“The results of our case review are encouraging,” said Donald J. Meyer, MD, PhD, the study’s primary author. “Currently, when conservative treatment measures fail, therapeutic options are limited for individuals with back pain due to disc degeneration. Many resort to disc surgery or spinal fusion with mediocre results. Our goal is to help develop a safe, natural method to boost the body’s own capacity to heal discogenic pain.”
Patients were informed of the study’s experimental nature and gave informed consent. During the procedure, investigators harvested 60 cc iliac bone-marrow aspirate and concentrated it in a centrifuge to obtain bone-marrow aspirate cellular concentrate (BMAC). They then injected BMAC into each affected lumbar disc annulus using a 22-gauge Chiba needle under fluoroscopy. This was followed by the injection of an additional small amount of BMAC immediately external to the annulus. A maximum of 2 discs were treated.
At 5-24 months following treatment, patients reported changes in back pain ranging from complete pain relief to no improvement. No patient reported a worsening of pain, and no complications occurred. All subjects who experienced pain relief also reported significant improvement in activity tolerance or a reduction in pain medication use, or both.
A future prospective study is warranted, the authors concluded, to examine whether
biologic autograft treatment may provide a safe and effective therapy for lumbar discogenic pain.
Poster 203 – Lumbar Disc Biologic Autograft Injection of Bone Marrow Concentrate for Treatment of Low Back Pain: Retrospective Review of 22 Consecutive Cases
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