Effect of Hyaluronic Acid on the Acceleration of Bone Fracture Healing: A Systematic Review
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Eligibility Criteria
2.1.1. Inclusion Criteria
2.1.2. Exclusion Criteria
2.2. Search Strategy
2.3. Study Selection
2.4. Study Coding and Data Extraction
2.5. Methodological Quality and Risk of Bias
3. Results
3.1. Search Results
3.2. Main Findings
Author | Study Type | Number and Age of Patients | Methods | Results | Bone Regeneration | Bone Quality | Bone Density | Egree of Angiogenesis |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Göçmen et al., 2016 [29] | Comparative split-mouth study | 10 patients (6 women, 4 men), mean age: 56.7 years | Comparison of HA and ultrasonic resorbable pin fixation (URPF) for space maintenance in non-grafted sinus lifting. Measurement of height of alveolar bone (HAB), reduction in sinus volume (RSV), bone density, and implant survival. | Postoperative HAB and RSV were significantly greater on the URPF side. No statistically significant difference in implant survival or bone quality. A 100% implant survival rate. No complications observed. | Both techniques led to sufficient bone height for implant placement, but URPF resulted in higher HAB and RSV. | No type I bone identified; 35% in type II, 50% in type III, and 15% in type IV. | Comparable between both techniques. | Not specifically reported in the study. |
Park et al., 2016 [25] | Open-label, single-arm, single-center, phase I/II clinical trial | 7 patients, mean age: 58.7 years | Application of allogeneic umbilical cord blood-derived mesenchymal stem cells (hUCB-MSCs) combined with hyaluronic acid hydrogel for cartilage regeneration in osteoarthritic patients. Follow-up for 7 years, evaluating safety, VAS pain scores, IKDC subjective knee scores, MRI findings, and histological assessment. | Maturing repair tissue observed at 12 weeks; significant improvement in pain and knee function maintained over 7 years. No severe adverse effects reported. Histological evaluation showed hyaline-like cartilage. MRI at 3 years showed persistent cartilage regeneration. | Not directly assessed; focus was on cartilage regeneration. | Cartilage regeneration resulted in hyaline-like cartilage with good structural properties. | MRI findings indicated high glycosaminoglycan (GAG) content, suggesting strong cartilage quality. | Not specifically measured, but good integration with surrounding cartilage was reported. |
Dogan et al., 2017 [30] | Randomized-controlled split-mouth study | 13 patients (8 women, 5 men), age range: 33–69 years | Comparison of collagenated heterologous bone graft (CHBG) alone versus CHBG + hyaluronic matrix for sinus augmentation. Micro-CT and histomorphometric analysis performed on bone biopsy samples after 4 months. | Significantly higher percentage of new bone in CHBG + hyaluronic matrix group compared to CHBG alone. No implant loss observed. | CHBG + hyaluronic matrix enhanced bone formation compared to CHBG alone. | Higher osseous stiffness observed in CHBG + hyaluronic matrix group. | Higher bone density in CHBG + hyaluronic matrix group. | Increased vascularization observed in CHBG + hyaluronic matrix group. |
Kir et al., 2019 [24] | Retrospective clinical study | Forty-four patients with atrophic midshaft clavicular nonunion, mean age 42.4 years | Comparison of iliac wing autograft with anatomical locking plate (ALP) fixation alone versus ALP + HA-based mesh. Assessed fracture healing time, clavicular length, Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand (DASH) score, and constant score over a 2-year follow-up. | Group with HA-based mesh showed significantly shorter fracture healing time (14.7 vs. 19.6 months), higher constant score (90.2 vs. 81.5), and better DASH score (7.3 vs. 17.5) compared to the control group. | HA-based mesh improved bone healing by enhancing osteogenesis and maintaining periosteal integrity. | Better bone healing and structural integrity in the HA-based mesh group. | Faster mineralization and improved bone regeneration in the HA-based mesh group. | HA-based mesh stimulated angiogenesis, improving fracture healing. |
Na et al., 2020 [27] | Retrospective comparative study | 81 cases assessed, 31 cases with kissing lesion, 25 in BMAC group, 14 in Cartistem group | Comparison of the cartilage regeneration between bone marrow aspirate concentrate (BMAC) and allogeneic hUCB-MSCs (Cartistem) in medial unicompartmental osteoarthritis after high tibial osteotomy. Evaluated IKDC, KSS, WOMAC, and ICRS CRA grading system through secondary arthroscopy. | Both groups showed clinical improvement, but no significant differences in clinical and radiologic outcomes. However, Cartistem showed significantly better cartilage regeneration compared to BMAC in second-look arthroscopy (p = 0.002, 0.000). | Cartistem resulted in higher quality cartilage regeneration compared to BMAC. | Grade II cartilage observed in 85.7% of Cartistem group vs. 40% in BMAC group. | Higher cartilage integrity observed in Cartistem group based on ICRS CRA grading. | Not specifically reported in the study. |
Velasco-Ortega et al., 2021 [26] | Randomized controlled trial | 24 patients undergoing maxillary sinus augmentation, divided into three groups | Comparison of anorganic bovine bone mineral (ABBM), tricalcium phosphate (TCP), and TCP with hyaluronic acid (TCP+HA) for maxillary sinus augmentation. Evaluated histomorphometric, clinical, and patient-reported outcomes after 9 months. | No significant difference in percentage of new bone among groups. Residual biomaterial was significantly higher in the ABBM group, while TCP and TCP+HA groups had significantly lower nonmineralized tissue. Implant insertion torque was higher in the ABBM group. | All groups showed sufficient bone regeneration for implant placement. | Higher mineralized tissue observed in ABBM group, suggesting better mechanical resistance. | No significant difference among groups. | Increased vascularization observed around biomaterials in TCP and TCP+HA groups. |
Liu et al., 2023 [28] | Experimental study (clinical and animal model) | 20 patients with femoral fractures and rat femoral fracture model | Investigated the role of Hyaluronan and Proteoglycan Link Protein 1 (HAPLN1) in osteogenic differentiation and fracture healing. Used human serum samples, a rat femoral fracture model, and MC3T3-E1 osteoblast cell line. Examined BMP4/Smad1/5/8 signaling pathway involvement. | HAPLN1 was significantly overexpressed in fracture healing. Silencing HAPLN1 inhibited osteogenic differentiation and mineralization in MC3T3-E1 cells. BMP4/Smad1/5/8 pathway was identified as a key regulator in HAPLN1-induced osteogenesis. | HAPLN1 promoted osteoblast differentiation and fracture healing by activating BMP4/Smad1/5/8 signaling. | Enhanced bone formation and mineralization observed with increased HAPLN1 expression. | HAPLN1 knockdown reduced osteoblast mineralization and alkaline phosphatase activity. | Not specifically reported, but improved bone regeneration was observed. |
Özdemir et al., 2023 [23] | Case report | Two cases: 42-year-old female with rheumatoid arthritis and glenoid defect; 19-year-old male with neglected Galeazzi fracture and radius non-union | Use of 3D-printed polycaprolactone (PCL) + hyaluronic acid-based scaffold for bone regeneration. One case involved reverse total shoulder arthroplasty, and the other involved open reduction and internal fixation of the radius. | Successful bone regeneration observed in both cases. The scaffold provided good integration, with no implant loosening or scaffold lysis over follow-up. Full range of motion achieved in both patients. | 3D-printed scaffold facilitated bone regeneration and provided structural support. | Good bone integration with maintained mechanical stability. | Improved bone density in scaffold-treated areas. | Not specifically reported, but good bone healing was observed. |
Kimball et al., 2024 [31] | Review study | Not specified, general review on bone marrow stimulation for osteochondral lesions | Analysis of bone marrow stimulation techniques for cartilage regeneration in osteochondral lesions of the talus. Discusses optimal lesion size, depth, and use of biological adjuvants. | Bone marrow stimulation is effective for lesions < 107.4 mm2 and <5 mm in depth. Larger lesions (>15 mm) require additional cartilage restoration techniques. Biological adjuvants improve outcomes. | Bone marrow stimulation induces cartilage repair but is limited by lesion size and depth. | Effectiveness depends on lesion chronicity and presence of cystic components. | Not directly measured but influenced by bone marrow stimulation success. | Biologic adjuvants can enhance angiogenesis and tissue repair. |
3.3. Quality Assessment and Risk of Bias
3.4. GRADE Quality Assessment
4. Discussion
4.1. Limitations
4.2. Implications for Practice, Policy, and Future Research
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
Abbreviation | Meaning |
ABBM | Anorganic Bovine Bone Mineral |
BMAC | Bone Marrow Aspirate Concentrate |
BMP | Bone Morphogenetic Protein |
CHBG | Collagenated Heterologous Bone Grafts |
GAG | Glycosaminoglycan |
GRADE | Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation |
HA | Hyaluronic Acid |
HAPLN1 | Hyaluronan and Proteoglycan Link Protein 1 |
hUCB-MSCs | Human Umbilical Cord Blood-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells |
ICRS CRA | International Cartilage Repair Society Cartilage Repair Assessment |
IKDC | International Knee Documentation Committee |
JBI | Joanna Briggs Institute |
micro-CT | Micro-computed Tomography |
MIS | Minimally Invasive Surgery |
MSCs | Mesenchymal Stem Cells |
OA | Osteoarthritis |
PCL | Poly-ε-caprolactone |
PICO | Population, Intervention, Comparison, Outcome |
PRISMA | Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses |
RCT | Randomized Controlled Trial |
ROB-2 | Risk of Bias Tool for Randomized Trials |
ROBINS-I | Risk of Bias In Non-randomized Studies-of Interventions |
TCP | Tricalcium Phosphate |
URPF | Ultrasonic Resorbable Pin Fixation |
VAS | Visual Analog Scale |
Appendix A
- Searches strings for electronic databases.
- The original search string was created in PubMed. The searches strings employed for Web of Science and MEDLINE via PubMed were translated using an automatic online tool (https://sr-accelerator.com/#/polyglot). Filters: 10 years and human.
- 1. Search strategy for PubMed. URL: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov on 25–27 February 2025
- (“Hyaluronic Acid” OR Hyaluronan OR “Hyaluronate alginate” OR “Sodium Hyaluronate” OR “Hyaluronic Gel” OR Hyaluronate OR Hyaluronidase) AND (“bone regene*” OR “Fracture Healing” OR Osteogenesis OR “Bone Formation” OR “Bone Repair” OR “Bone Healing” OR “Bone Regeneration”) AND (Osteotom* OR “Orthopedic Procedures” OR “Percutaneous Procedures” OR Osteosynthes* OR “Bone Surgery” OR “Fracture Fixation” OR “Bone Fracture Treatment” OR Orthopedics)
- Search strategy for Web of Science URL: https://www.webofscience.com/wos/alldb/basic-search on 25–27 February 2025
- (“Hyaluronic Acid” OR Hyaluronan OR “Hyaluronate alginate”) AND (“bone regene*” OR “Fracture Healing” OR Osteogenesis) AND (Osteotom* OR “Orthopedic Procedures” OR “percutaneous”)
- Search strategy for Scopus
- (TITLE-ABS-KEY (“Hyaluronic Acid” OR hyaluronan OR “Hyaluronate alginate”) AND TITLE-ABS-KEY (“bone regene*” OR “Fracture Healing” OR osteogenesis) AND TITLE-ABS-KEY (osteotom* OR “Orthopedic Procedures” OR “percutaneous”))
- Search EBSCOH
- (‘hyaluronic acid’ OR hyaluronan OR ‘hyaluronate alginate’) AND (‘bone regene*’ OR ‘fracture healing’ OR osteogenesis) AND (osteotom* OR ‘orthopedic procedures’ OR percutaneous)
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Section | Methodology |
---|---|
Search Strategy | Databases: PubMed, EbscoHost, Web of Science, and Scopus. Search string: (“Hyaluronic Acid” OR Hyaluronan OR “Hyaluronate alginate” OR “Sodium Hyaluronate” OR “Hyaluronic Gel” OR Hyaluronate OR Hyaluronidase) AND (“bone regene*” OR “Fracture Healing” OR Osteogenesis OR “Bone Formation” OR “Bone Repair” OR “Bone Healing” OR “Bone Regeneration”) AND (Osteotom* OR “Orthopedic Procedures” OR “Percutaneous Procedures” OR Osteosynthes* OR “Bone Surgery” OR “Fracture Fixation” OR “Bone Fracture Treatment” OR Orthopedics). Boolean operators and controlled vocabulary were used. |
Search Period | Time frame: Last 10 years. Final search dates: 25–28 February 2025. |
Study Selection | Two authors (H.F.S. and E.C.O.P.) independently reviewed titles and abstracts. The SR-Accelerator tool was used to resolve disagreements, with a third reviewer (J.F.T.) consulted when necessary. Mendeley was used to remove duplicate references. |
Tools Used | Online deduplication tool: SR-Accelerator Deduplicator. Excel for data management. RoB 2, ROBINS-I, JBI, and GRADE tools to assess methodological quality and risk of bias. |
Inclusion Criteria | Human studies published in the last 10 years. Focus on HA applied to bone consolidation in fractures and osteotomies. Use of imaging techniques and histological analysis to evaluate bone regeneration. |
Exclusion Criteria | Studies lacking sufficient information on HA application. Animal studies without clinical correlation in humans. Systematic reviews or meta-analyses without primary data. Publications in languages other than English or Spanish. Studies in which HA was not the primary therapeutic component under evaluation. |
Data Extraction | Two authors independently extracted and coded the following information: Author and year of publication. Type of HA used. Study design and applied interventions. Outcomes related to bone regeneration, bone quality and density, and angiogenesis. |
Synthesis Approach | Narrative synthesis combined with quantitative analysis. Effect sizes, certainty of evidence, and statistical outcomes were analyzed. Heterogeneity in study design and interventions was taken into account. |
PICO Assessment | Population: Adult patients with fractures or osteotomies. Intervention: Application of HA alone or in combination with bone grafts or other biomolecules. Comparison: Standard bone regeneration treatments without HA. Outcomes: Evaluation of accelerated bone consolidation, improved bone quality, graft integration, and angiogenesis. |
Author/Year | it. 1 | it. 2 | it. 3 | it. 4 | it. 5 | it. 6 | it. 7 | it. 8 | it. 9 | it. 10 | Overall Quality |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Özdemir et al. (2023) [23] | High risk | ||||||||||
Kimball et al. (2024) [31] | High risk | ||||||||||
Kir et al. 2019 [24] | Moderate |
Author/Year | it. 1 | it. 2 | it. 3 | it. 4 | it. 5 | it. 6 | it. 7 | it. 8 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Göçmen et al., 2016 [29] | ||||||||
Na et al., 2020 [27] | ||||||||
Liu et al., 2023 [28] |
Author/Year | it. 1 | it. 2 | it. 3 | it. 4 | it. 5 | it. 6 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Park et al., 2016 [25] | ||||||
Dogan et al., 2017 [30] | ||||||
Velasco-Ortega et al., 2021 [26] |
Author/Year | Study Design | Initial Quality | Risk of Bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Publication Bias | Final Quality |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Göçmen et al., 2016 [29] | Observational | Low | Moderate | Moderate | High | Low | High | Low |
Park et al., 2016 [25] | RCT | High | Moderate | Moderate | High | High | High | Moderate |
Dogan et al., 2017 [30] | RCT | High | Moderate | Low | High | Low | High | Moderate |
Kir et al., 2019 [24] | Observational | Low | High | High | Low | Moderate | Moderate | Low |
Na et al., 2020 [27] | Observational | Low | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | Low |
Velasco-Ortega et al., 2021 [26] | RCT | High | High | High | Moderate | High | High | High |
Liu et al., 2023 [28] | Observational | Low | High | High | Moderate | High | Low | Low |
Özdemir et al., 2023 [23] | Quantitative | Moderate | Moderate | Low | Low | High | High | Moderate |
Kimball et al., 2024 [31] | Quantitative | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | Low | Moderate | High | Moderate |
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Share and Cite
Surroca, H.F.; Pardo, E.C.; Ramírez-Andrés, L.; Nieto-Gonzalez, E.; Ferrer-Torregrosa, J.; Nieto-Garcia, E. Effect of Hyaluronic Acid on the Acceleration of Bone Fracture Healing: A Systematic Review. Biomedicines 2025, 13, 1353. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines13061353
Surroca HF, Pardo EC, Ramírez-Andrés L, Nieto-Gonzalez E, Ferrer-Torregrosa J, Nieto-Garcia E. Effect of Hyaluronic Acid on the Acceleration of Bone Fracture Healing: A Systematic Review. Biomedicines. 2025; 13(6):1353. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines13061353
Chicago/Turabian StyleSurroca, Helena Fuguet, Esther Caballé Pardo, Leonor Ramírez-Andrés, Elena Nieto-Gonzalez, Javier Ferrer-Torregrosa, and Eduardo Nieto-Garcia. 2025. "Effect of Hyaluronic Acid on the Acceleration of Bone Fracture Healing: A Systematic Review" Biomedicines 13, no. 6: 1353. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines13061353
APA StyleSurroca, H. F., Pardo, E. C., Ramírez-Andrés, L., Nieto-Gonzalez, E., Ferrer-Torregrosa, J., & Nieto-Garcia, E. (2025). Effect of Hyaluronic Acid on the Acceleration of Bone Fracture Healing: A Systematic Review. Biomedicines, 13(6), 1353. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines13061353