Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Freeze-dried secretome treatment for osteoarthritis in dogs and horses
By Berni, Priscilla et al.·Published in International journal of pharmaceutics·2025·Department of Veterinary Sciences, Italy·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Clinical evaluation of freeze-dried secretome (lyosecretome) for osteoarthritis: a controlled trial in dogs and preliminary safety assessment in horses.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 26 dogs with osteoarthritis (OA) received an injection of a freeze-dried secretome (lyosecretome) or a control substance to see which helped improve their condition. Owners reported that dogs treated with lyosecretome showed significant improvement in their ability to walk, play, and move easily after exercise, even though pain levels didn't change much. The treatment was safe, with no serious side effects noted. Overall, the lyosecretome appeared to help dogs with OA feel better and more active.
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Abstract
Most in vivo studies on MSC-secretome for osteoarthritis (OA) have relied on animal models, using products lacking pharmaceutical quality, not formulated for clinical use, and insufficiently characterized, limiting knowledge of its effectiveness. This study reports veterinary clinical trials on dogs and horses with spontaneous OA: in dogs (26 subjects), the trial is randomized, double-blinded, and controlled; in horses, 5 clinical cases were treated for safety assessment. Treatment consisted of hyaluronic acid with either lyosecretome - a freeze-dried, injectable MSC-secretome obtained through standardized GMP manufacturing - or mannitol, the lyosecretome excipient (control), intrarticularly administered. Patients underwent clinical evaluations and orthopedic assessments over an 80-day follow-up; dog-owner feedback was collected through questionnaires. Lyosecretome doesn't induce systemic adverse responses. In dogs, improvement following treatment - significant in favor of lyosecretome - was observed, especially in reducing lameness; although it did not demonstrate significant pain reduction, patients were significantly more likely to walk, play, and move easily after exercise. Proteomic investigation supported these efficacy findings, revealing lyosecretome proteins involved in inhibiting protease and hyaluronidase, as well as in regulating immune response and inflammation, and those associated with cartilage regeneration and antioxidant activity. These results support the beneficial effect of MSC-secretome on joint disorders and offer insights that may be relevant to human patients, given the similarities in OA pathophysiology between humans and dogs or horses.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40532750/