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complication rates stem cell procedures – Regenexx

February 29th, 2020 7:44 am

Given the quite reasonable concerns this past week over the blinding of three womenby a stem cell clinic injecting fat stem cells into eyes, I thought it was time to take a look at stem-cell-procedure complications. All medical procedures have complications. So what bar can we use to see if those complications are reasonable, and how should those be reported and measured?

First, to decide what complications might be reasonable, we need to understand the playing field of common side effects of conventional treatments. So what are some common complications in my world of orthopedic care, and how often do they happen?

So conventional procedures and widely used medications can have big time complications and rates!

To date, I think weve reported the most comprehensive paper on stem-cell-related complications. In more than 2,300 patients and 3,000 procedures, the total complication rate was 2.0%. Of those, four were deemed to be more serious and definitely related to the procedure by at least one independent reviewer not related to our group. Since this is out of 3.012, this is a serious-complication rate of 0.13%. Pretty small compared to the rates reported above for common orthopedic procedures.

This week we saw reported that the complication rate for the fat stem cell clinic that blinded three consecutive patients was approximately 0.01%. That seems about ten times less, despite the significant reported complications. Why? The data is an apples to oranges comparison.

For our reported data, a registry infrastructure was used where questionnaires were sent to every patient, and if they failed to respond, telephone calls were made. Based on conversations I have had with participating physicians, the stem cell outfit with the complications uses a passive system where the doctors are told to report the complications. Its likely that pinging patients about whats wrong can find more complications when compared to relying on a busy physician to report his or her complications.

Regrettably, the stem cell outfit that blinded these patients hasnt published any safety data on the widespread use of fat stem cells, so there is no research to review. This is concerning.

As you can see from the above risks, stem-cell-based orthopedic therapies have low-risk profiles when compared to conventional orthopedic procedures. Hence, when complications do occur, they are rare. However, to determine risk, efficacy is also needed as part of the calculus. So lets look at knee replacement.

So how good is knee replacement compared to garden-variety physical therapy (PT)? Not great. In a recent study (video below), 3 in 4 knee-replacement candidates undergoing PT instead of surgery decided not get a knee replacement after one year.Also you need to amputate 56 knees to find just one patient who reports more than a 15% functional improvement as a result of this maximally invasive surgery.

Looking at the relative efficacy of two procedures is hard without a head-to-head comparison trial. However, in the case of knee arthritis, we can comparetwo different studies that both compare to PT. In the above caseof knee replacement, we know how that invasive procedure fared, and below well look at a same-day stem cell procedure.

For the stem cell procedure, well be looking at the Regenexx bone-marrow-based version. Below is a graphic that discusses that out of more than 5,000 knee stem-cell-treated patients, as of this month, only about 12% went on to get a knee replacement despite their treatment at 12 years. This was based on 100% response rate from a random sample of 100 registry patients.

Below are the yet unpublished results of our randomized controlled trial where knee-replacement candidates were treated with our Regenexx knee stem cell procedure versus physical therapy:

The patients with a stem cell procedure report more knee function more quickly compared to the physical therapy group (listed here as Exercise Therapy). The PT group crossed over to the stem cell procedure at three months, which is why the PT data is only tracked for that long.

So comparing risks and benefits of these two therapies, the risk of knee replacement is significantly greater and the outcome based on a randomized controlled trial is likely no better than a stem cell injection. Hence, the risk/benefit of a Regenexx-protocol knee stem cell procedure is good compared to traditional care.

The upshot? While the risks of stem cell therapy are likely lower than most traditional treatments, for some indications, like injecting fat stem cells in the eye, that equation goes in the wrong direction. The goal with todays review was also to open a debate about when stem cell therapy is likely the better option.So lets have a reasonable discussion about stem cell risks and not throw the baby out with the bathwater!

See the article here:
complication rates stem cell procedures - Regenexx

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