What might the future hold?
“One of the strengths of this study is that by using a semi-automated approach, we feel that this is a more objective measure of radiographic hip OA, which hopefully will mean that it’s more reproducible in the future when repeating in other cohorts,” Dr. Faber said.
Asked what he thought the future held, Dr. Faber responded: “A grand vision might be that you’re already doing DEXA scans to look at bone health in individuals, and from those same DEXAs you could get information on radiographic hip OA,” he hypothesized.
“We do this with BMD and we feed that into FRAX [Fracture Risk Assessment Tool] to give someone a fracture risk. Could we do the same for total hip replacement to really identify people are high risk of OA in the future?” he wondered. “Then could we intervene to potentially prevent that ... or increase the duration that they’re healthy before they require the operation? There’s still plenty of work needed to get there.”
Dr. Faber and colleagues work was recently published in Rheumatology.
Dr. Faber had no conflicts of interest to disclose. Dr. Vincent had nothing to declare; her research is funded by Versus Arthritis, the Medical Research Council, the European Research Council, FOREUM (Foundation for Research in Rheumatology), the Dunhill Trust, and the Kennedy Trust for Rheumatology Research.