracture of Humerus, Tibial or Femur
Sex: All
Ages: 18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers: No
Phase: PHASE2
Enrollment: 30
Sponsor: Institut National de la Santé Et de la Recherche Médicale, France
Location: Depatment of Orthopaedic Surgery, Hôpital Henri Mondor Créteil
Summary
Bone grafting is widely used in hospitals to repair injured, aged or diseased skeletal tissue. In Europe, about one million patients encounter a surgical bone reconstruction annually and the numbers are increasing due to our ageing population. Bone grafting intends to facilitate bone healing through osteogenesis (i.e. bone generation) at the site of damage, but this is only attained presently by including cells capable of forming bone into the augmentation.
Bone autograft is the safest and most effective grafting procedure, since it contains patient's own bone growing cells (to enhance osteogenesis) and proteins (to enhance osteoinduction), and it providing a scaffold for the new bone to grow into (osteoconduction). However, bone autograft is limited in quantity (about 20 cc) and its harvesting (e.g. from the iliac crest) represents an additional surgical intervention, with frequent consequent pain and complications.
We hypothesize that using autologous bone marrow cells expanded in GMP facility surgically implanted with synthetic bone substitutes contribute to the resolution of the health and socioeconomic complications of delayed union or non-union after diaphyseal and metaphyseal-diaphyseal fractures with safety and efficacy.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
* Age 18 to 65, both sexes
* Traumatic isolated closed or open Gustilo I and II humerus, tibial or femur diaphyseal or metaphyseal-diaphyseal fracture status delayed union or non-union
* At least 3 months from acute fracture
* Able to provide informed consent, and signed informed consent
* Patients (by themselves) should have medical health care coverage to be included in a research study
* Able to understand and accept the study constraints
Exclusion Criteria:
* Pregnancy, breast feeding women and women who are of childbearing age and not practicing adequate birth control
* Participation in another therapeutic trial in the previous 3 months
* Delayed union or non-union related to iatrogeny
* Segmental bone loss requiring specific therapy (bone transport, large structural allograft, megaprosthesis, etc)
* Vascular or neural injury
* Other fractures causing interference with weight bearing
* Acute persistent chronic bacterial infections such as brucellosis, typhus, leprosy, relapsing fever, melioidosis and tularemia
* Visceral injuries of diseases interfering with callus formation (cranioencephalic trauma, etc.)
* History of bone harvesting on iliac crest contraindicating bone-marrow aspiration
* Corticoid or immunosuppressive therapy more than one week in the three months prior to study inclusion
* History of prior or concurrent diagnosis of HIV-, Syphilis, Hepatitis-B- or Hepatitis-C-infection (confirmed by serology or PCR)
* History of neoplasia or current neoplasia in any organ
* Subject legally protected, under legal guardianship, deprived of their liberty by judicial or administrative decision, subject of psychiatric care, or admission to a health facility.
* Impossibility to meet at the appointments for the follow up
* Insulin dependent diabetes
* Obesity (BMI \> 30)
* Autoimmune inflammatory disease
* Current treatment by biphosphonate or stopped in the three months prior to study inclusion.
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01842477). StuddyBuddy aggregates publicly available trial information.