Tissue Integration of Calcium Phosphate Compound after Subchondroplasty: 4-Year Follow-Up in a 76-Year-Old Female Patient

Bioengineering (Basel). 2023 Feb 4;10(2):208. doi: 10.3390/bioengineering10020208.

Abstract

Subchondroplasty is a new minimally invasive surgical technique developed to treat bone marrow lesions (BML) and early osteoarthritis (OA). During the procedure, engineered calcium phosphate compound (CPC) is injected. It is claimed by the manufacturer that during the healing process, the CPC is replaced with new bone. The purpose of this study was to verify the replacement of CPC with new bone after subchondroplasty for the first time in humans. A 76-year old woman was referred for resistant medial knee pain. Standing radiographs showed varus knee OA and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed BML. She was treated with subchondroplasty of medial femoral condyle. Excellent relief of pain was achieved after procedure. Afterwards, the pain worsened, the radiographs confirmed the OA progression and the patient was treated with a total knee arthroplasty (TKA) 4 years after primary procedure. The resected bone was examined histologically and with micro-computed tomography (CT). Histologically, bone trabeculae of subcortical bone were embedded in the amorphous mass. However, no signs of CPC resorption and/or bone replacement have been found with micro-CT. In short term, excellent pain relief could be expected after the subchondroplasty procedure. However, there was no replacement of CPC with bone and the technique probably did not influence the natural process of knee OA.

Keywords: arthroplasty; biomedical device; bone tissue regeneration; calcium phosphate compound; implant interface; knee; micro-CT; orthopedic implant; osteoarthritis; subchondroplasty.

Grants and funding

This research was conducted at University Medical Centre Maribor and received no external funding. The APC was funded by University Medical Centre Maribor, Slovenia. The micro-CT analysis was supported by funding from the Slovenian Research Agency to »Infrastructural Center Microscopy of Biological Samples« (MRIC UL, I0-0022-0481-08), at Biotechnical Faculty, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia.