PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2025

Clinical relevance of engineered cartilage maturation in a randomized multicenter trial for articular cartilage repair

Mumme M, Wixmerten A, et al.

Science Translational Medicine

University of Basel, University Hospital Basel, University of Zurich, University of Zagreb, University of Milan, University of Freiburg, Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Fraunhofer ISC, University Hospital Würzburg, Medacta International SA, University Children’s Hospital Basel

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This multicenter, randomized phase II clinical trial evaluated whether maturation of autologous nasal chondrocyte–based engineered cartilage (N-TEC) before implantation improves articular cartilage repair outcomes compared with immature neocartilage (N-CAM). Matured N-TEC grafts cultured for 14 days exhibited greater collagen II and glycosaminoglycan content, increased stiffness, and more homogeneous matrix organization. At 24 months, patients treated with N-TEC showed significantly higher KOOS and MOCART scores, reduced pain, and improved graft integration relative to N-CAM. The results demonstrate that biomechanical maturation of engineered cartilage enhances clinical function and durability of cartilage repair.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

MicroTester

Biomechanical characterization of N-CAM and N-TEC grafts was performed using a CellScale MicroTester G2 to quantify compressive modulus and stress–strain behavior prior to implantation. Cylindrical grafts (4 mm × 2 mm) were tested in PBS at 37 °C under 0.5 mm min⁻¹ loading rate. The matured N-TEC grafts exhibited an average compressive modulus of ~0.35 ± 0.06 MPa versus 0.18 ± 0.05 MPa for N-CAM constructs, confirming that mechanical maturation paralleled increased matrix density and collagen organization.
AUTHORS

Marcus Mumme, Anke Wixmerten, Alan Ivkovic, Giuseppe M. Peretti, Tayfun Yilmaz, Stephan Reppenhagen, Oliver Pullig, Sylvie Miot, Kaywan Izadpanah, Marcel Jakob, Laura Mangiavini, Corrado Sosio, Filip Vuletic, Oliver Bieri, Stefano Biguzzi, Brigitta Gahl, Gyözö Lehoczky, Rudolf Vukojevic, Sebastian Häusner, Anna Gryadunova, Martin Haug, Andrea Barbero, Ivan Martin.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Science Translational Medicine

YEAR

2025

INSTITUTIONS

University of Basel, University Hospital Basel, University of Zurich, University of Zagreb, University of Milan, University of Freiburg, Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Fraunhofer ISC, University Hospital Würzburg, Medacta International SA, University Children’s Hospital Basel

COUNTRIES

Croatia, Germany, Italy, Switzerland

INSTRUMENT USED

MicroTester

TESTING METHODS

Compression TestingHydrated and Temperature Controlled TestingMicro-Mechanical Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

Cartilage and Meniscus MechanicsInjectable & Regenerative BiomaterialsMusculoskeletal Tissue Engineering & Mechanics

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