Special Announcement - Now Screening for FDA Approved Stem Cell Study
Dr. Mitchell Sheinkop has completed training and is credentialed for an FDA-approved stem cell clinical trial for knee arthritis. Our clinic is now screening patients for this trial. Contact us at 312-475-1893 for details. Click here to learn more.

When it comes to Orthobiologics, what’s in and what’s out

Out is routine Medicare and insurance coverage indemnification of hyaluronic acid injections for osteoarthritic joints other than the knee. Additionally, several insurance carriers are now requiring pre-certification to determine if they will even cover hyaluronic acid injections of the knee. The phenomenon was first reported in Florida but now the reduction in coverage is spreading across the country including Illinois. A physician may decide to proceed with the single, thee part or at times five part injection series but it would be at the expense of the patient if insurance and Medicare deny coverage. The reason behind the decision has to do with long-term studies that fail to validate the claims of the many advertisements you may see on television or find in the newspaper concerning the various forms of hyaluronic acid as a gel.

Increasingly in is Amniotic Fluid Concentrate for Osteoarthritis even though not covered by Medicare or Insurance. The clinical trial regarding outcomes for said therapy are incomplete; and to the best of my knowledge, the only source of Amniotic Fluid Concentrate providers seriously investigating results is MiMedx, out of Marietta, Georgia. Nevertheless, there seems to be an ever-increasing presence of Amniotic Fluid Concentrate offerings in the medical marketplace; unfortunately with unsupported claims of a stem cell content. There does seem to be a benefit from amniotic fluid concentrate in relieving the symptoms of an osteoarthritic joint but we have to wait for completion of current clinical trials to understand proper dosage and the length of action.

If you are a regular reader of this Blog, you will have become familiar with the term Subchondroplasty, an adjunct that I have been offering on occasion in conjunction with Bone Marrow Concentrate/Stem cell procedures into the joint. The successes of Subchondroplasty are such that the attention to the bone supporting the joint when working inside the joint is a subject gaining increased attention on a national basis. It looks like the future will be an increasing combination of both intra-articular and extra-articular intervention. While no one is able to confirm why the decompression of the bone adjacent to a joint relieves pain and why the adjunct of biologics improves longer-term outcomes, attention to bone defects in the area around the joint is proving to make a major difference in outcomes for arthritis. The question now is whether the best approach is Bone Marrow Concentrate inside and outside the joint or Bone Marrow Concentrate inside the joint with a synthetic augment outside the joint?

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“Whoever can supply them with illusions is easily their master”

“Whoever can supply them with illusions is easily their master”

This past Thursday, I was reading the Steve Chapman article in the Chicago Tribune and in the article, he quoted French Sociologist Gustav Le Bon who is best known for his 1895 work The Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind. While Chapman was trying to explain the Trump phenomenon, I saw an explanation as to why patients with arthritis make decisions as to how to proceed with care. At the recent Orthopedic and Biological Institute meeting in Las Vegas, speaker after speaker including napropaths, chiropractors, and non-board certified physicians presented a show and tell as to how they approach arthritis in this day of expanded access to orthobiologics. The explanations given approached the realm of fantasy; missing from the several day event were science, outcomes and results.

In the past several months, I have watched the entry of large orthopedic companies, with whom I have had a 40-year plus joint reconstruction relationships, into the growing specialty of Orthobiologics. These companies not only bring research support into our specialty of cellular (interventional) orthopedics, they carefully scrutinize those with whom they partner so the net result is evidence based patient care, research and education; not unfounded claims by “Camp Followers”. Witness the ad in a suburban newspaper placed by chiropractors offering stem cell containing amniotic fluid for the treatment of arthritis. I have written about this scientifically unfounded claim in this Blog before and I will emphasize it again, there are no living stem cells in amniotic fluid after processing, irradiating and fast thawing.

Assume if you would that you have an arthritic joint wherein your symptoms and limitations are no longer responsive to cortisone injections, anti-inflammatory medications, physical therapy, hyaluronic acid injections and the like. Your choices historically have been to either wait until end stage arthritis and then have a joint replacement or have a joint replacement early on and risk the potential adverse life changing consequences versus the potential benefits. Today there is an alternative option that will help postpone a joint replacement or possible help avoid one; it falls within the emerging discipline of Regenerative Medicine. Warning though, don’t be a victim of illusion; seek out a consultation and opinion from a board certified specialist who integrates cellular orthopedic patient care with research and education.

Call (312) 475-1893 to schedule your Orthobiologic consultation.

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“Whoever can supply them with illusions is easily their master”

The Place for Preemptive Bone Marrow Concentrate, Growth Factor Concentrate and Stem Cells

Just as I hope to improve patient activity with delivery of Bone Marrow Concentrate (BMC), Stem Cells and Concentrated Growth Factor for grades 2 and 3 osteoarthritis, might the success of a surgical procedure at the time of the initial trauma be significantly improved by the adjunct of BMC, Stem Cells and GFC thereby heading off a suboptimal response to an initial trauma surgery? Clearly, being driven as medical practice is in the US; that is to assess pain and then determine the anatomical treatments to relieve that pain has to change. It would make more sense for the surgeon to examine the “flaws” in anatomy, and judiciously treat with BMC before the flaw leads to frank pain and other issues. There is a need for the preemptive integration of Cellular Orthopedics in both the early arthritis and traumatic environments.

Bone bruises and bone edema are grossly under treated in the current orthopedic paradigm. If we would offer patients a Bone Marrow Concentrate intervention at the time of injury or in conjunction with surgery, it is possible, actually likely, that progression to higher arthritic scores will be greatly delayed.

To put things in a proper perspective, most patients expect an improvement of physical activity after total knee replacement. In a Feature Article How Much Improvement in Patient Activity Can Be Expected After TKA?, from a major university center in Germany, only 22% of TKR recipients met health-enhancing physical activity (HEPA) guidelines and only 31% achieved an active lifestyle. In contrast, our data indicates that greater than 70% of our patients who have undergone a bone marrow concentrate/stem cell intervention for osteoarthritis are active in recreational athletics and fitness pursuits including skiing, cycling, golfing, dancing, hunting, fly fishing, basketball, etc.

You the patient have to determine how to proceed and become an advocate for your own arthritic care be it interventional or preemptive. Clearly, the orthopedic surgical and sports medicine communities are behind in integrating orthobiologics into treatment protocols. To stay ahead and learn more be it arthritis or a recent injury requiring surgical repair, consider a cellular orthopedic consultation 312-475-1893 to schedule an appointment.

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“Whoever can supply them with illusions is easily their master”

Subchondroplasty Revisited

In the late summer of 2015, I was featured on a Fox cable news segment featuring a patient on whom I had performed a Bone Marrow Aspirate Concentrate –Stem Cell intervention coupled with a subchondroplasty procedure. The patient had experienced a poor result from a right Total Knee Replacement years earlier and was seeking a means of improving function and minimizing her left knee pain resulting from arthritis. Cartilage does not have a nerve supply so scientists and clinicians have long sought a clear understanding of the pain generator in osteoarthritis. While there still is not a clear-cut consensus, many clinicians are looking at the bone marrow lesions seen on an MRI when taken of an arthritic joint as the possible cause of pain associated with arthritis.

In the case of my patient, the combined BMAC-Stem Cell procedure coupled with the subchondroplasty had resulted in a very satisfactory outcome and such maintains at this time to the best of my knowledge. What was unique about my patient was the use of Bone Marrow Concentrate-Stem Cells to serve as the catalyst to effect healing of the bone marrow lesions. Up until that time, surgeons were using a synthetic calcium phosphate material to fill the defects above and below a joint surface with a mandatory three months of protected weight bearing and six months of altered physical activity. The introduction of Bone Marrow Concentrate with Stem cells required 48 hours of crutch support and six weeks of restricted physical activity.

My patient who received media attention served to foster a debate in the medical device industry as to the superior methodology serving as an adjunct to a subchondroplasty. First came the initial trial using a subchondroplasty procedure and synthetic filler with the inherent need for prolonged altered function and assisted ambulation. Now there are several clinical trials in development pertaining to an arthritic joint and the minimally invasive, percutaneous subchondroplasty comparing the synthetic filler to the Bone Marrow Aspirate Concentrate-stem cell adjunct; with the latter used both inside the joint and in the adjacent subchondral bone.

Are your arthritic joint changes affecting both the cartilage and the supporting bone? Is the actual source of your joint pain, the supporting bone or bone marrow lesions adjacent to the hip, knee, ankle or shoulder? It would require a complete examination and review of X-rays and an MRI for me to answer the question and advance the most appropriate therapeutic recommendation. Could it be that the failure of a regenerative intervention wasn’t a failure of the stem cells but rather a failure to address the real pain generator, subchondral bone?

Call for an assessment 312 475 1893 and I will try to answer that question.

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Cartilage repair revisited

Articulate cartilage has little to no capacity to undergo spontaneous repair because it has no blood supply nor is it able to regenerate across a physical gap. In order to restore cartilage in a skeletally mature patient, there is a need for outside help. In some settings, osteochondral transfer (bone with cartilage) may be harvested from elsewhere in a damaged joint and repositioned or relocated in that joint. In other settings, fresh cadaveric tissue (allograft) may be used. More recently, attempts have been directed at “engineering” cartilage. For engineering to take place, there are three requirements. First must come a matrix scaffold necessary to support tissue formation. Second are cells such as mesenchymal stem cells either from bone marrow or synovial membrane lining the joint. Third comes signaling molecules (cytokines) and growth factors. Platelet Rich Plasma is a source of signaling molecules. While Bone Marrow Concentrate doesn’t meet every need for tissue engineering, to the best of my knowledge at this time, there is nothing superior for a long term successful outcome either as an adjunct to a surgical procedure for a small defect or as a primary intervention for an arthritic joint.
There are several ways to measure success after an attempt at cartilage repair. For a contained or global defect, MRI is the primary outcome measure; whereas for osteoarthritis, the Outcome objective metrics I use have proven statistically significant and reproducible. I write this Blog in between presentations by the faculty at American Academy of Orthopedic Surgery Program: Articular Cartilage Restoration-The Modern Frontier. I came here to learn and learn I did about surgical procedures for contained injury. When it comes to osteoarthritis, I learned little but contributed much. No, I am not being egotistical, I am reporting what transpired at the meeting and what is transpiring in my practice. Of interest is the universal agreement by those treating the global defect with surgery and those of us who treat osteoarthritis with stem cells; including the supporting bone ( bone marrow edema)in the therapeutic algorithm via subchodndroplasty is paramount.
“He, who has data, need not shout”

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Health Care-Practice Guidelines and Grades of Recommendation must be based on Levels of Evidence and not anecdote or personal; that’s why I recommend what I do

Patients should participate in strengthening, low-impact aerobic exercises, and neuromuscular education; and engage in physical activity.

Rationale:

This recommendation is rated strong because of seven high-strength studies of which five showed beneficial outcomes. The exercise interventions were predominantly conducted under supervision, most often by a physical therapist.

I recommend weight loss for patients with symptomatic osteoarthritis of the knee and a BMI = 25.

Rationale:

Physical Function shows important improvement in outcomes for this patient population. Function also shows statistical improvement that is clinically significant. Diet and exercise combined achieves the best results.

I do not recommend using acupuncture in patients with symptomatic osteoarthritis of the knee

Rationale:

In Studies that comparing acupuncture to groups receiving non-intervention sham, usual care, or education, the majority, show no clinically significant improvement. While there is a lack of efficacy, there is no potential harm.

I am unable to recommend for or against the use of physical agents (including electrotherapeutic modalities) in patients with symptomatic osteoarthritis of the knee.

Rationale:

Due to the overall scientifically inconsistent findings for various physical agents and electrotherapeutic modalities, I am unable to make a recommendation for or against their use in patients with symptomatic osteoarthritis of the knee. To better understand the role of pulses in the management of arthritis, I am waiting for FDA approval to launch a clinical trial using a pulsed brace after a bone marrow concentrate/stem cell procedure.

I am unable to recommend for or against manual therapy in patients with symptomatic osteoarthritis of the knee.

Rationale:

Due to the lack of studies examining most manual therapy techniques, I am unable to opine. No studies evaluating joint mobilization, joint manipulation, chiropractic therapy, patellar mobilization, or myofascial release were found of scientific merit.

I cannot recommend using glucosamine and chondroitin for patients based on science; yet I personally use them

Rationale:

At this time, both glucosamine and chondroitin sulfate have been extensively studied. There is essentially no evidence that minimum clinically important outcomes have been achieved compared to placebo. There is no evidence of potential harm. The same may be said of the  neutraceuticals methylsulfonylmethane, omega-3, gelatin, vitamin D, dimethylsulfoxide, antioxidants, and coenzyme Q10. 01

I will not use needle lavage for patients with symptomatic osteoarthritis of the knee.

Rationale:

The published evidence shows little or no benefit from needle lavage in the treatment of osteoarthritis of the knee.

I am able to recommend growth factors and stem cells derived from Bone Marrow Aspirate in conjunction with platelet rich plasma for patients with symptomatic osteoarthritis of the knee.

Rationale:

I have an ever-increasing Data-Base of Outcome measurements to support my recommendations with Levels of Evidence at 1B and 3 with a Grade D governmental guideline Grading (the highest). You may learn more at the National Guideline Clearinghouse (http://www.guidelines.gov) or make an appointment at 847 390 7666

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