CAM Procedure with BMAC for Shoulder OA
Launched by SHANE A. SHAPIRO · Mar 29, 2021
Trial Information
Current as of June 27, 2025
Recruiting
Keywords
ClinConnect Summary
This clinical trial is studying a treatment called Bone Marrow Aspirate Concentrate (BMAC) for people with shoulder osteoarthritis (OA). The researchers want to learn more about the side effects of BMAC and how much of it is safe for patients. They are looking for men and women who are 50 years and older and have OA in one or both shoulders. To qualify, participants should have tried other treatments like physical therapy or anti-inflammatory medications for at least six months without enough improvement.
If you join this study, you will receive the BMAC treatment and be monitored for any side effects. It’s important to note that there are certain health conditions and recent treatments that may prevent someone from participating, such as having significant health issues, certain medications, or recent shoulder surgeries. Before participating, you will need to provide written consent after understanding all details about the study. If you think you might be eligible and are interested in learning more about this trial, please reach out to the study coordinators for further information.
Gender
ALL
Eligibility criteria
- • Inclusion Criteria
- • Male and Female subjects.
- • Subjects must be 50 years of age or older.
- • Subjects must have OA in a single or bilateral shoulder(s) with an inferior osteophyte measuring \<7 mm.
- • \> 1 mm joint space width in the study shoulder.
- • ASES score of 14.1 to 88.5
- • Osteoarthritis must be primary. Subjects must have previously tried 6 months of one of the following conservative treatments: activity modification, physical therapy, and anti-inflammatory or injection therapy.
- • Patients can provide written informed consent after the nature of the study is fully explained.
- • Exclusion Criteria
- • Patients with clinically significant abnormal hematology, serum chemistry, or urinalysis screening laboratory results. If the laboratory reports a single, non-clinically relevant, non-life-threatening result for any of these studies and is the only excluding factor it may be repeated 1 week later if the patient wishes. If the laboratory reports a single, non-clinically relevant, non-life-threatening result for any of these studies and is the only excluding factor it may be repeated 1 week later if the patient wishes. Normalization of that laboratory study will then be considered non-exclusionary. If repeat non-clinically relevant, non-life-threatening results do not normalize the patient may be further evaluated by a specialist or primary care provider to determine if lab result should be exclusionary.
- • Patients taking anti-inflammatory medications (prescription or over-the-counter), including herbal therapies, within 14 days of baseline visit.
- • Walch Type B2/C glenoid.
- • Patients taking anti-rheumatic disease medication (including methotrexate or other antimetabolites) within the 3 months prior to study entry.
- • Patients receiving injections to the treated shoulder within 3 months prior to study entry,
- • Patients who are pregnant or currently breast-feeding children. Females of childbearing potential must have a negative pregnancy test prior to receiving the study drug and will agree use adequate contraception (hormonal or barrier method or abstinence) from the time of screening to a period of 3 months following completion of the drug treatment cycle. Females of childbearing potential are defined as premenopausal and not surgically sterilized, or post-menopausal for fewer than 2 years. A urine pregnancy test will be performed prior to the administration of the study drug to confirm negative results. If the urine pregnancy test is positive, the study drug will not be administered and the result will be confirmed by a serum pregnancy test. Serum pregnancy tests will be performed at a central clinical laboratory, whereas urine pregnancy tests will be performed by qualified personnel using kit.
- • Patients with systemic, rheumatic or inflammatory disease of the shoulder or chondrocalcinosis, hemochromatosis, inflammatory arthritis, arthropathy of the shoulder associated with juxta-articular Paget's disease, ochronosis, hemophilic arthropathy, infectious arthritis, villonodular synovitis, and synovial chondromatosis.
- • Patients with ongoing infectious disease, including HIV and hepatitis.
- • Patients with clinically significant cardiovascular, renal, hepatic, endocrine disease, cancer, or diabetes.
- • Patients participating in a study of an experimental drug or medical device within 30 days of study entry.
- • Patients with hardware or implants in the affected shoulder.
- • Patients with previous open shoulder surgery or an arthroscopic procedure requiring structural repair with anchors and/or sutures.
- • Presence of large glenoid cysts
- • Opiate use within three months.
- • Patients taking Coumadin or Plavix
About Shane A. Shapiro
Shane A. Shapiro is a dedicated clinical trial sponsor committed to advancing medical research through innovative and ethical study designs. With a focus on enhancing patient outcomes, Shane A. Shapiro collaborates with healthcare professionals, regulatory bodies, and research institutions to facilitate robust clinical trials across various therapeutic areas. The organization prioritizes safety, compliance, and scientific integrity, ensuring that all trials adhere to the highest standards of quality and transparency. Through a patient-centered approach, Shane A. Shapiro aims to contribute to the development of groundbreaking therapies that address unmet medical needs.
Contacts
Jennifer Cobb
Immunology at National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Locations
Jacksonville, Florida, United States
Patients applied
Trial Officials
Bradley Schoch, MD
Principal Investigator
Mayo Clinic
Timeline
First submit
Trial launched
Trial updated
Estimated completion
Not reported
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