A Study of MACI in Patients Aged 10 to 17 Years With Symptomatic Chondral or Osteochondral Defects of the Knee
Purpose
The objective of this study is to compare the efficacy and safety of MACI® vs arthroscopic microfracture in the treatment of participants aged 10 to 17 years with symptomatic articular chondral or osteochondral defects of the knee.
Conditions
- Chondral Defect
- Osteochondritis Dissecans (OCD)
- Articular Cartilage Defect
- Articular Cartilage Disorder of Knee
Eligibility
- Eligible Ages
- Between 10 Years and 17 Years
- Eligible Sex
- All
- Accepts Healthy Volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria
- Symptomatic cartilage or osteochondral defects - One or more International Cartilage Repair Society (ICRS) Grade III or IV chondral or unsalvageable osteochondral defects located on the femoral condyles and/or trochlea amenable to treatment with the surgical procedure determined at randomization (MACI or microfracture). 1. Concurrent ICRS Grade I and II defects are acceptable on the tibia if they remain untreated (or are treated with debridement only) at the time of study treatment. 2. Participants with a potentially re-attachable osteochondral fragment, identified by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and that has not previously been repaired, may be consented to the study and undergo baseline assessments per protocol and prior to confirmatory arthroscopy (Visit 2). At arthroscopy, an attempt will be made to reattach the osteochondral fragment. If this is successful, the participant will be excluded from the study and deemed an intra-operative screen failure. If the attempted reattachment fails and no other
Exclusion Criteria
apply, the participant may continue in the PEAK study: a MACI biopsy will be taken, the participant will be randomized and treated per protocol. - At least 1 defect size ≥1.5 cm2 on the patella, femoral condyles and/or the trochlea; defects include OCD lesions with a bone lesion depth of ≤6 mm and does not require a bone graft. - Salvageable OCD lesions must have failed prior conservative and a reparative treatment, and the participant still experiences pain associated with the osteochondral lesion. Participants with defects as a result of trauma or unknown etiology are eligible regardless of prior treatments. - Stable target knee (i.e., anterior and posterior cruciate ligaments should be free of laxity as well as stable and intact). Ligament repair or reconstruction procedures are allowed prior to screening arthroscopy. - Intact meniscus or partial meniscus (at least 50% of functional meniscus remaining) in the target knee. Meniscal repair or resection might be performed either staged or concurrent with the cartilage repair procedure provided that the surgeon was able to confirm that at least 50% of functional meniscus would remain after the corrective meniscal treatment. - Written informed consent Exclusion Criteria: - Any surgery on the target knee joint within 6 months prior to Screening (not including diagnostic arthroscopy) - Previous investigational drug or device use within 3 months prior to Screening - Avascular necrosis of the target knee (other than potential OCD lesion to be treated) - Participants with uninvolved open growth plates where the surgery necessitates crossing the growth plate, or where the depth of the lesion crosses the growth plate - ICRS Grade III or IV chondral or unsalvageable osteochondral defects located on the tibia or any lesion that is bipolar to the index lesion - Malalignment requiring concurrent osteotomy to correct tibial-femoral or patella-femoral alignment (prior guided growth treatment is not exclusionary) - Symptomatic musculoskeletal conditions in the lower limbs that could impede measurement of efficacy for the target knee joint - Concomitant inflammatory disease or other conditions that affects the joints (eg, rheumatoid arthritis, metabolic bone disease, psoriasis, symptomatic chondrocalcinosis) - Known history of septic arthritis in the index knee joint - Current malignancy or treatment for malignancy within the past 5 years - Known history of hypersensitivity to gentamicin, other aminoglycosides, or products of porcine or bovine origin - Females who are pregnant or lactating - Participants who, in the opinion of the Investigator, have significant medical or psychosocial problems that warrant exclusion. Examples of significant problems included but are not limited to: - Any condition that has potential for negatively impacting intra or postoperative course - Conditions that limit compliance with rehabilitation program - Any condition that has potential for significantly limiting participant's ability to assess postoperative knee function - Any condition, psychiatric or otherwise, that would preclude informed consent/assent, consistent follow-up, or compliance with any aspect of the study - Participant is currently abusing drugs or alcohol or, in the opinion of the Investigator, at high risk for poor compliance
Study Design
- Phase
- Phase 3
- Study Type
- Interventional
- Allocation
- Randomized
- Intervention Model
- Parallel Assignment
- Primary Purpose
- Treatment
- Masking
- None (Open Label)
Arm Groups
| Arm | Description | Assigned Intervention |
|---|---|---|
|
Experimental MACI |
autologous cultured chondrocytes on porcine collagen membrane |
|
|
Other microfracture |
surgical procedure |
|
Recruiting Locations
More Details
- Status
- Recruiting
- Sponsor
- Vericel Corporation
Detailed Description
This is a 2-year prospective, multicenter, randomized, open-label, parallel group clinical trial; a total of 45 participants, ages 10 to 17 years, will be randomized to receive a 1-time treatment with MACI or microfracture (2:1, 30 MACI:15 microfracture). After meeting screening criteria at the initial visit, all participants will have a screening arthroscopy to further assess study eligibility. During the screening arthroscopy, participants will be further evaluated against entry criteria. Cartilage lesion size will be measured prior to any cartilage repair procedure and randomization. All participants who meet the eligibility criteria and are considered suitable for treatment in the study will have a cartilage biopsy taken prior to randomization to study treatment. Eligible participants will be randomized during the screening arthroscopy procedure to receive either MACI or microfracture treatment. Participants randomized to microfracture will undergo the procedure during the screening arthroscopy. All biopsied tissue will be sent to the Vericel manufacturing facility in Massachusetts, where the sample will be processed to isolate the autologous chondrocytes. Cells from participants randomized to the MACI group will be used in the preparation of the MACI implant; cells from participants randomized to the microfracture group will be cryopreserved. Participants randomized to treatment with MACI will return within 12 weeks of the screening arthroscopy to undergo the chondrocyte implantation procedure via arthrotomy. Participants are to follow a recommended postoperative rehabilitation program and compliance with the rehabilitation schedule will be monitored. Participants will be followed post-study treatment for 2 years (104 Weeks).