For middle-aged or older adults with symptomatic early-to-moderate hip OA who wish to defer or avoid joint replacement, intra-articular cell therapy offers a tissue-preserving option with modest risk. For young patients with severe OA from prior trauma, the high cost and uncertain long-term durability must be weighed against eventual surgical replacement. For asymptomatic radiographic OA, treatment is not justified.
Hip osteoarthritis (OA) develops when protective cartilage lining the femoral head and acetabulum undergoes progressive degradation—triggered by mechanical wear, inflammation, prior injury, or metabolic dysfunction—exposing the underlying bone. Cartilage lesions enlarge, bone spurs form, and synovial fluid (joint lubricant) becomes inflamed. Pain, stiffness, and loss of range of motion ensue, eventually limiting walking and activities of daily living. Cell therapy in hip OA leverages placental MSCs, engineered chondrocytes, and exosomes to deliver anti-inflammatory and cartilage-regenerative signals directly into the joint. Intra-articular injection (into the joint space) positions cells to interact with damaged cartilage surfaces, synovial tissue, and local immune cells, potentially slowing degeneration or promoting cartilage matrix repair.
Am I a candidate? → · Hip Osteoarthritis: full overview → · Hip Osteoarthritis cost → · Cost →
Medically reviewed by StemCellAtlas’s editorial team with Dr Tymur Lukyanenko (Orthopaedic Traumatologist · 20+ yrs clinical, 15+ yrs cell therapy) of partner clinic Stem Plus (Sofia), against ISSCR, FDA & EMA guidance. Educational information, not medical advice; figures indicative.
Médecine régénérative certifiée GMP au cœur de l'UE — à partir de 3 000–8 000 €, une fraction des prix américains ou allemands. Protocoles personnalisés pour patients de plus de 50 pays.
Évaluation médicale gratuite