OVERVIEW

Chapter synopsis

This chapter summarizes the indications for, techniques to perform, and results of osteochondral allograft (OCA) transplantation for the treatment of symptomatic cartilage defects of the knee.

Important points

  • OCA is indicated for symptomatic, full-thickness chondral or osteochondral defects of the femur, tibia, or patella.

  • The dowel technique is most commonly used. The shell or small fragment technique is useful for complex or large, relatively inaccessible lesions such as the tibial plateau or posterior femoral condyles.

Clinical/surgical pearls

  • Ensure the graft has been received in acceptable condition and the size and laterality are appropriate before the patient is anesthetized.

  • A positioning device can be helpful to stabilize the extremity during surgery; this is particularly helpful for very posterior lesions.

  • Inspect the graft to determine the largest size graft(s) you can harvest prior to preparing the recipient site.

  • Most grafts should be only 5–8 mm thick (bone and cartilage combined).

  • Consider bone grafting cysts or deeper lesion with autograft obtained from recipient site preparation.

  • Perpendicularity to the site of repair and graft harvest is key to proper fit.

  • Different surgical instruments have different tightness of fit designs. Dilate the recipient site and bevel graft edges to minimize force required to seat the graft.

Clinical/surgical pitfalls

  • Do not allow graft to dry out during the surgical procedure.

  • Prior to insertion, lavage the graft to remove marrow elements.

  • Avoid excessive force while seating the graft to prevent chondrocyte death.

  • Grafts most commonly fail through the bone, not the cartilage.

  • Avoid excessive impact activities during the initial 4 months. The subchondral bone is only slowly substituted and is at its weakest several months after the operation.

Introduction

Osteochondral allografting (OCA) is a versatile surgical technique for treatment of a wide variety of chondral or osteochondral lesions in the knee (and other joints such as ankle, shoulder, and hip). OCA allows for transplantation of mature hyaline cartilage, containing viable chondrocytes to support the cartilage matrix, and a small amount of supporting subchondral bone that reproduce the architectural and histologic characteristics of native tissues adjacent to the lesion. It is helpful to consider osteochondral grafts as a composite of living hyaline cartilage and inert subchondral bone, because both have distinct properties that impact transplantation. Hyaline cartilage is attractive for allogeneic transplantation because it is avascular, with metabolic demands satisfied via synovial diffusion, and it is immunoprivileged, as living donor chondrocytes within the cartilage matrix are relatively shielded from detection by the host immune system. The osseous portion of the graft provides a mechanism for host tissue fixation to the graft and subsequent incorporation via creeping substitution. The osseous component is vascularized, but cells are not felt to survive transplantation.

Preoperative considerations

History

Given the spectrum of pathology amenable to treatment with OCA, the history will be pathology and patient-specific.

Important historical points

  • Inquire regarding location, timing, and onset of symptoms; focus on factors suggestive of intra-articular pathology (knee swelling, mechanical symptoms, instability)

  • History of prior knee injury or surgery

Physical examination

  • Joint swelling or effusion, range of motion (ROM), ligamentous stability

  • Observe gait and assess for limb malalignment or rotational deformities

  • Quadriceps atrophy correlates with severity and duration of symptoms

  • Tenderness to palpation at site of lesion is variable

  • Correlation of lesion location with patient symptoms is predictive of outcome of OCA.

Imaging

Radiography

The following radiographs are helpful:

  • Standing anteroposterior (AP) view with knee in full extension (use marker to correct for magnification)

    • Femoral lesions: measure width of involved condyle, allograft condyle within 2 mm of host condyle considered acceptable

    • Tibial lesions: measure coronal width of tibial plateau just distal to tibial plateau

  • Standing posteroanterior (PA) view with knee in 30 to 60 degrees of flexion (notch, tunnel, or Rosenberg view)

  • Lateral view (assess patella alta or baja)

  • Patellar sunrise view (assess joint space narrowing, dysplasia, tilt, maltracking)

  • Bilateral long-leg alignment views (assess mechanical alignment)

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