Clinical Inquiries question
Is platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injection an effective treatment for rotator cuff disease?
Evidence-based answer
In non-operative treatment of rotator cuff injuries, PRP injection did not improve functional outcomes or pain scores when compared with saline solution placebo, dry needling, or corticosteroid injection (strength of recommendation A: systematic review of randomized controlled trials [RCTs] with some methodologic flaws). Surgical adjunctive PRP injection inconsistently produced statistically significant improvements in pain and function of minimal clinical significance (less than 5%) (strength of recommendation B: systematic review of RCTs). Overall, PRP injection in the treatment of rotator cuff disease showed inconsistent results with moderate to high risk of bias.
Evidence summary
A systematic review of 5 RCTs (N = 214, 108 injected with PRP and 106 controls) compared PRP injection with saline solution injection, formal exercise therapy, dry needling, or corticosteroid injection. Overall, 61.6% of participants were female. Non-randomized studies, retrospective studies, reviews, laboratory studies, non–English language studies, and non–peer-reviewed studies were excluded. Studies using PRP injection as a surgical adjunct were also excluded. Incomplete outcome data limited 4 of the 5 studies.1
In 1 of the 5 RCTs comparing PRP injection to saline solution placebo, there was no significant difference in Western Ontario Rotator Cuff Index score, Shoulder Pain and Disability Index (SPADI) score, visual analogue scale (VAS) score, or range of motion (Box 1 and Table 1).1-5
Summary of RCTs
Two of the other RCTs compared PRP injection to formal exercise therapy. In 1 of these RCTs, at 1- and 3-month follow-up, VAS scores statistically significantly improved in the exercise therapy group compared to the PRP injection group. At 6-month follow-up, there was no significant difference in VAS score between the groups. At final follow-up, exercise therapy resulted in improved Western Ontario Rotator Cuff Index score and abduction range of motion, and there was no difference in Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand (DASH) score (Box 1).1
In the second exercise-comparator RCT, participants were given weekly PRP injections for 3 weeks, with final follow-up at 1 year. Both groups had improved range of motion. Flexion, extension, abduction, and external rotation degrees were statistically significantly higher in the exercise therapy group than in the PRP injection group. Both groups had statistically significantly improved DASH scores, but there was no difference in DASH scores between the treatment groups at final follow-up. In both groups, VAS scores statistically significantly improved.2
A 2013 RCT compared PRP injection to dry needling. Both groups showed improvement in SPADI scores. Both groups achieved statistically significant improvement from 6 weeks to 6 months after initial injection. The authors reported that the PRP injection group had statistically significant improvement in their SPADI scores (P < .05) compared with the dry needling group. However, PRP injection did not produce significant differences in SPADI scores for total pain or for total disability.3
The final RCT compared PRP injection to corticosteroid injection. At 3 months, participants in the PRP injection group had better results compared with the corticosteroid injection group on the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons assessment, the Constant-Murley Score (CMS), the Simple Shoulder Test, and the VAS (Box 1). However, at 6 months, which was the final follow-up, no significant difference occurred in any of the outcome measures.1
Platelet-rich plasma injection as a surgical adjunct. A meta-analysis looking at PRP injection as an adjunct to arthroscopy repair of rotator cuff tears included 12 RCTs (N = 781 patients; 391 PRP injected and 390 control). Overall, 54.7% of participants were female. Inclusion criteria included RCTs or quasi-RCTs published in English in a peer-reviewed journal. Non-randomized, retrospective, review, and basic science studies were excluded. The authors rated the reviewed studies—using the Jadad 5-point scale—as at low risk of bias, despite 10 of the 12 studies not using control injections.4
Platelet-rich plasma injection scores were 2.5% better than control on the CMS (85.6 for PRP injection vs 83.1 for control; P < .05), 2.8% better than control on the University of California Los Angeles Shoulder Scale (Box 1; 30.9 for PRP injection vs 29.9 for control; P < .05), and 14% better than control on a VAS 30 days after the operation (2.9 for PRP injection vs 4.3 for control; P < .05) and 2% better at final follow-up (1.2 for PRP injection vs 1.4 for control; P < .05).4
A second meta-analysis with 17 RCTs evaluated surgical adjunct PRP injection versus surgical repair without PRP injection (N = 1116 patients; 545 PRP injection and 571 control). Overall, 55.7% of participants were female. Exclusion criteria included non–English language articles and non–level 1 studies. Follow-up time varied between short term (up to 6.5 months of follow-up) and long term (> 1 year of follow-up, if available). The data were assessed using funnel plots and Egger tests; potential publication bias complicated by small study effects was found for the University of California Los Angeles Shoulder Scale and the VAS.5 Long-term retear rates greatly decreased in groups treated with PRP injection. Several patient-reported outcome measures (CMS, VAS), healing rates, and pain levels were higher in PRP-injected patients, but this meta-analysis noted failure to reach a clinically important difference.5
Recommendations from others
The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons lists PRP injection in the treatment of rotator cuff disease as a limited-evidence recommendation, citing variability in high-quality study findings.6
Notes
Clinical Inquiries are author-formulated questions that are answered with the best available current evidence, written by family medicine residency faculty and their residents through the Family Physician Inquiries Network. The strength of recommendations and the level of evidence for individual studies are rated using criteria developed by the Evidence-Based Medicine Working Group (www.cebm.net). The Family Physicians Inquiries Network Clinical Inquiries series in Canadian Family Physician is coordinated by Rick Guthmann, MD, MPH, Editor-in-Chief for the series. If interested in submitting questions or writing answers for this series, go to www.fpin.org or e-mail ci{at}fpin.org.
©Family Physicians Inquiries Network. Used with permission.
Footnotes
Competing interests
None declared
- Copyright© the College of Family Physicians of Canada