Author Interviews, NYU, Orthopedics / 10.08.2020
Injections of Adenosine into Mouse Joints Reversed Osteoarthritis
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Bruce N. Cronstein, MD
Paul R. Esserman Professor of Medicine
NYU School of Medicine
Director, NYU-H+H Clinical and Translational Science Institute
Director, Division of Translational Medicine
NYU Langone Health
New York, NY 10016
MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this study?
Response: Osteoarthritis is the most common type of arthritis affecting about 10% of the adult population and 25% of the population over 60. We had previously found that adenosine, a molecule generated by nearly all cell types, is critical for maintaining cartilage health by activating specific adenosine receptors on the surface of cells (A2A receptors). Moreover, giving adenosine into the joint could prevent deterioration of cartilage (progression of osteoarthritis) in a rat model of osteoarthritis. Because people do not usually go for treatment of osteoarthritis until they have developed symptoms we asked whether administration of adenosine or adenosine that had been modified to be a more potent and specific stimulus for A2A receptors, carried in fat bubbles called liposomes, could reverse osteoarthritis after it had already started.
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