Injectable Biologics for the Treatment of Degenerative Disc Disease

Curr Rev Musculoskelet Med. 2020 Dec;13(6):680-687. doi: 10.1007/s12178-020-09668-2.

Abstract

Purpose of review: Spinal pain and associated disability is a leading cause of morbidity worldwide that has a strong association with degenerative disc disease (DDD). Biologically based therapies to treat DDD face significant challenges posed by the unique milieu of the environment within the intervertebral disc, and many promising therapies are in the early stages of development. Patient selection, reasonable therapeutic goals, approach, and timing will need to be discerned to successfully translate potential therapeutics. This review provides a brief overview of the status of intradiscal biologic therapies.

Recent findings: Proposed systemic delivery of therapeutic agents has not progressed very much in large part due to the risk of adverse events in remote tissues plus the very limited vascular supply and therefore questionable delivery to the intervertebral disc nucleus pulposus. Intradiscal delivery of therapeutic proteins shows good potential for clinical trials and translation with encouraging results from large animal pre-clinical studies plus an enhanced understanding of the biology of DDD. There are a few cell-based therapies currently under pre-clinical and clinical trial investigation; however, these attempts continue to be hampered by unknown if any, mechanism of action, no downstream detection of transplanted cells, mixed results concerning efficacy, small sample numbers, and a lack of objective evidence of pain mediation. Treatment of DDD using biologically based therapeutics is a widely sought-after goal; however, potential therapies need to address pain and disability in larger, well-controlled studies.

Keywords: Back pain; Disc injections; Intervertebral disc disease; Stem cell treatment.

Publication types

  • Review