Metformin linked to reduced osteoarthritis risk

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Patients taking metformin for type 2 diabetes had a lower risk of developing osteoarthritis than did patients taking a sulfonylurea, according to a cohort study published in JAMA Network Open. The findings jibe with those seen in a 2022 systematic review of preclinical and observational human studies finding potentially protective effects of metformin on osteoarthritis.

“Our study provides further, robust epidemiological evidence that metformin may be associated with protection in the development and progression of osteoarthritis in individuals with type 2 diabetes,” wrote Matthew C. Baker, MD, MS, an assistant professor of medicine in immunology and rheumatology at Stanford (Calif.) University, and his colleagues.

metformin_tablets_web.jpg

The findings also fit with the results of a poster presented at the Osteoarthritis Research Society International 2023 World Congress, although that abstract’s findings did not reach statistical significance.

In the published study, the researchers analyzed deidentified claims data from Optum’s Clinformatics Data Mart Database between December 2003 and December 2019. The database includes more than 15 million people with private insurance or Medicare Advantage Part D but does not include people with Medicaid, thereby excluding people from lower socioeconomic groups.

The researchers included all patients who were at least 40 years old, had type 2 diabetes, were taking metformin, and had been enrolled in the database for at least 1 uninterrupted year. They excluded anyone with type 1 diabetes or a prior diagnosis of osteoarthritis, inflammatory arthritis, or joint replacement. The authors then compared the incidence of osteoarthritis and joint replacement in these 20,937 participants to 20,937 control participants who were taking a sulfonylurea, matched to those taking metformin on the basis of age, sex, race, a comorbidity score, and duration of treatment. More than half the overall population (58%) was male with an average age of 62.

Patients needed to be on either drug for at least 3 months, but those who were initially treated with metformin before later taking a sulfonylurea could also be included and contribute to both groups. Those who first took a sulfonylurea and later switched to metformin were included only for the sulfonylurea group and censored after their switch to ensure the sulfonylurea group had enough participants. The comparison was further adjusted for age, sex, race, ethnicity, geographic region, education, comorbidities, and outpatient visit frequency.

The results revealed that those who were taking metformin were 24% less likely to develop osteoarthritis at least 3 months after starting the medication than were those taking a sulfonylurea (P < .001). The rate of joint replacements was not significantly different between those taking metformin and those taking a sulfonylurea. These two results did not change in a sensitivity analysis that compared patients who only ever took metformin or a sulfonylurea (as opposed to those who took one drug before switching to the other).

“When stratified by prior exposure to metformin within the sulfonylurea group, the observed benefit associated with metformin ... was attenuated in the people treated with a sulfonylurea with prior exposure to metformin, compared with those treated with a sulfonylurea with no prior exposure to metformin,” the authors further reported. A possible reason for this finding is that those taking a sulfonylurea after having previously taken metformin gained some protection from the earlier metformin exposure, the authors hypothesized.

This observational study could not show a causative effect from the metformin, but the researchers speculated on potential mechanisms if a causative effect were present, based on past research.

”Several preclinical studies have suggested a protective association of metformin in osteoarthritis through activating AMP-activated protein kinase signaling, decreasing the level of matrix metalloproteinase, increasing autophagy and reducing chondrocyte apoptosis, and augmenting chondroprotective and anti-inflammatory properties of mesenchymal stem cells,” the authors wrote.

Among this study’s limitations, however, was the lack of data on body mass index, which is associated with osteoarthritis in the literature and may differ between patients taking metformin versus a sulfonylurea. The researchers also did not have data on physical activity or a history of trauma to the joints, though there’s no reason to think these rates might differ between those taking one or the other medication.

Another substantial limitation is that all patients had type 2 diabetes, making it impossible to determine whether a similar protective effect from metformin might exist in people without diabetes.

 

 

Nonsignificant lower risk for posttraumatic knee osteoarthritis

Similar to the published study, the OARSI poster compared 5-year odds of incident osteoarthritis or total knee replacement surgery between patients taking metformin and those taking sulfonylureas, but it focused on younger patients, aged 18-40 years, who underwent anterior cruciate ligament or meniscus surgery.

Using data from MarketScan commercial insurance claims databases between 2006 and 2020, the authors identified 2,376 participants who were taking metformin or a sulfonylurea when they underwent their surgery or began taking it in the 6 months after their surgery. More than half the participants were female (57%) with an average age of 35.

Within 5 years, 10.8% of those taking metformin developed osteoarthritis, compared with 17.9% of those taking a sulfonylurea. In addition, 3% of those taking metformin underwent a total knee replacement, compared with 5.3% of those taking a sulfonylurea. After adjustment for age, sex, obesity, and a history of chronic kidney disease, liver disease, and depression, however, both risk difference and odds ratios were not statistically significant.

Risk of osteoarthritis was 17% lower in patients taking metformin (95% confidence interval, –0.18 to 0.09), whose odds of osteoarthritis were approximately half the odds of those taking a sulfonylurea (OR, 0.5; 95% CI, 0.21-1.67). Risk of a total knee replacement was 10% lower in metformin users (95% CI, –0.28 to 0.08) with a similar reduction in odds, compared with those taking a sulfonylurea (OR, 0.53; 95% CI, 0.2-1.44).

In this study, the researchers did not specifically determine whether the participants were diagnosed with diabetes, but they assumed all, or at least most, were, according to S. Reza Jafarzadeh, PhD, DVM, an assistant professor of medicine at Boston University.

“The goal was not to only focus on the diabetes population, but on people who received that exposure [of metformin or sulfonylureas],” Dr. Jafarzadeh said in an interview. Dr. Jafarzadeh noted that a larger randomized controlled trial is underway to look at whether metformin reduces the risk of osteoarthritis independent of whether a patient has diabetes.

The published study was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and Stanford University, and the authors reported no disclosures. The poster at OARSI was funded by NIH and the Arthritis Foundation, and the authors reported no disclosures.

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Patients taking metformin for type 2 diabetes had a lower risk of developing osteoarthritis than did patients taking a sulfonylurea, according to a cohort study published in JAMA Network Open. The findings jibe with those seen in a 2022 systematic review of preclinical and observational human studies finding potentially protective effects of metformin on osteoarthritis.

“Our study provides further, robust epidemiological evidence that metformin may be associated with protection in the development and progression of osteoarthritis in individuals with type 2 diabetes,” wrote Matthew C. Baker, MD, MS, an assistant professor of medicine in immunology and rheumatology at Stanford (Calif.) University, and his colleagues.

metformin_tablets_web.jpg

The findings also fit with the results of a poster presented at the Osteoarthritis Research Society International 2023 World Congress, although that abstract’s findings did not reach statistical significance.

In the published study, the researchers analyzed deidentified claims data from Optum’s Clinformatics Data Mart Database between December 2003 and December 2019. The database includes more than 15 million people with private insurance or Medicare Advantage Part D but does not include people with Medicaid, thereby excluding people from lower socioeconomic groups.

The researchers included all patients who were at least 40 years old, had type 2 diabetes, were taking metformin, and had been enrolled in the database for at least 1 uninterrupted year. They excluded anyone with type 1 diabetes or a prior diagnosis of osteoarthritis, inflammatory arthritis, or joint replacement. The authors then compared the incidence of osteoarthritis and joint replacement in these 20,937 participants to 20,937 control participants who were taking a sulfonylurea, matched to those taking metformin on the basis of age, sex, race, a comorbidity score, and duration of treatment. More than half the overall population (58%) was male with an average age of 62.

Patients needed to be on either drug for at least 3 months, but those who were initially treated with metformin before later taking a sulfonylurea could also be included and contribute to both groups. Those who first took a sulfonylurea and later switched to metformin were included only for the sulfonylurea group and censored after their switch to ensure the sulfonylurea group had enough participants. The comparison was further adjusted for age, sex, race, ethnicity, geographic region, education, comorbidities, and outpatient visit frequency.

The results revealed that those who were taking metformin were 24% less likely to develop osteoarthritis at least 3 months after starting the medication than were those taking a sulfonylurea (P < .001). The rate of joint replacements was not significantly different between those taking metformin and those taking a sulfonylurea. These two results did not change in a sensitivity analysis that compared patients who only ever took metformin or a sulfonylurea (as opposed to those who took one drug before switching to the other).

“When stratified by prior exposure to metformin within the sulfonylurea group, the observed benefit associated with metformin ... was attenuated in the people treated with a sulfonylurea with prior exposure to metformin, compared with those treated with a sulfonylurea with no prior exposure to metformin,” the authors further reported. A possible reason for this finding is that those taking a sulfonylurea after having previously taken metformin gained some protection from the earlier metformin exposure, the authors hypothesized.

This observational study could not show a causative effect from the metformin, but the researchers speculated on potential mechanisms if a causative effect were present, based on past research.

”Several preclinical studies have suggested a protective association of metformin in osteoarthritis through activating AMP-activated protein kinase signaling, decreasing the level of matrix metalloproteinase, increasing autophagy and reducing chondrocyte apoptosis, and augmenting chondroprotective and anti-inflammatory properties of mesenchymal stem cells,” the authors wrote.

Among this study’s limitations, however, was the lack of data on body mass index, which is associated with osteoarthritis in the literature and may differ between patients taking metformin versus a sulfonylurea. The researchers also did not have data on physical activity or a history of trauma to the joints, though there’s no reason to think these rates might differ between those taking one or the other medication.

Another substantial limitation is that all patients had type 2 diabetes, making it impossible to determine whether a similar protective effect from metformin might exist in people without diabetes.

 

 

Nonsignificant lower risk for posttraumatic knee osteoarthritis

Similar to the published study, the OARSI poster compared 5-year odds of incident osteoarthritis or total knee replacement surgery between patients taking metformin and those taking sulfonylureas, but it focused on younger patients, aged 18-40 years, who underwent anterior cruciate ligament or meniscus surgery.

Using data from MarketScan commercial insurance claims databases between 2006 and 2020, the authors identified 2,376 participants who were taking metformin or a sulfonylurea when they underwent their surgery or began taking it in the 6 months after their surgery. More than half the participants were female (57%) with an average age of 35.

Within 5 years, 10.8% of those taking metformin developed osteoarthritis, compared with 17.9% of those taking a sulfonylurea. In addition, 3% of those taking metformin underwent a total knee replacement, compared with 5.3% of those taking a sulfonylurea. After adjustment for age, sex, obesity, and a history of chronic kidney disease, liver disease, and depression, however, both risk difference and odds ratios were not statistically significant.

Risk of osteoarthritis was 17% lower in patients taking metformin (95% confidence interval, –0.18 to 0.09), whose odds of osteoarthritis were approximately half the odds of those taking a sulfonylurea (OR, 0.5; 95% CI, 0.21-1.67). Risk of a total knee replacement was 10% lower in metformin users (95% CI, –0.28 to 0.08) with a similar reduction in odds, compared with those taking a sulfonylurea (OR, 0.53; 95% CI, 0.2-1.44).

In this study, the researchers did not specifically determine whether the participants were diagnosed with diabetes, but they assumed all, or at least most, were, according to S. Reza Jafarzadeh, PhD, DVM, an assistant professor of medicine at Boston University.

“The goal was not to only focus on the diabetes population, but on people who received that exposure [of metformin or sulfonylureas],” Dr. Jafarzadeh said in an interview. Dr. Jafarzadeh noted that a larger randomized controlled trial is underway to look at whether metformin reduces the risk of osteoarthritis independent of whether a patient has diabetes.

The published study was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and Stanford University, and the authors reported no disclosures. The poster at OARSI was funded by NIH and the Arthritis Foundation, and the authors reported no disclosures.

 

Patients taking metformin for type 2 diabetes had a lower risk of developing osteoarthritis than did patients taking a sulfonylurea, according to a cohort study published in JAMA Network Open. The findings jibe with those seen in a 2022 systematic review of preclinical and observational human studies finding potentially protective effects of metformin on osteoarthritis.

“Our study provides further, robust epidemiological evidence that metformin may be associated with protection in the development and progression of osteoarthritis in individuals with type 2 diabetes,” wrote Matthew C. Baker, MD, MS, an assistant professor of medicine in immunology and rheumatology at Stanford (Calif.) University, and his colleagues.

metformin_tablets_web.jpg

The findings also fit with the results of a poster presented at the Osteoarthritis Research Society International 2023 World Congress, although that abstract’s findings did not reach statistical significance.

In the published study, the researchers analyzed deidentified claims data from Optum’s Clinformatics Data Mart Database between December 2003 and December 2019. The database includes more than 15 million people with private insurance or Medicare Advantage Part D but does not include people with Medicaid, thereby excluding people from lower socioeconomic groups.

The researchers included all patients who were at least 40 years old, had type 2 diabetes, were taking metformin, and had been enrolled in the database for at least 1 uninterrupted year. They excluded anyone with type 1 diabetes or a prior diagnosis of osteoarthritis, inflammatory arthritis, or joint replacement. The authors then compared the incidence of osteoarthritis and joint replacement in these 20,937 participants to 20,937 control participants who were taking a sulfonylurea, matched to those taking metformin on the basis of age, sex, race, a comorbidity score, and duration of treatment. More than half the overall population (58%) was male with an average age of 62.

Patients needed to be on either drug for at least 3 months, but those who were initially treated with metformin before later taking a sulfonylurea could also be included and contribute to both groups. Those who first took a sulfonylurea and later switched to metformin were included only for the sulfonylurea group and censored after their switch to ensure the sulfonylurea group had enough participants. The comparison was further adjusted for age, sex, race, ethnicity, geographic region, education, comorbidities, and outpatient visit frequency.

The results revealed that those who were taking metformin were 24% less likely to develop osteoarthritis at least 3 months after starting the medication than were those taking a sulfonylurea (P < .001). The rate of joint replacements was not significantly different between those taking metformin and those taking a sulfonylurea. These two results did not change in a sensitivity analysis that compared patients who only ever took metformin or a sulfonylurea (as opposed to those who took one drug before switching to the other).

“When stratified by prior exposure to metformin within the sulfonylurea group, the observed benefit associated with metformin ... was attenuated in the people treated with a sulfonylurea with prior exposure to metformin, compared with those treated with a sulfonylurea with no prior exposure to metformin,” the authors further reported. A possible reason for this finding is that those taking a sulfonylurea after having previously taken metformin gained some protection from the earlier metformin exposure, the authors hypothesized.

This observational study could not show a causative effect from the metformin, but the researchers speculated on potential mechanisms if a causative effect were present, based on past research.

”Several preclinical studies have suggested a protective association of metformin in osteoarthritis through activating AMP-activated protein kinase signaling, decreasing the level of matrix metalloproteinase, increasing autophagy and reducing chondrocyte apoptosis, and augmenting chondroprotective and anti-inflammatory properties of mesenchymal stem cells,” the authors wrote.

Among this study’s limitations, however, was the lack of data on body mass index, which is associated with osteoarthritis in the literature and may differ between patients taking metformin versus a sulfonylurea. The researchers also did not have data on physical activity or a history of trauma to the joints, though there’s no reason to think these rates might differ between those taking one or the other medication.

Another substantial limitation is that all patients had type 2 diabetes, making it impossible to determine whether a similar protective effect from metformin might exist in people without diabetes.

 

 

Nonsignificant lower risk for posttraumatic knee osteoarthritis

Similar to the published study, the OARSI poster compared 5-year odds of incident osteoarthritis or total knee replacement surgery between patients taking metformin and those taking sulfonylureas, but it focused on younger patients, aged 18-40 years, who underwent anterior cruciate ligament or meniscus surgery.

Using data from MarketScan commercial insurance claims databases between 2006 and 2020, the authors identified 2,376 participants who were taking metformin or a sulfonylurea when they underwent their surgery or began taking it in the 6 months after their surgery. More than half the participants were female (57%) with an average age of 35.

Within 5 years, 10.8% of those taking metformin developed osteoarthritis, compared with 17.9% of those taking a sulfonylurea. In addition, 3% of those taking metformin underwent a total knee replacement, compared with 5.3% of those taking a sulfonylurea. After adjustment for age, sex, obesity, and a history of chronic kidney disease, liver disease, and depression, however, both risk difference and odds ratios were not statistically significant.

Risk of osteoarthritis was 17% lower in patients taking metformin (95% confidence interval, –0.18 to 0.09), whose odds of osteoarthritis were approximately half the odds of those taking a sulfonylurea (OR, 0.5; 95% CI, 0.21-1.67). Risk of a total knee replacement was 10% lower in metformin users (95% CI, –0.28 to 0.08) with a similar reduction in odds, compared with those taking a sulfonylurea (OR, 0.53; 95% CI, 0.2-1.44).

In this study, the researchers did not specifically determine whether the participants were diagnosed with diabetes, but they assumed all, or at least most, were, according to S. Reza Jafarzadeh, PhD, DVM, an assistant professor of medicine at Boston University.

“The goal was not to only focus on the diabetes population, but on people who received that exposure [of metformin or sulfonylureas],” Dr. Jafarzadeh said in an interview. Dr. Jafarzadeh noted that a larger randomized controlled trial is underway to look at whether metformin reduces the risk of osteoarthritis independent of whether a patient has diabetes.

The published study was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and Stanford University, and the authors reported no disclosures. The poster at OARSI was funded by NIH and the Arthritis Foundation, and the authors reported no disclosures.

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All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, copied, or otherwise reproduced or distributed without the prior written permission of Frontline Medical Communications Inc.</copyrightNotice> </rightsInfo> </provider> <abstract/> <metaDescription>Patients taking metformin for type 2 diabetes had a lower risk of developing osteoarthritis than did patients taking a sulfonylurea, according to a cohort study</metaDescription> <articlePDF/> <teaserImage>288999</teaserImage> <teaser>Though the findings were in observational studies, one of which did not reach significance, the results line up with the findings of other preclinical and human observational studies. </teaser> <title>Metformin linked to reduced osteoarthritis risk</title> <deck/> <disclaimer/> <AuthorList/> <articleURL/> <doi/> <pubMedID/> <publishXMLStatus/> <publishXMLVersion>1</publishXMLVersion> <useEISSN>0</useEISSN> <urgency/> <pubPubdateYear/> <pubPubdateMonth/> <pubPubdateDay/> <pubVolume/> <pubNumber/> <wireChannels/> <primaryCMSID/> <CMSIDs/> <keywords/> <seeAlsos/> <publications_g> <publicationData> <publicationCode>rn</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>im</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>fp</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> </publications_g> <publications> <term canonical="true">26</term> <term>21</term> <term>15</term> </publications> <sections> <term canonical="true">53</term> <term>27970</term> <term>39313</term> </sections> <topics> <term canonical="true">265</term> <term>290</term> <term>205</term> </topics> <links> <link> <itemClass qcode="ninat:picture"/> <altRep contenttype="image/jpeg">images/2401114a.jpg</altRep> <description role="drol:caption"/> <description role="drol:credit">Thinglass/iStock Editorial/Getty Images</description> </link> </links> </header> <itemSet> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>Main</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title>Metformin linked to reduced osteoarthritis risk</title> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> <p>Patients taking metformin for type 2 diabetes had a lower risk of developing osteoarthritis than did patients taking a sulfonylurea, according to a cohort study published in JAMA Network Open. The findings jibe with those seen in a 2022 <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1063458422007464">systematic review</a></span> of preclinical and observational human studies finding potentially protective effects of metformin on osteoarthritis.</p> <p>“Our study provides further, robust epidemiological evidence that metformin may be associated with protection in the development and progression of osteoarthritis in individuals with type 2 diabetes,” wrote Matthew C. Baker, MD, MS, an assistant professor of medicine in immunology and rheumatology at Stanford (Calif.) University, and his colleagues. <br/><br/>[[{"fid":"288999","view_mode":"medstat_image_flush_right","fields":{"format":"medstat_image_flush_right","field_file_image_alt_text[und][0][value]":"Metformin tablets","field_file_image_credit[und][0][value]":"Thinglass/iStock Editorial/Getty Images","field_file_image_caption[und][0][value]":""},"type":"media","attributes":{"class":"media-element file-medstat_image_flush_right"}}]]The findings also fit with the results of a poster presented at the Osteoarthritis Research Society International 2023 World Congress, although that abstract’s findings did not reach statistical significance. <br/><br/>In the <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2802669">published study</a></span>, the researchers analyzed deidentified claims data from Optum’s Clinformatics Data Mart Database between December 2003 and December 2019. The database includes more than 15 million people with private insurance or Medicare Advantage Part D but does not include people with Medicaid, thereby excluding people from lower socioeconomic groups. <br/><br/>The researchers included all patients who were at least 40 years old, had type 2 diabetes, were taking metformin, and had been enrolled in the database for at least 1 uninterrupted year. They excluded anyone with type 1 diabetes or a prior diagnosis of osteoarthritis, inflammatory arthritis, or joint replacement. The authors then compared the incidence of osteoarthritis and joint replacement in these 20,937 participants to 20,937 control participants who were taking a sulfonylurea, matched to those taking metformin on the basis of age, sex, race, a comorbidity score, and duration of treatment. More than half the overall population (58%) was male with an average age of 62. <br/><br/>Patients needed to be on either drug for at least 3 months, but those who were initially treated with metformin before later taking a sulfonylurea could also be included and contribute to both groups. Those who first took a sulfonylurea and later switched to metformin were included only for the sulfonylurea group and censored after their switch to ensure the sulfonylurea group had enough participants. The comparison was further adjusted for age, sex, race, ethnicity, geographic region, education, comorbidities, and outpatient visit frequency. <br/><br/>The results revealed that those who were taking metformin were 24% less likely to develop osteoarthritis at least 3 months after starting the medication than were those taking a sulfonylurea (<em>P</em> &lt; .001). The rate of joint replacements was not significantly different between those taking metformin and those taking a sulfonylurea. These two results did not change in a sensitivity analysis that compared patients who only ever took metformin or a sulfonylurea (as opposed to those who took one drug before switching to the other). <br/><br/>“When stratified by prior exposure to metformin within the sulfonylurea group, the observed benefit associated with metformin ... was attenuated in the people treated with a sulfonylurea with prior exposure to metformin, compared with those treated with a sulfonylurea with no prior exposure to metformin,” the authors further reported. A possible reason for this finding is that those taking a sulfonylurea after having previously taken metformin gained some protection from the earlier metformin exposure, the authors hypothesized. <br/><br/>This observational study could not show a causative effect from the metformin, but the researchers speculated on potential mechanisms if a causative effect were present, based on past research. <br/><br/>”Several preclinical studies have suggested a protective association of metformin in osteoarthritis through activating AMP-activated protein kinase signaling, decreasing the level of matrix metalloproteinase, increasing autophagy and reducing chondrocyte apoptosis, and augmenting chondroprotective and anti-inflammatory properties of mesenchymal stem cells,” the authors wrote. <br/><br/>Among this study’s limitations, however, was the lack of data on body mass index, which is associated with osteoarthritis in the literature and may differ between patients taking metformin versus a sulfonylurea. The researchers also did not have data on physical activity or a history of trauma to the joints, though there’s no reason to think these rates might differ between those taking one or the other medication.<br/><br/>Another substantial limitation is that all patients had type 2 diabetes, making it impossible to determine whether a similar protective effect from metformin might exist in people without diabetes.</p> <h2>Nonsignificant lower risk for posttraumatic knee osteoarthritis</h2> <p>Similar to the published study, the <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.oarsijournal.com/article/S1063-4584(23)00254-6/fulltext">OARSI poster</a></span> compared 5-year odds of incident osteoarthritis or total knee replacement surgery between patients taking metformin and those taking sulfonylureas, but it focused on younger patients, aged 18-40 years, who underwent anterior cruciate ligament or meniscus surgery. </p> <p>Using data from MarketScan commercial insurance claims databases between 2006 and 2020, the authors identified 2,376 participants who were taking metformin or a sulfonylurea when they underwent their surgery or began taking it in the 6 months after their surgery. More than half the participants were female (57%) with an average age of 35.<br/><br/>Within 5 years, 10.8% of those taking metformin developed osteoarthritis, compared with 17.9% of those taking a sulfonylurea. In addition, 3% of those taking metformin underwent a total knee replacement, compared with 5.3% of those taking a sulfonylurea. After adjustment for age, sex, obesity, and a history of chronic kidney disease, liver disease, and depression, however, both risk difference and odds ratios were not statistically significant. <br/><br/>Risk of osteoarthritis was 17% lower in patients taking metformin (95% confidence interval, –0.18 to 0.09), whose odds of osteoarthritis were approximately half the odds of those taking a sulfonylurea (OR, 0.5; 95% CI, 0.21-1.67). Risk of a total knee replacement was 10% lower in metformin users (95% CI, –0.28 to 0.08) with a similar reduction in odds, compared with those taking a sulfonylurea (OR, 0.53; 95% CI, 0.2-1.44). <br/><br/>In this study, the researchers did not specifically determine whether the participants were diagnosed with diabetes, but they assumed all, or at least most, were, according to S. Reza Jafarzadeh, PhD, DVM, an assistant professor of medicine at Boston University.<br/><br/>“The goal was not to only focus on the diabetes population, but on people who received that exposure [of metformin or sulfonylureas],” Dr. Jafarzadeh said in an interview. 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Metabolic syndrome linked to knee pain in middle adulthood

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– Metabolic syndrome in both early and mid-adulthood is associated with symptoms of knee osteoarthritis, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress.

knee_pain_web.jpg
“Relative to those without metabolic syndrome at either life stage, knee pain scores were more pronounced for those who developed metabolic syndrome after young adulthood than those who had metabolic syndrome in young adulthood,” Changhai Ding, MD, PhD, a professor and director of Clinical Research Centre at Zhujiang Hospital at Southern Medical University, Guangzhou, China, and an ARC Future Fellow at the Menzies Institute for Medical Research at the University of Tasmania in Hobart, Australia, told attendees at the meeting, which was sponsored by the Osteoarthritis Research Society International.

To supplement existing evidence on the association between metabolic syndrome and joint pain in older adults, the researchers investigated the association in middle-aged adults over a 10- to 13-year period.

The researchers analyzed data from the Childhood Determinants of Adult Health study, which enrolled 2,447 adults with an average age of 31 between 2004 and 2006 and conducted follow-up in 1,549 participants with an average age of 44, during 2014-2019. The Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) was used at follow-up only to assess knee symptoms of pain, stiffness, and dysfunction, as well as the overall score.

[embed:render:related:node:253751]

Data at both time points included fasting blood biochemistry, waist circumference, and blood pressure measures. The criteria for metabolic syndrome requires presence of central obesity (a waist circumference of at least 94 cm in males or 80 cm in females) and two of the following four factors:

  • Raised triglycerides (at least 150 mg/dL) or specific treatment for this lipid abnormality.
  • Reduced HDL cholesterol (below 40 mg/dL in males and below 50 mg/dL in females) or treatment for this.
  • Raised blood pressure (at least 130 mm Hg systolic or at least 85 mm Hg diastolic) or treatment of previously diagnosed hypertension.
  • Raised fasting blood glucose (at least 100 mg/dL) or previously diagnosed type 2 diabetes.

The researchers grouped the participants on the basis of having no metabolic syndrome at either life stage, having metabolic syndrome in young adulthood but not at follow-up (improved), having developed metabolic syndrome at follow-up (incident), and having metabolic syndrome at both time points (persistent). Most of the participants did not have the metabolic syndrome at either time point (85%), whereas 2% improved in mid-adulthood, 9% developed incident metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood, and 4% had persistent metabolic syndrome.

At follow-up, 43% of the participants reported pain on the WOMAC, and the average WOMAC score was 10. Prevalence of metabolic syndrome increased from 8% in young adulthood to 13% in mid-adulthood, with an increase in abdominal obesity prevalence from 29% to 47%. Metabolic syndrome at any time point – whether improved later, developed later, or persistent – was associated with more knee symptoms, compared with no metabolic syndrome.

Presence of metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood was associated with knee symptoms from the total WOMAC score (ratio of means, 1.33; P < .001) after adjustment for age, sex, and body mass index (BMI). Metabolic syndrome was also independently associated in mid-adulthood with knee pain (RoM, 1.29; P < .001) and poor function (RoM, 1.37; P < .001).

Those who developed incident metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood had the greatest association with overall knee symptoms (RoM, 1.56; P < .001) and with knee pain (RoM, 1.52; P < .001). Although improved and persistent metabolic syndrome were both significantly associated with total WOMAC score, neither was significantly associated with knee pain after adjustment for age, sex, and BMI.

The three individual metabolic criteria independently associated with overall WOMAC score were abdominal obesity (RoM, 1.09), hypertension (RoM, 1.44), and low HDL (RoM, 1.17; P < .001 for all).

Leigh F. Callahan, PhD, a professor of medicine and associate director of the Thurston Arthritis Research Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said in an interview that this topic is especially important because there’s so little understanding of the role of comorbid conditions and osteoarthritis.

“There were some key things that I thought were wonderful about this study – the longitudinal nature and the fact that they had collected metabolic syndrome [criteria] at multiple time points and were able to look at persistent versus incident metabolic syndrome,” Dr. Callahan said. “We frequently don’t have that kind of trajectory.”

Jaqueline Lourdes Rios, PhD, an assistant professor of orthopedics at University Medical Center Utrecht (Netherlands), said in an interview that the study raised questions about whether treating metabolic syndrome could help prevent the progression of osteoarthritis to some extent. “Although, if you already have damage in your cartilage, and if you have a lot of inflammation that’s local, it might be a bit trickier than just treating metabolic syndrome,” Dr. Lourdes Rios added. “Then, it might help, it might not.” Either way, she said, it’s certainly worthwhile for physicians to spend time discussing interventions to address metabolic syndrome “because you treat the patient, not a knee.”

Dr. Ding, Dr. Lourdes Rios, and Dr. Callahan had no relevant financial relationships to disclose. The researchers did not note any external funding.

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– Metabolic syndrome in both early and mid-adulthood is associated with symptoms of knee osteoarthritis, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress.

knee_pain_web.jpg
“Relative to those without metabolic syndrome at either life stage, knee pain scores were more pronounced for those who developed metabolic syndrome after young adulthood than those who had metabolic syndrome in young adulthood,” Changhai Ding, MD, PhD, a professor and director of Clinical Research Centre at Zhujiang Hospital at Southern Medical University, Guangzhou, China, and an ARC Future Fellow at the Menzies Institute for Medical Research at the University of Tasmania in Hobart, Australia, told attendees at the meeting, which was sponsored by the Osteoarthritis Research Society International.

To supplement existing evidence on the association between metabolic syndrome and joint pain in older adults, the researchers investigated the association in middle-aged adults over a 10- to 13-year period.

The researchers analyzed data from the Childhood Determinants of Adult Health study, which enrolled 2,447 adults with an average age of 31 between 2004 and 2006 and conducted follow-up in 1,549 participants with an average age of 44, during 2014-2019. The Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) was used at follow-up only to assess knee symptoms of pain, stiffness, and dysfunction, as well as the overall score.

[embed:render:related:node:253751]

Data at both time points included fasting blood biochemistry, waist circumference, and blood pressure measures. The criteria for metabolic syndrome requires presence of central obesity (a waist circumference of at least 94 cm in males or 80 cm in females) and two of the following four factors:

  • Raised triglycerides (at least 150 mg/dL) or specific treatment for this lipid abnormality.
  • Reduced HDL cholesterol (below 40 mg/dL in males and below 50 mg/dL in females) or treatment for this.
  • Raised blood pressure (at least 130 mm Hg systolic or at least 85 mm Hg diastolic) or treatment of previously diagnosed hypertension.
  • Raised fasting blood glucose (at least 100 mg/dL) or previously diagnosed type 2 diabetes.

The researchers grouped the participants on the basis of having no metabolic syndrome at either life stage, having metabolic syndrome in young adulthood but not at follow-up (improved), having developed metabolic syndrome at follow-up (incident), and having metabolic syndrome at both time points (persistent). Most of the participants did not have the metabolic syndrome at either time point (85%), whereas 2% improved in mid-adulthood, 9% developed incident metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood, and 4% had persistent metabolic syndrome.

At follow-up, 43% of the participants reported pain on the WOMAC, and the average WOMAC score was 10. Prevalence of metabolic syndrome increased from 8% in young adulthood to 13% in mid-adulthood, with an increase in abdominal obesity prevalence from 29% to 47%. Metabolic syndrome at any time point – whether improved later, developed later, or persistent – was associated with more knee symptoms, compared with no metabolic syndrome.

Presence of metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood was associated with knee symptoms from the total WOMAC score (ratio of means, 1.33; P < .001) after adjustment for age, sex, and body mass index (BMI). Metabolic syndrome was also independently associated in mid-adulthood with knee pain (RoM, 1.29; P < .001) and poor function (RoM, 1.37; P < .001).

Those who developed incident metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood had the greatest association with overall knee symptoms (RoM, 1.56; P < .001) and with knee pain (RoM, 1.52; P < .001). Although improved and persistent metabolic syndrome were both significantly associated with total WOMAC score, neither was significantly associated with knee pain after adjustment for age, sex, and BMI.

The three individual metabolic criteria independently associated with overall WOMAC score were abdominal obesity (RoM, 1.09), hypertension (RoM, 1.44), and low HDL (RoM, 1.17; P < .001 for all).

Leigh F. Callahan, PhD, a professor of medicine and associate director of the Thurston Arthritis Research Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said in an interview that this topic is especially important because there’s so little understanding of the role of comorbid conditions and osteoarthritis.

“There were some key things that I thought were wonderful about this study – the longitudinal nature and the fact that they had collected metabolic syndrome [criteria] at multiple time points and were able to look at persistent versus incident metabolic syndrome,” Dr. Callahan said. “We frequently don’t have that kind of trajectory.”

Jaqueline Lourdes Rios, PhD, an assistant professor of orthopedics at University Medical Center Utrecht (Netherlands), said in an interview that the study raised questions about whether treating metabolic syndrome could help prevent the progression of osteoarthritis to some extent. “Although, if you already have damage in your cartilage, and if you have a lot of inflammation that’s local, it might be a bit trickier than just treating metabolic syndrome,” Dr. Lourdes Rios added. “Then, it might help, it might not.” Either way, she said, it’s certainly worthwhile for physicians to spend time discussing interventions to address metabolic syndrome “because you treat the patient, not a knee.”

Dr. Ding, Dr. Lourdes Rios, and Dr. Callahan had no relevant financial relationships to disclose. The researchers did not note any external funding.

 

– Metabolic syndrome in both early and mid-adulthood is associated with symptoms of knee osteoarthritis, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress.

knee_pain_web.jpg
“Relative to those without metabolic syndrome at either life stage, knee pain scores were more pronounced for those who developed metabolic syndrome after young adulthood than those who had metabolic syndrome in young adulthood,” Changhai Ding, MD, PhD, a professor and director of Clinical Research Centre at Zhujiang Hospital at Southern Medical University, Guangzhou, China, and an ARC Future Fellow at the Menzies Institute for Medical Research at the University of Tasmania in Hobart, Australia, told attendees at the meeting, which was sponsored by the Osteoarthritis Research Society International.

To supplement existing evidence on the association between metabolic syndrome and joint pain in older adults, the researchers investigated the association in middle-aged adults over a 10- to 13-year period.

The researchers analyzed data from the Childhood Determinants of Adult Health study, which enrolled 2,447 adults with an average age of 31 between 2004 and 2006 and conducted follow-up in 1,549 participants with an average age of 44, during 2014-2019. The Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) was used at follow-up only to assess knee symptoms of pain, stiffness, and dysfunction, as well as the overall score.

[embed:render:related:node:253751]

Data at both time points included fasting blood biochemistry, waist circumference, and blood pressure measures. The criteria for metabolic syndrome requires presence of central obesity (a waist circumference of at least 94 cm in males or 80 cm in females) and two of the following four factors:

  • Raised triglycerides (at least 150 mg/dL) or specific treatment for this lipid abnormality.
  • Reduced HDL cholesterol (below 40 mg/dL in males and below 50 mg/dL in females) or treatment for this.
  • Raised blood pressure (at least 130 mm Hg systolic or at least 85 mm Hg diastolic) or treatment of previously diagnosed hypertension.
  • Raised fasting blood glucose (at least 100 mg/dL) or previously diagnosed type 2 diabetes.

The researchers grouped the participants on the basis of having no metabolic syndrome at either life stage, having metabolic syndrome in young adulthood but not at follow-up (improved), having developed metabolic syndrome at follow-up (incident), and having metabolic syndrome at both time points (persistent). Most of the participants did not have the metabolic syndrome at either time point (85%), whereas 2% improved in mid-adulthood, 9% developed incident metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood, and 4% had persistent metabolic syndrome.

At follow-up, 43% of the participants reported pain on the WOMAC, and the average WOMAC score was 10. Prevalence of metabolic syndrome increased from 8% in young adulthood to 13% in mid-adulthood, with an increase in abdominal obesity prevalence from 29% to 47%. Metabolic syndrome at any time point – whether improved later, developed later, or persistent – was associated with more knee symptoms, compared with no metabolic syndrome.

Presence of metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood was associated with knee symptoms from the total WOMAC score (ratio of means, 1.33; P < .001) after adjustment for age, sex, and body mass index (BMI). Metabolic syndrome was also independently associated in mid-adulthood with knee pain (RoM, 1.29; P < .001) and poor function (RoM, 1.37; P < .001).

Those who developed incident metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood had the greatest association with overall knee symptoms (RoM, 1.56; P < .001) and with knee pain (RoM, 1.52; P < .001). Although improved and persistent metabolic syndrome were both significantly associated with total WOMAC score, neither was significantly associated with knee pain after adjustment for age, sex, and BMI.

The three individual metabolic criteria independently associated with overall WOMAC score were abdominal obesity (RoM, 1.09), hypertension (RoM, 1.44), and low HDL (RoM, 1.17; P < .001 for all).

Leigh F. Callahan, PhD, a professor of medicine and associate director of the Thurston Arthritis Research Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said in an interview that this topic is especially important because there’s so little understanding of the role of comorbid conditions and osteoarthritis.

“There were some key things that I thought were wonderful about this study – the longitudinal nature and the fact that they had collected metabolic syndrome [criteria] at multiple time points and were able to look at persistent versus incident metabolic syndrome,” Dr. Callahan said. “We frequently don’t have that kind of trajectory.”

Jaqueline Lourdes Rios, PhD, an assistant professor of orthopedics at University Medical Center Utrecht (Netherlands), said in an interview that the study raised questions about whether treating metabolic syndrome could help prevent the progression of osteoarthritis to some extent. “Although, if you already have damage in your cartilage, and if you have a lot of inflammation that’s local, it might be a bit trickier than just treating metabolic syndrome,” Dr. Lourdes Rios added. “Then, it might help, it might not.” Either way, she said, it’s certainly worthwhile for physicians to spend time discussing interventions to address metabolic syndrome “because you treat the patient, not a knee.”

Dr. Ding, Dr. Lourdes Rios, and Dr. Callahan had no relevant financial relationships to disclose. The researchers did not note any external funding.

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The Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) was used at follow-up only to assess knee symptoms of pain, stiffness, and dysfunction, as well as the overall score.<br/><br/>Data at both time points included fasting blood biochemistry, waist circumference, and blood pressure measures. The criteria for metabolic syndrome requires presence of central obesity (a waist circumference of at least 94 cm in males or 80 cm in females) and two of the following four factors:</p> <ul class="body"> <li>Raised triglycerides (at least 150 mg/dL) or specific treatment for this lipid abnormality.</li> <li>Reduced HDL cholesterol (below 40 mg/dL in males and below 50 mg/dL in females) or treatment for this.</li> <li>Raised blood pressure (at least 130 mm Hg systolic or at least 85 mm Hg diastolic) or treatment of previously diagnosed hypertension.</li> <li>Raised fasting blood glucose (at least 100 mg/dL) or previously diagnosed type 2 diabetes.</li> </ul> <p>The researchers grouped the participants on the basis of having no metabolic syndrome at either life stage, having metabolic syndrome in young adulthood but not at follow-up (improved), having developed metabolic syndrome at follow-up (incident), and having metabolic syndrome at both time points (persistent). Most of the participants did not have the metabolic syndrome at either time point (85%), whereas 2% improved in mid-adulthood, 9% developed incident metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood, and 4% had persistent metabolic syndrome. <br/><br/>At follow-up, 43% of the participants reported pain on the WOMAC, and the average WOMAC score was 10. Prevalence of metabolic syndrome increased from 8% in young adulthood to 13% in mid-adulthood, with an increase in abdominal obesity prevalence from 29% to 47%. Metabolic syndrome at any time point – whether improved later, developed later, or persistent – was associated with more knee symptoms, compared with no metabolic syndrome. <br/><br/>Presence of metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood was associated with knee symptoms from the total WOMAC score (ratio of means, 1.33; <em>P</em> &lt; .001) after adjustment for age, sex, and body mass index (BMI). Metabolic syndrome was also independently associated in mid-adulthood with knee pain (RoM, 1.29; <em>P</em> &lt; .001) and poor function (RoM, 1.37; <em>P</em> &lt; .001). <br/><br/>Those who developed incident metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood had the greatest association with overall knee symptoms (RoM, 1.56; <em>P</em> &lt; .001) and with knee pain (RoM, 1.52; <em>P</em> &lt; .001). Although improved and persistent metabolic syndrome were both significantly associated with total WOMAC score, neither was significantly associated with knee pain after adjustment for age, sex, and BMI. <br/><br/>The three individual metabolic criteria independently associated with overall WOMAC score were abdominal obesity (RoM, 1.09), hypertension (RoM, 1.44), and low HDL (RoM, 1.17; <em>P</em> &lt; .001 for all). <br/><br/>Leigh F. Callahan, PhD, a professor of medicine and associate director of the Thurston Arthritis Research Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said in an interview that this topic is especially important because there’s so little understanding of the role of comorbid conditions and osteoarthritis. <br/><br/>“There were some key things that I thought were wonderful about this study – the longitudinal nature and the fact that they had collected metabolic syndrome [criteria] at multiple time points and were able to look at persistent versus incident metabolic syndrome,” Dr. Callahan said. “We frequently don’t have that kind of trajectory.”<br/><br/><span class="Hyperlink">Jaqueline Lourdes Rios</span>, PhD, an assistant professor of orthopedics at University Medical Center Utrecht (Netherlands), said in an interview that the study raised questions about whether treating metabolic syndrome could help prevent the progression of osteoarthritis to some extent. “Although, if you already have damage in your cartilage, and if you have a lot of inflammation that’s local, it might be a bit trickier than just treating metabolic syndrome,” Dr. Lourdes Rios added. “Then, it might help, it might not.” Either way, she said, it’s certainly worthwhile for physicians to spend time discussing interventions to address metabolic syndrome “because you treat the patient, not a knee.”<br/><br/>Dr. Ding, Dr. Lourdes Rios, and Dr. Callahan had no relevant financial relationships to disclose. 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Osteoarthritis adjunctive therapies offer negligible added benefit to exercise

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– Adding therapies such as acupuncture, electrophysical stimulation, or other interventions to standard exercise therapy does not appear to offer much benefit in pain relief or physical function for patients with knee osteoarthritis, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress. The findings were also published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews in October 2022.

“The results do not support the use of adjunctive therapies when we add them to exercise for pain, physical function, or quality of life, when compared against placebo, adjunctive therapy, and exercise,” Helen P. French, PhD, told attendees at the meeting sponsored by the Osteoarthritis Research Society International. The findings were similar for pain and physical function when comparing adjunctive therapies with exercise against exercise alone, said Dr. French, an associate professor in physiotherapy at the Royal College of Surgeons, Dublin, except that patients using adjunctive therapies reported feeling greater improvement in their global assessments.

Exercise is recommended as a core treatment for osteoarthritis, but some patients or clinicians may be interested in supplementing that therapy with acupuncture, heat therapy, electromagnetic fields, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, braces/orthotics, and other interventions. Various Cochrane Reviews of the evidence exist for these interventions in treating chronic pain in general but not for their use as adjunctive therapies in addition to exercise for osteoarthritis pain.

Researchers therefore assessed the evidence for improvement in pain, physical function, and quality of life for two sets of comparisons: adjunctive therapies plus exercise versus exercise alone, and adjunctive therapies with exercise versus placebo adjunctive therapy with exercise. The review excluded studies looking at medications or supplements.

Pain was assessed with the Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS, 0-10), with an improvement of at least 2 points (15% improvement) representing the minimum clinically important difference (MCID). Physical function was assessed with the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index (WOMAC, 0-68), with 6 points (15%) considered the MCID, and quality of life was assessed with the SF-36 (0-100), with 6 points (12%) as the MCID.

The researchers identified trials on knee osteoarthritis that included an overall 6,508 participants with an average age ranging from 52 to 83 years. A total of 36 studies evaluated electrophysical agents. Another seven looked at manual therapies; four looked at acupuncture/dry needling or taping; three looked at psychological, dietary, or “whole body vibration” therapies; and two evaluated spa or peloid therapy. Only one trial evaluated foot insoles.

Nearly all the studies (98%) assessed pain, and most (87%) assessed physical function. Only about one in five (21%) assessed quality of life. The improvement in pain from adding adjunctive therapies to exercise, compared with placebo therapies plus exercise, was 0.77 points, or just under a 10% improvement, which fell short of the 15% MCID. Physical function improvement similarly fell short, with an average improvement of 5 points (12%).

[embed:render:related:node:261887]

In comparisons of exercise plus adjunctive therapies against exercise alone, the improvement from the additional interventions was even lower. Pain improvement was 0.41 points (7%), and physical function improvement was 2.8 points (9%). However, patients’ perceptions told a different story: 37% more patients who were using an adjunctive therapy reported feeling that the therapies were successful, compared with patients undergoing exercise therapy alone.

Adverse events were poorly reported in the trials, with only 10 trials reporting them at all, and the researchers found no significant difference in adverse events among the studies reporting them. The most common adverse events were increased pain in the joint with the osteoarthritis, pain elsewhere, or swelling and inflammation. It’s unclear, however, whether the pain, swelling, and inflammation were related to the interventions and how serious these effects might have been.

Michelle Hall, PhD, an associate professor in the department of physiotherapy at the University of Melbourne, comoderated the session with this presentation and found it interesting that more than one-third of patients perceived that they did better with the additional therapies even though improvement didn’t bear out in their pain or physical function assessments.

“But the other part of that was that the studies were of poor quality, so we can’t say with confidence, ‘Don’t do this therapy because it’s not going to work,’ ” Dr. Hall said in an interview. She said she personally would probably discourage patients from those therapies, “but I don’t think the evidence is there for everybody to do that,” she added.

Martin Van Der Esch, PhD, of Reade Centre of Rehabilitation and Rheumatology in Amsterdam, also comoderated the discussion and had more concerns about the use of adjunctive therapies in light of the study’s findings. He said in an interview that he tended to believe the patients’ overall self-reported improvement is likely a placebo effect, and he sees potential harm in that effect. If the pain is not truly decreasing as patients continue using those therapies, then the pain may become a more stable part of the nervous system, “so I think they need to do an intervention which really has evidence in reducing pain, an active approach that means exercising in the right way,” Dr. Van Der Esch said. If patients are undergoing therapy whose primary benefit is a placebo effect, “the pain will prolong and become more fixed in the nervous system,” shifting the patients toward greater risk of the pain becoming chronic, he said.

“I want to emphasize that we have an ethical role to our management, and it’s not ethical to give treatments which have no response and no pain relief except that the patient or the professional believes it will have an effect,” Dr. Van Der Esch said.

The research did not involve outside funding. Dr. French, Dr. Hall, and Dr. Van Der Esch reported having no relevant financial relationships.

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– Adding therapies such as acupuncture, electrophysical stimulation, or other interventions to standard exercise therapy does not appear to offer much benefit in pain relief or physical function for patients with knee osteoarthritis, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress. The findings were also published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews in October 2022.

“The results do not support the use of adjunctive therapies when we add them to exercise for pain, physical function, or quality of life, when compared against placebo, adjunctive therapy, and exercise,” Helen P. French, PhD, told attendees at the meeting sponsored by the Osteoarthritis Research Society International. The findings were similar for pain and physical function when comparing adjunctive therapies with exercise against exercise alone, said Dr. French, an associate professor in physiotherapy at the Royal College of Surgeons, Dublin, except that patients using adjunctive therapies reported feeling greater improvement in their global assessments.

Exercise is recommended as a core treatment for osteoarthritis, but some patients or clinicians may be interested in supplementing that therapy with acupuncture, heat therapy, electromagnetic fields, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, braces/orthotics, and other interventions. Various Cochrane Reviews of the evidence exist for these interventions in treating chronic pain in general but not for their use as adjunctive therapies in addition to exercise for osteoarthritis pain.

Researchers therefore assessed the evidence for improvement in pain, physical function, and quality of life for two sets of comparisons: adjunctive therapies plus exercise versus exercise alone, and adjunctive therapies with exercise versus placebo adjunctive therapy with exercise. The review excluded studies looking at medications or supplements.

Pain was assessed with the Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS, 0-10), with an improvement of at least 2 points (15% improvement) representing the minimum clinically important difference (MCID). Physical function was assessed with the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index (WOMAC, 0-68), with 6 points (15%) considered the MCID, and quality of life was assessed with the SF-36 (0-100), with 6 points (12%) as the MCID.

The researchers identified trials on knee osteoarthritis that included an overall 6,508 participants with an average age ranging from 52 to 83 years. A total of 36 studies evaluated electrophysical agents. Another seven looked at manual therapies; four looked at acupuncture/dry needling or taping; three looked at psychological, dietary, or “whole body vibration” therapies; and two evaluated spa or peloid therapy. Only one trial evaluated foot insoles.

Nearly all the studies (98%) assessed pain, and most (87%) assessed physical function. Only about one in five (21%) assessed quality of life. The improvement in pain from adding adjunctive therapies to exercise, compared with placebo therapies plus exercise, was 0.77 points, or just under a 10% improvement, which fell short of the 15% MCID. Physical function improvement similarly fell short, with an average improvement of 5 points (12%).

[embed:render:related:node:261887]

In comparisons of exercise plus adjunctive therapies against exercise alone, the improvement from the additional interventions was even lower. Pain improvement was 0.41 points (7%), and physical function improvement was 2.8 points (9%). However, patients’ perceptions told a different story: 37% more patients who were using an adjunctive therapy reported feeling that the therapies were successful, compared with patients undergoing exercise therapy alone.

Adverse events were poorly reported in the trials, with only 10 trials reporting them at all, and the researchers found no significant difference in adverse events among the studies reporting them. The most common adverse events were increased pain in the joint with the osteoarthritis, pain elsewhere, or swelling and inflammation. It’s unclear, however, whether the pain, swelling, and inflammation were related to the interventions and how serious these effects might have been.

Michelle Hall, PhD, an associate professor in the department of physiotherapy at the University of Melbourne, comoderated the session with this presentation and found it interesting that more than one-third of patients perceived that they did better with the additional therapies even though improvement didn’t bear out in their pain or physical function assessments.

“But the other part of that was that the studies were of poor quality, so we can’t say with confidence, ‘Don’t do this therapy because it’s not going to work,’ ” Dr. Hall said in an interview. She said she personally would probably discourage patients from those therapies, “but I don’t think the evidence is there for everybody to do that,” she added.

Martin Van Der Esch, PhD, of Reade Centre of Rehabilitation and Rheumatology in Amsterdam, also comoderated the discussion and had more concerns about the use of adjunctive therapies in light of the study’s findings. He said in an interview that he tended to believe the patients’ overall self-reported improvement is likely a placebo effect, and he sees potential harm in that effect. If the pain is not truly decreasing as patients continue using those therapies, then the pain may become a more stable part of the nervous system, “so I think they need to do an intervention which really has evidence in reducing pain, an active approach that means exercising in the right way,” Dr. Van Der Esch said. If patients are undergoing therapy whose primary benefit is a placebo effect, “the pain will prolong and become more fixed in the nervous system,” shifting the patients toward greater risk of the pain becoming chronic, he said.

“I want to emphasize that we have an ethical role to our management, and it’s not ethical to give treatments which have no response and no pain relief except that the patient or the professional believes it will have an effect,” Dr. Van Der Esch said.

The research did not involve outside funding. Dr. French, Dr. Hall, and Dr. Van Der Esch reported having no relevant financial relationships.

– Adding therapies such as acupuncture, electrophysical stimulation, or other interventions to standard exercise therapy does not appear to offer much benefit in pain relief or physical function for patients with knee osteoarthritis, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress. The findings were also published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews in October 2022.

“The results do not support the use of adjunctive therapies when we add them to exercise for pain, physical function, or quality of life, when compared against placebo, adjunctive therapy, and exercise,” Helen P. French, PhD, told attendees at the meeting sponsored by the Osteoarthritis Research Society International. The findings were similar for pain and physical function when comparing adjunctive therapies with exercise against exercise alone, said Dr. French, an associate professor in physiotherapy at the Royal College of Surgeons, Dublin, except that patients using adjunctive therapies reported feeling greater improvement in their global assessments.

Exercise is recommended as a core treatment for osteoarthritis, but some patients or clinicians may be interested in supplementing that therapy with acupuncture, heat therapy, electromagnetic fields, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, braces/orthotics, and other interventions. Various Cochrane Reviews of the evidence exist for these interventions in treating chronic pain in general but not for their use as adjunctive therapies in addition to exercise for osteoarthritis pain.

Researchers therefore assessed the evidence for improvement in pain, physical function, and quality of life for two sets of comparisons: adjunctive therapies plus exercise versus exercise alone, and adjunctive therapies with exercise versus placebo adjunctive therapy with exercise. The review excluded studies looking at medications or supplements.

Pain was assessed with the Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS, 0-10), with an improvement of at least 2 points (15% improvement) representing the minimum clinically important difference (MCID). Physical function was assessed with the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index (WOMAC, 0-68), with 6 points (15%) considered the MCID, and quality of life was assessed with the SF-36 (0-100), with 6 points (12%) as the MCID.

The researchers identified trials on knee osteoarthritis that included an overall 6,508 participants with an average age ranging from 52 to 83 years. A total of 36 studies evaluated electrophysical agents. Another seven looked at manual therapies; four looked at acupuncture/dry needling or taping; three looked at psychological, dietary, or “whole body vibration” therapies; and two evaluated spa or peloid therapy. Only one trial evaluated foot insoles.

Nearly all the studies (98%) assessed pain, and most (87%) assessed physical function. Only about one in five (21%) assessed quality of life. The improvement in pain from adding adjunctive therapies to exercise, compared with placebo therapies plus exercise, was 0.77 points, or just under a 10% improvement, which fell short of the 15% MCID. Physical function improvement similarly fell short, with an average improvement of 5 points (12%).

[embed:render:related:node:261887]

In comparisons of exercise plus adjunctive therapies against exercise alone, the improvement from the additional interventions was even lower. Pain improvement was 0.41 points (7%), and physical function improvement was 2.8 points (9%). However, patients’ perceptions told a different story: 37% more patients who were using an adjunctive therapy reported feeling that the therapies were successful, compared with patients undergoing exercise therapy alone.

Adverse events were poorly reported in the trials, with only 10 trials reporting them at all, and the researchers found no significant difference in adverse events among the studies reporting them. The most common adverse events were increased pain in the joint with the osteoarthritis, pain elsewhere, or swelling and inflammation. It’s unclear, however, whether the pain, swelling, and inflammation were related to the interventions and how serious these effects might have been.

Michelle Hall, PhD, an associate professor in the department of physiotherapy at the University of Melbourne, comoderated the session with this presentation and found it interesting that more than one-third of patients perceived that they did better with the additional therapies even though improvement didn’t bear out in their pain or physical function assessments.

“But the other part of that was that the studies were of poor quality, so we can’t say with confidence, ‘Don’t do this therapy because it’s not going to work,’ ” Dr. Hall said in an interview. She said she personally would probably discourage patients from those therapies, “but I don’t think the evidence is there for everybody to do that,” she added.

Martin Van Der Esch, PhD, of Reade Centre of Rehabilitation and Rheumatology in Amsterdam, also comoderated the discussion and had more concerns about the use of adjunctive therapies in light of the study’s findings. He said in an interview that he tended to believe the patients’ overall self-reported improvement is likely a placebo effect, and he sees potential harm in that effect. If the pain is not truly decreasing as patients continue using those therapies, then the pain may become a more stable part of the nervous system, “so I think they need to do an intervention which really has evidence in reducing pain, an active approach that means exercising in the right way,” Dr. Van Der Esch said. If patients are undergoing therapy whose primary benefit is a placebo effect, “the pain will prolong and become more fixed in the nervous system,” shifting the patients toward greater risk of the pain becoming chronic, he said.

“I want to emphasize that we have an ethical role to our management, and it’s not ethical to give treatments which have no response and no pain relief except that the patient or the professional believes it will have an effect,” Dr. Van Der Esch said.

The research did not involve outside funding. Dr. French, Dr. Hall, and Dr. Van Der Esch reported having no relevant financial relationships.

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This material may not be published, broadcast, copied, or otherwise reproduced or distributed without the prior written permission of Frontline Medical Communications Inc.</copyrightNotice> </rightsInfo> </provider> <abstract/> <metaDescription>DENVER – Adding therapies such as acupuncture, electrophysical stimulation, or other interventions to standard exercise therapy does not appear to offer much be</metaDescription> <articlePDF/> <teaserImage/> <teaser>Interventions such as electrophysical stimulation and acupuncture don’t appear to offer much benefit in reducing pain or improving physical function even when used to supplement exercise therapy for osteoarthritis. </teaser> <title>Osteoarthritis adjunctive therapies offer negligible added benefit to exercise</title> <deck/> <disclaimer/> <AuthorList/> <articleURL/> <doi/> <pubMedID/> <publishXMLStatus/> <publishXMLVersion>1</publishXMLVersion> <useEISSN>0</useEISSN> <urgency/> <pubPubdateYear/> <pubPubdateMonth/> <pubPubdateDay/> <pubVolume/> <pubNumber/> <wireChannels/> <primaryCMSID/> <CMSIDs/> <keywords/> <seeAlsos/> <publications_g> <publicationData> <publicationCode>rn</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>im</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>fp</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> </publications_g> <publications> <term canonical="true">26</term> <term>21</term> <term>15</term> </publications> <sections> <term canonical="true">53</term> <term>39313</term> </sections> <topics> <term canonical="true">265</term> <term>290</term> </topics> <links/> </header> <itemSet> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>Main</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title>Osteoarthritis adjunctive therapies offer negligible added benefit to exercise</title> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> <p><span class="dateline">DENVER </span>– Adding therapies such as acupuncture, electrophysical stimulation, or other interventions to standard exercise therapy does not appear to offer much benefit in pain relief or physical function for patients with knee osteoarthritis, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress. The findings were also <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.cochranelibrary.com/cdsr/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD011915.pub2/full">published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews</a></span> in October 2022. </p> <p> “The results do not support the use of adjunctive therapies when we add them to exercise for pain, physical function, or quality of life, when compared against placebo, adjunctive therapy, and exercise,” <span class="Hyperlink">Helen P. French</span>, PhD, told attendees at the meeting sponsored by the Osteoarthritis Research Society International. The findings were similar for pain and physical function when comparing adjunctive therapies with exercise against exercise alone, said Dr. French, an associate professor in physiotherapy at the Royal College of Surgeons, Dublin, except that patients using adjunctive therapies reported feeling greater improvement in their global assessments. <br/><br/>Exercise is recommended as a core treatment for osteoarthritis, but some patients or clinicians may be interested in supplementing that therapy with acupuncture, heat therapy, electromagnetic fields, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, braces/orthotics, and other interventions. Various Cochrane Reviews of the evidence exist for these interventions in treating chronic pain in general but not for their use as adjunctive therapies in addition to exercise for osteoarthritis pain.<br/><br/>Researchers therefore assessed the evidence for improvement in pain, physical function, and quality of life for two sets of comparisons: adjunctive therapies plus exercise versus exercise alone, and adjunctive therapies with exercise versus placebo adjunctive therapy with exercise. The review excluded studies looking at medications or supplements. <br/><br/>Pain was assessed with the Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS, 0-10), with an improvement of at least 2 points (15% improvement) representing the minimum clinically important difference (MCID). Physical function was assessed with the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index (WOMAC, 0-68), with 6 points (15%) considered the MCID, and quality of life was assessed with the SF-36 (0-100), with 6 points (12%) as the MCID.<br/><br/>The researchers identified trials on knee osteoarthritis that included an overall 6,508 participants with an average age ranging from 52 to 83 years. A total of 36 studies evaluated electrophysical agents. Another seven looked at manual therapies; four looked at acupuncture/dry needling or taping; three looked at psychological, dietary, or “whole body vibration” therapies; and two evaluated spa or peloid therapy. Only one trial evaluated foot insoles.<br/><br/>Nearly all the studies (98%) assessed pain, and most (87%) assessed physical function. Only about one in five (21%) assessed quality of life. The improvement in pain from adding adjunctive therapies to exercise, compared with placebo therapies plus exercise, was 0.77 points, or just under a 10% improvement, which fell short of the 15% MCID. Physical function improvement similarly fell short, with an average improvement of 5 points (12%). <br/><br/>In comparisons of exercise plus adjunctive therapies against exercise alone, the improvement from the additional interventions was even lower. Pain improvement was 0.41 points (7%), and physical function improvement was 2.8 points (9%). However, patients’ perceptions told a different story: 37% more patients who were using an adjunctive therapy reported feeling that the therapies were successful, compared with patients undergoing exercise therapy alone. <br/><br/>Adverse events were poorly reported in the trials, with only 10 trials reporting them at all, and the researchers found no significant difference in adverse events among the studies reporting them. The most common adverse events were increased pain in the joint with the osteoarthritis, pain elsewhere, or swelling and inflammation. It’s unclear, however, whether the pain, swelling, and inflammation were related to the interventions and how serious these effects might have been. <br/><br/><span class="Hyperlink">Michelle Hall</span>, PhD, an associate professor in the department of physiotherapy at the University of Melbourne, comoderated the session with this presentation and found it interesting that more than one-third of patients perceived that they did better with the additional therapies even though improvement didn’t bear out in their pain or physical function assessments. <br/><br/>“But the other part of that was that the studies were of poor quality, so we can’t say with confidence, ‘Don’t do this therapy because it’s not going to work,’ ” Dr. Hall said in an interview. She said she personally would probably discourage patients from those therapies, “but I don’t think the evidence is there for everybody to do that,” she added. <br/><br/><span class="Hyperlink">Martin Van Der Esch</span>, PhD, of Reade Centre of Rehabilitation and Rheumatology in Amsterdam, also comoderated the discussion and had more concerns about the use of adjunctive therapies in light of the study’s findings. He said in an interview that he tended to believe the patients’ overall self-reported improvement is likely a placebo effect, and he sees potential harm in that effect. If the pain is not truly decreasing as patients continue using those therapies, then the pain may become a more stable part of the nervous system, “so I think they need to do an intervention which really has evidence in reducing pain, an active approach that means exercising in the right way,” Dr. Van Der Esch said. If patients are undergoing therapy whose primary benefit is a placebo effect, “the pain will prolong and become more fixed in the nervous system,” shifting the patients toward greater risk of the pain becoming chronic, he said.<br/><br/>“I want to emphasize that we have an ethical role to our management, and it’s not ethical to give treatments which have no response and no pain relief except that the patient or the professional believes it will have an effect,” Dr. Van Der Esch said.<br/><br/>The research did not involve outside funding. Dr. French, Dr. Hall, and Dr. Van Der Esch reported having no relevant financial relationships.<span class="end"/></p> </itemContent> </newsItem> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>teaser</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title/> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> </itemContent> </newsItem> </itemSet></root>
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Antidepressants benefit some patients with osteoarthritis pain

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– Using antidepressants to treat osteoarthritis pain can benefit some individuals but appears to have a clinically unimportant reduction in pain when looking at all patients who have tried them, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress. The review was also published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews in October 2022.

In terms of implications for clinical practice, the findings “seem to suggest there is a subgroup that is more likely to respond to antidepressants,” Anita Wluka, PhD, MBBS, a professor in the School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine at Monash University in Melbourne, told attendees. The findings also raise an important research question: “How can we identify the patient phenotype likely to benefit so we can [minimize the] risk of those adverse events and effects?”

Osteoarthritis pain is heterogeneous, and an estimated 30% of the pain is neuropathic-like, likely including central and peripheral sensitization, Dr. Wluka said. Given that antidepressants affect multiple sites along these pathways, multiple organizations have issued a conditional recommendation for duloxetine in their osteoarthritis guidelines, including OARSI, the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology, and the American College of Rheumatology.

The Cochrane Collaboration therefore conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of research on the benefits and harms of using antidepressants to treat symptomatic knee and hip osteoarthritis. The review included studies through January 2021 whose participants had knee and/or hip osteoarthritis and which compared antidepressant therapy with placebo or another intervention for at least 6 weeks. The authors looked at seven outcomes: overall pain on a 0-10 scale, clinical response (at least a 50% reduction in 24‐hour mean pain), physical function using the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index (WOMAC), quality of life using the EQ-5D, the proportion of participants withdrawing because of adverse events, the proportion who experienced any adverse events, and the proportion who experienced serious adverse events.

The researchers considered a change on the pain scale of 0.5-1 points to be “slight to small,” a difference above 1 up to 2 to be “moderate,” and a difference greater than 2 points to be “large.” In assessing quality of life function on a scale of 0-100, a slight to small difference was 5-10, a moderate difference was 11-20, and a large difference was above 20.

Of the 18 articles the researchers identified for qualitative synthesis, 9 met the criteria for qualitative synthesis in the meta-analysis, including 7 studies only on the knee and 2 that included the knees and hips. All nine studies compared antidepressants with placebo, with or without NSAIDs. Most focused on serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) – six studies on duloxetine and one on milnacipran – while one included fluvoxamine and one included nortriptyline.

The trials included a combined 2,122 participants who were predominantly female with an average age range of 54-66. Trials ranged from 8 to 16 weeks. Five of the trials carried risk of attrition and reporting bias, and only one trial had low risk of bias across all domains.

In five trials with SNRIs and one trial with tricyclics (nortriptyline) totaling 1,904 participants, 45% of those receiving antidepressants had a clinical response, compared with 29% of patients who received placebo (risk ratio, 1.55; 95% CI, 1.31-1.92). This absolute improvement in pain occurred in 16% more participants taking antidepressants, giving a number needed to treat (NNT) of 6. Average improvement in WOMAC physical function was 10.5 points with placebo and 16.2 points with antidepressants, indicating a “small, clinically unimportant response,” the researchers concluded.

Withdrawals because of adverse events included 11% of the antidepressant group and 5% of the placebo group (RR, 2.15; 95% CI, 1.56-2.87), putting the NNT for a harmful outcome at 17.

For all nine trials together, however, the mean reduction in pain from antidepressants was 2.3 points, compared with 1.7 points with placebo, a statistically significant but ”clinically unimportant improvement,” the researchers concluded. Adverse events occurred in 64% of the antidepressant group, compared with 49% of the placebo group (RR, 1.27; 95% CI, 1.15-1.41), which put the NNT for a harmful outcome at 7. No significant difference in serious adverse events occurred between the groups.

The analysis was limited by the low number of trials, most of which were sponsored by industry and most of which used duloxetine. Further, few of the studies enrolled patients with osteoarthritis of the hip, none assessed medium- or long-term effects, and none stratified the participants for different types of pain (neuropathic-like or central or peripheral pain sensitization).

“My general impression is that there was a statistically significant difference found in favor of duloxetine and the antidepressants,” David J. Hunter, MBBS, PhD, MSc, of the University of Sydney, said after the presentation. “There is a real risk of harm, which I think is important to take into consideration, but at least for me as a clinician and in advising other clinicians, it’s one tool in our armamentarium. I think it’s really important to allow patients to make an informed decision about the potential benefit, the real risk of harm, and the fact that it is quite useful in some patients, and I use it in my clinical practice.”

Jeffrey N. Katz, MD, MS, of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, said he uses antidepressants in the same way in his practice and that other types of medications, such as TNF inhibitors, also carry risk of harm that may exceed that of antidepressants.

“I’ve had lots of people start duloxetine, and if they stop it, it’s usually because they just don’t tolerate it very well,” Dr. Katz said.

“We don’t want to throw too many things away,” Dr. Hunter added. “Our patients don’t necessarily have a lot of choices here from a pharmacologic perspective, so I think it’s one of those options that I want to keep in my tool kit, and that’s not necessarily going to change.”

The research did not involve outside funding, and Dr. Wluka reported having no industry disclosures. Disclosure information was unavailable for Dr. Katz and Dr. Hunter. The Congress was sponsored by the Osteoarthritis Research Society International.

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– Using antidepressants to treat osteoarthritis pain can benefit some individuals but appears to have a clinically unimportant reduction in pain when looking at all patients who have tried them, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress. The review was also published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews in October 2022.

In terms of implications for clinical practice, the findings “seem to suggest there is a subgroup that is more likely to respond to antidepressants,” Anita Wluka, PhD, MBBS, a professor in the School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine at Monash University in Melbourne, told attendees. The findings also raise an important research question: “How can we identify the patient phenotype likely to benefit so we can [minimize the] risk of those adverse events and effects?”

Osteoarthritis pain is heterogeneous, and an estimated 30% of the pain is neuropathic-like, likely including central and peripheral sensitization, Dr. Wluka said. Given that antidepressants affect multiple sites along these pathways, multiple organizations have issued a conditional recommendation for duloxetine in their osteoarthritis guidelines, including OARSI, the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology, and the American College of Rheumatology.

The Cochrane Collaboration therefore conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of research on the benefits and harms of using antidepressants to treat symptomatic knee and hip osteoarthritis. The review included studies through January 2021 whose participants had knee and/or hip osteoarthritis and which compared antidepressant therapy with placebo or another intervention for at least 6 weeks. The authors looked at seven outcomes: overall pain on a 0-10 scale, clinical response (at least a 50% reduction in 24‐hour mean pain), physical function using the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index (WOMAC), quality of life using the EQ-5D, the proportion of participants withdrawing because of adverse events, the proportion who experienced any adverse events, and the proportion who experienced serious adverse events.

The researchers considered a change on the pain scale of 0.5-1 points to be “slight to small,” a difference above 1 up to 2 to be “moderate,” and a difference greater than 2 points to be “large.” In assessing quality of life function on a scale of 0-100, a slight to small difference was 5-10, a moderate difference was 11-20, and a large difference was above 20.

Of the 18 articles the researchers identified for qualitative synthesis, 9 met the criteria for qualitative synthesis in the meta-analysis, including 7 studies only on the knee and 2 that included the knees and hips. All nine studies compared antidepressants with placebo, with or without NSAIDs. Most focused on serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) – six studies on duloxetine and one on milnacipran – while one included fluvoxamine and one included nortriptyline.

The trials included a combined 2,122 participants who were predominantly female with an average age range of 54-66. Trials ranged from 8 to 16 weeks. Five of the trials carried risk of attrition and reporting bias, and only one trial had low risk of bias across all domains.

In five trials with SNRIs and one trial with tricyclics (nortriptyline) totaling 1,904 participants, 45% of those receiving antidepressants had a clinical response, compared with 29% of patients who received placebo (risk ratio, 1.55; 95% CI, 1.31-1.92). This absolute improvement in pain occurred in 16% more participants taking antidepressants, giving a number needed to treat (NNT) of 6. Average improvement in WOMAC physical function was 10.5 points with placebo and 16.2 points with antidepressants, indicating a “small, clinically unimportant response,” the researchers concluded.

Withdrawals because of adverse events included 11% of the antidepressant group and 5% of the placebo group (RR, 2.15; 95% CI, 1.56-2.87), putting the NNT for a harmful outcome at 17.

For all nine trials together, however, the mean reduction in pain from antidepressants was 2.3 points, compared with 1.7 points with placebo, a statistically significant but ”clinically unimportant improvement,” the researchers concluded. Adverse events occurred in 64% of the antidepressant group, compared with 49% of the placebo group (RR, 1.27; 95% CI, 1.15-1.41), which put the NNT for a harmful outcome at 7. No significant difference in serious adverse events occurred between the groups.

The analysis was limited by the low number of trials, most of which were sponsored by industry and most of which used duloxetine. Further, few of the studies enrolled patients with osteoarthritis of the hip, none assessed medium- or long-term effects, and none stratified the participants for different types of pain (neuropathic-like or central or peripheral pain sensitization).

“My general impression is that there was a statistically significant difference found in favor of duloxetine and the antidepressants,” David J. Hunter, MBBS, PhD, MSc, of the University of Sydney, said after the presentation. “There is a real risk of harm, which I think is important to take into consideration, but at least for me as a clinician and in advising other clinicians, it’s one tool in our armamentarium. I think it’s really important to allow patients to make an informed decision about the potential benefit, the real risk of harm, and the fact that it is quite useful in some patients, and I use it in my clinical practice.”

Jeffrey N. Katz, MD, MS, of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, said he uses antidepressants in the same way in his practice and that other types of medications, such as TNF inhibitors, also carry risk of harm that may exceed that of antidepressants.

“I’ve had lots of people start duloxetine, and if they stop it, it’s usually because they just don’t tolerate it very well,” Dr. Katz said.

“We don’t want to throw too many things away,” Dr. Hunter added. “Our patients don’t necessarily have a lot of choices here from a pharmacologic perspective, so I think it’s one of those options that I want to keep in my tool kit, and that’s not necessarily going to change.”

The research did not involve outside funding, and Dr. Wluka reported having no industry disclosures. Disclosure information was unavailable for Dr. Katz and Dr. Hunter. The Congress was sponsored by the Osteoarthritis Research Society International.

– Using antidepressants to treat osteoarthritis pain can benefit some individuals but appears to have a clinically unimportant reduction in pain when looking at all patients who have tried them, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress. The review was also published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews in October 2022.

In terms of implications for clinical practice, the findings “seem to suggest there is a subgroup that is more likely to respond to antidepressants,” Anita Wluka, PhD, MBBS, a professor in the School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine at Monash University in Melbourne, told attendees. The findings also raise an important research question: “How can we identify the patient phenotype likely to benefit so we can [minimize the] risk of those adverse events and effects?”

Osteoarthritis pain is heterogeneous, and an estimated 30% of the pain is neuropathic-like, likely including central and peripheral sensitization, Dr. Wluka said. Given that antidepressants affect multiple sites along these pathways, multiple organizations have issued a conditional recommendation for duloxetine in their osteoarthritis guidelines, including OARSI, the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology, and the American College of Rheumatology.

The Cochrane Collaboration therefore conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of research on the benefits and harms of using antidepressants to treat symptomatic knee and hip osteoarthritis. The review included studies through January 2021 whose participants had knee and/or hip osteoarthritis and which compared antidepressant therapy with placebo or another intervention for at least 6 weeks. The authors looked at seven outcomes: overall pain on a 0-10 scale, clinical response (at least a 50% reduction in 24‐hour mean pain), physical function using the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index (WOMAC), quality of life using the EQ-5D, the proportion of participants withdrawing because of adverse events, the proportion who experienced any adverse events, and the proportion who experienced serious adverse events.

The researchers considered a change on the pain scale of 0.5-1 points to be “slight to small,” a difference above 1 up to 2 to be “moderate,” and a difference greater than 2 points to be “large.” In assessing quality of life function on a scale of 0-100, a slight to small difference was 5-10, a moderate difference was 11-20, and a large difference was above 20.

Of the 18 articles the researchers identified for qualitative synthesis, 9 met the criteria for qualitative synthesis in the meta-analysis, including 7 studies only on the knee and 2 that included the knees and hips. All nine studies compared antidepressants with placebo, with or without NSAIDs. Most focused on serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) – six studies on duloxetine and one on milnacipran – while one included fluvoxamine and one included nortriptyline.

The trials included a combined 2,122 participants who were predominantly female with an average age range of 54-66. Trials ranged from 8 to 16 weeks. Five of the trials carried risk of attrition and reporting bias, and only one trial had low risk of bias across all domains.

In five trials with SNRIs and one trial with tricyclics (nortriptyline) totaling 1,904 participants, 45% of those receiving antidepressants had a clinical response, compared with 29% of patients who received placebo (risk ratio, 1.55; 95% CI, 1.31-1.92). This absolute improvement in pain occurred in 16% more participants taking antidepressants, giving a number needed to treat (NNT) of 6. Average improvement in WOMAC physical function was 10.5 points with placebo and 16.2 points with antidepressants, indicating a “small, clinically unimportant response,” the researchers concluded.

Withdrawals because of adverse events included 11% of the antidepressant group and 5% of the placebo group (RR, 2.15; 95% CI, 1.56-2.87), putting the NNT for a harmful outcome at 17.

For all nine trials together, however, the mean reduction in pain from antidepressants was 2.3 points, compared with 1.7 points with placebo, a statistically significant but ”clinically unimportant improvement,” the researchers concluded. Adverse events occurred in 64% of the antidepressant group, compared with 49% of the placebo group (RR, 1.27; 95% CI, 1.15-1.41), which put the NNT for a harmful outcome at 7. No significant difference in serious adverse events occurred between the groups.

The analysis was limited by the low number of trials, most of which were sponsored by industry and most of which used duloxetine. Further, few of the studies enrolled patients with osteoarthritis of the hip, none assessed medium- or long-term effects, and none stratified the participants for different types of pain (neuropathic-like or central or peripheral pain sensitization).

“My general impression is that there was a statistically significant difference found in favor of duloxetine and the antidepressants,” David J. Hunter, MBBS, PhD, MSc, of the University of Sydney, said after the presentation. “There is a real risk of harm, which I think is important to take into consideration, but at least for me as a clinician and in advising other clinicians, it’s one tool in our armamentarium. I think it’s really important to allow patients to make an informed decision about the potential benefit, the real risk of harm, and the fact that it is quite useful in some patients, and I use it in my clinical practice.”

Jeffrey N. Katz, MD, MS, of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, said he uses antidepressants in the same way in his practice and that other types of medications, such as TNF inhibitors, also carry risk of harm that may exceed that of antidepressants.

“I’ve had lots of people start duloxetine, and if they stop it, it’s usually because they just don’t tolerate it very well,” Dr. Katz said.

“We don’t want to throw too many things away,” Dr. Hunter added. “Our patients don’t necessarily have a lot of choices here from a pharmacologic perspective, so I think it’s one of those options that I want to keep in my tool kit, and that’s not necessarily going to change.”

The research did not involve outside funding, and Dr. Wluka reported having no industry disclosures. Disclosure information was unavailable for Dr. Katz and Dr. Hunter. The Congress was sponsored by the Osteoarthritis Research Society International.

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All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, copied, or otherwise reproduced or distributed without the prior written permission of Frontline Medical Communications Inc.</copyrightNotice> </rightsInfo> </provider> <abstract/> <metaDescription>DENVER – Using antidepressants to treat osteoarthritis pain can benefit some individuals but appears to have a clinically unimportant reduction in pain when loo</metaDescription> <articlePDF/> <teaserImage/> <teaser>Although some patients benefit from antidepressants for osteoarthritis pain, it’s difficult to know which patients will benefit and which will be more likely to experience harm. </teaser> <title>Antidepressants benefit some patients with osteoarthritis pain</title> <deck/> <disclaimer/> <AuthorList/> <articleURL/> <doi/> <pubMedID/> <publishXMLStatus/> <publishXMLVersion>1</publishXMLVersion> <useEISSN>0</useEISSN> <urgency/> <pubPubdateYear/> <pubPubdateMonth/> <pubPubdateDay/> <pubVolume/> <pubNumber/> <wireChannels/> <primaryCMSID/> <CMSIDs/> <keywords/> <seeAlsos/> <publications_g> <publicationData> <publicationCode>rn</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>im</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>fp</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> </publications_g> <publications> <term canonical="true">26</term> <term>21</term> <term>15</term> </publications> <sections> <term canonical="true">53</term> <term>39313</term> </sections> <topics> <term canonical="true">265</term> <term>268</term> <term>290</term> </topics> <links/> </header> <itemSet> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>Main</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title>Antidepressants benefit some patients with osteoarthritis pain</title> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> <p><span class="dateline">DENVER </span>– Using antidepressants to treat osteoarthritis pain can benefit some individuals but appears to have a clinically unimportant reduction in pain when looking at all patients who have tried them, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress. The review was also <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.cochranelibrary.com/cdsr/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD012157.pub2/full">published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews</a></span> in October 2022. </p> <p>In terms of implications for clinical practice, the findings “seem to suggest there is a subgroup that is more likely to respond to antidepressants,” Anita Wluka, PhD, MBBS, a professor in the School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine at Monash University in Melbourne, told attendees. The findings also raise an important research question: “How can we identify the patient phenotype likely to benefit so we can [minimize the] risk of those adverse events and effects?”<br/><br/>Osteoarthritis pain is heterogeneous, and an estimated 30% of the pain is neuropathic-like, likely including central and peripheral sensitization, Dr. Wluka said. Given that antidepressants affect multiple sites along these pathways, multiple organizations have issued a conditional recommendation for duloxetine in their osteoarthritis guidelines, including OARSI, the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology, and the American College of Rheumatology. <br/><br/>The Cochrane Collaboration therefore conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of research on the benefits and harms of using antidepressants to treat symptomatic knee and hip osteoarthritis. The review included studies through January 2021 whose participants had knee and/or hip osteoarthritis and which compared antidepressant therapy with placebo or another intervention for at least 6 weeks. The authors looked at seven outcomes: overall pain on a 0-10 scale, clinical response (at least a 50% reduction in 24‐hour mean pain), physical function using the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index (WOMAC), quality of life using the EQ-5D, the proportion of participants withdrawing because of adverse events, the proportion who experienced any adverse events, and the proportion who experienced serious adverse events. <br/><br/>The researchers considered a change on the pain scale of 0.5-1 points to be “slight to small,” a difference above 1 up to 2 to be “moderate,” and a difference greater than 2 points to be “large.” In assessing quality of life function on a scale of 0-100, a slight to small difference was 5-10, a moderate difference was 11-20, and a large difference was above 20. <br/><br/>Of the 18 articles the researchers identified for qualitative synthesis, 9 met the criteria for qualitative synthesis in the meta-analysis, including 7 studies only on the knee and 2 that included the knees and hips. All nine studies compared antidepressants with placebo, with or without NSAIDs. Most focused on serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) – six studies on duloxetine and one on milnacipran – while one included fluvoxamine and one included nortriptyline. <br/><br/>The trials included a combined 2,122 participants who were predominantly female with an average age range of 54-66. Trials ranged from 8 to 16 weeks. Five of the trials carried risk of attrition and reporting bias, and only one trial had low risk of bias across all domains. <br/><br/>In five trials with SNRIs and one trial with tricyclics (nortriptyline) totaling 1,904 participants, 45% of those receiving antidepressants had a clinical response, compared with 29% of patients who received placebo (risk ratio, 1.55; 95% CI, 1.31-1.92). This absolute improvement in pain occurred in 16% more participants taking antidepressants, giving a number needed to treat (NNT) of 6. Average improvement in WOMAC physical function was 10.5 points with placebo and 16.2 points with antidepressants, indicating a “small, clinically unimportant response,” the researchers concluded. <br/><br/>Withdrawals because of adverse events included 11% of the antidepressant group and 5% of the placebo group (RR, 2.15; 95% CI, 1.56-2.87), putting the NNT for a harmful outcome at 17. <br/><br/>For all nine trials together, however, the mean reduction in pain from antidepressants was 2.3 points, compared with 1.7 points with placebo, a statistically significant but ”clinically unimportant improvement,” the researchers concluded. Adverse events occurred in 64% of the antidepressant group, compared with 49% of the placebo group (RR, 1.27; 95% CI, 1.15-1.41), which put the NNT for a harmful outcome at 7. No significant difference in serious adverse events occurred between the groups. <br/><br/>The analysis was limited by the low number of trials, most of which were sponsored by industry and most of which used duloxetine. Further, few of the studies enrolled patients with osteoarthritis of the hip, none assessed medium- or long-term effects, and none stratified the participants for different types of pain (neuropathic-like or central or peripheral pain sensitization). <br/><br/>“My general impression is that there was a statistically significant difference found in favor of duloxetine and the antidepressants,” David J. Hunter, MBBS, PhD, MSc, of the University of Sydney, said after the presentation. “There is a real risk of harm, which I think is important to take into consideration, but at least for me as a clinician and in advising other clinicians, it’s one tool in our armamentarium. I think it’s really important to allow patients to make an informed decision about the potential benefit, the real risk of harm, and the fact that it is quite useful in some patients, and I use it in my clinical practice.” <br/><br/>Jeffrey N. Katz, MD, MS, of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, said he uses antidepressants in the same way in his practice and that other types of medications, such as TNF inhibitors, also carry risk of harm that may exceed that of antidepressants.<br/><br/>“I’ve had lots of people start duloxetine, and if they stop it, it’s usually because they just don’t tolerate it very well,” Dr. Katz said. <br/><br/>“We don’t want to throw too many things away,” Dr. Hunter added. “Our patients don’t necessarily have a lot of choices here from a pharmacologic perspective, so I think it’s one of those options that I want to keep in my tool kit, and that’s not necessarily going to change.”<br/><br/>The research did not involve outside funding, and Dr. Wluka reported having no industry disclosures. Disclosure information was unavailable for Dr. Katz and Dr. Hunter. The Congress was sponsored by the Osteoarthritis Research Society International.<span class="end"/></p> </itemContent> </newsItem> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>teaser</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title/> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> </itemContent> </newsItem> </itemSet></root>
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Link between knee pain, sleep disturbance related to daily activities

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– The relationship between nighttime knee pain from osteoarthritis and sleep disturbances is more complex than a simple association, according to new research presented at the Osteoarthritis Research Society International 2023 World Congress.

The findings suggested that the association between knee OA pain and sleep problems was also linked to activities of daily living, which can contribute to pain but are also affected by OA, Takahiro Sasahara, of the department of orthopedics at Juntendo University, Tokyo, and Koshigaya Municipal Hospital, Saitama, Japan, told attendees. The study also found that knee pain and mobility impairment were associated with sleep disturbances in older adults regardless of the severity of knee OA.

Luisa Cedin, a PhD student at Rush University, Chicago, who attended the presentation, noted the clinical implications of the interaction of daily activities with knee pain.

”I’m a physical therapist, and this could have a significant impact on the performance of the exercises that I’m requiring as a physical therapist,” Ms. Cedin said in an interview. “When you ask somebody who is not getting enough rest during the night – not only enough time but enough quality of rest – we know that we can expect a lower performance with any type of exercises, whether it’s less strength or force, less power, less agility, or less resistance or endurance, so this has a big impact on their quality of life.”

Mr. Sasahara cited research noting that acute pain occurs at the beginning of movement and during weight bearing and walking while chronic pain frequently occurs at night and in early morning awakenings. The prevalence of sleep disturbances in patients with chronic pain ranges from 50% to 80%, he said, and past evidence has shown the relationship between sleep and pain to be bidirectional.

For example, insomnia frequency and severity, sleep-onset problems, and sleep efficiency are all positively associated with pain sensitivity, and increasing severity of OA is linked to increasing prevalence of night knee pain and sleep problems, affecting quality of life, he said.

In this new study examining the relationship between sleep disturbance and knee pain and mobility, the researchers focused specifically on a population of older adults with knee OA. They analyzed data from the Bunkyo Health Study, which was conducted at Juntendo University’s Sportology Center to examine the association between metabolic, cardiovascular, cognitive dysfunction, and motor organ disorders in older adults from November 2015 to September 2018.

From the initial population of 1,630 adults, aged 65-84, who did not need medical treatment because of knee pain, the researchers analyzed data from 1,145 adults who the met this study’s criteria, which included MRI imaging of medial type knee OA. A little over half (55.7%) were women, with an average age of 73 and an average body mass index (BMI) of 22.8 kg/m2.

In addition to blood and urine sampling, the researchers determined the severity of knee OA based on joint space width, femorotibial angle, and Kellgren and Lawrence (K/L) grade from x-rays in standing position. They also assessed the structure of knee OA using a whole-organ MRI score (WORMS), and pain and mobility with a visual analog scale, the Japan Knee Osteoarthritis Measure (JKOM), and the 25-question geriatric locomotive function scale.

The JKOM, based on the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities quality of life index for general knee OA, is adjusted to account for the Japanese lifestyle and covers four categories: knee pain and stiffness, a score for activities of daily living, a social activities score, and the patient’s health conditions.

Overall, 41.3% of the participants had sleep disturbances, based on a score of 6 or higher on the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index–Japanese. More women (55.7%) than men experienced sleep problems (P < .001), but there were no significant differences in the average age between those who did and those who did not have sleep issues. There were also no significance differences in BMI, joint space width, or femorotibial angle, which was an average 177.5 degrees in group with no sleep problems and 177.6 degrees in the group with sleep disturbances.

The proportion of participants experiencing sleep disturbances increased with increasing K/L grade of OA: 56.8% of those with K/L grade 4 had sleep problems, compared with 40.9% of those with K/L grade 3, 42.1% of those with K/L grade 2, and 33.7% of those with K/L grade 1, resulting in 30% greater odds of sleep disturbance with a higher K/L grade (odds ratio, 1.3; P = .011).

Knee pain at night was also significantly associated with severity of OA based on the K/L grade. While only 6.9% of participants reported pain at night overall, nearly 1 in 3 (29.5%) of those with K/L grade 4 reported pain at night, compared with 3.4% of those with K/L grade 1 (P < .001). (Night pain occurred in 5.4% of those with K/L grade 2 and 16.1% with K/L grade 3.)

However, after adjusting for age, gender, and BMI, the severity of knee OA was not significantly associated with sleep disturbance based on K/L grade, joint space width, femoro-tibial angle, and/or WORMS. But knee pain remained significantly associated with sleep disturbance after adjustment based on the visual analog scale and the JKOM (P < .001 for both).

Sleep problems were also significantly associated with each subcategory of the JKOM after adjustment (P < .001 for all but social activities, which was P = .014).

“Activities of daily living may affect the occurrence of knee pain at night,” Mr. Sasahara said, and “sleep disturbance may also disturb quality of life.” If sleep disturbances related to nighttime knee pain are linked to activities of daily living, then “not only knee pain but also activities of daily living need to be improved in order to improve sleep.”

He noted several of the study’s limitations, including the fact that lifestyle habits and work were not taken into account, nor did the researchers evaluate sleep disturbances potentially resulting from a medical illness. The researchers also only examined knee pain, not pain in other parts of the body.

The research was funded by Juntendo University; the Strategic Research Foundation at Private Universities; KAKENHI from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan; the Mizuno Sports Promotion Foundation; and the Mitsui Life Social Welfare Foundation. Mr. Sasahara and Ms. Cedin had no disclosures.

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– The relationship between nighttime knee pain from osteoarthritis and sleep disturbances is more complex than a simple association, according to new research presented at the Osteoarthritis Research Society International 2023 World Congress.

The findings suggested that the association between knee OA pain and sleep problems was also linked to activities of daily living, which can contribute to pain but are also affected by OA, Takahiro Sasahara, of the department of orthopedics at Juntendo University, Tokyo, and Koshigaya Municipal Hospital, Saitama, Japan, told attendees. The study also found that knee pain and mobility impairment were associated with sleep disturbances in older adults regardless of the severity of knee OA.

Luisa Cedin, a PhD student at Rush University, Chicago, who attended the presentation, noted the clinical implications of the interaction of daily activities with knee pain.

”I’m a physical therapist, and this could have a significant impact on the performance of the exercises that I’m requiring as a physical therapist,” Ms. Cedin said in an interview. “When you ask somebody who is not getting enough rest during the night – not only enough time but enough quality of rest – we know that we can expect a lower performance with any type of exercises, whether it’s less strength or force, less power, less agility, or less resistance or endurance, so this has a big impact on their quality of life.”

Mr. Sasahara cited research noting that acute pain occurs at the beginning of movement and during weight bearing and walking while chronic pain frequently occurs at night and in early morning awakenings. The prevalence of sleep disturbances in patients with chronic pain ranges from 50% to 80%, he said, and past evidence has shown the relationship between sleep and pain to be bidirectional.

For example, insomnia frequency and severity, sleep-onset problems, and sleep efficiency are all positively associated with pain sensitivity, and increasing severity of OA is linked to increasing prevalence of night knee pain and sleep problems, affecting quality of life, he said.

In this new study examining the relationship between sleep disturbance and knee pain and mobility, the researchers focused specifically on a population of older adults with knee OA. They analyzed data from the Bunkyo Health Study, which was conducted at Juntendo University’s Sportology Center to examine the association between metabolic, cardiovascular, cognitive dysfunction, and motor organ disorders in older adults from November 2015 to September 2018.

From the initial population of 1,630 adults, aged 65-84, who did not need medical treatment because of knee pain, the researchers analyzed data from 1,145 adults who the met this study’s criteria, which included MRI imaging of medial type knee OA. A little over half (55.7%) were women, with an average age of 73 and an average body mass index (BMI) of 22.8 kg/m2.

In addition to blood and urine sampling, the researchers determined the severity of knee OA based on joint space width, femorotibial angle, and Kellgren and Lawrence (K/L) grade from x-rays in standing position. They also assessed the structure of knee OA using a whole-organ MRI score (WORMS), and pain and mobility with a visual analog scale, the Japan Knee Osteoarthritis Measure (JKOM), and the 25-question geriatric locomotive function scale.

The JKOM, based on the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities quality of life index for general knee OA, is adjusted to account for the Japanese lifestyle and covers four categories: knee pain and stiffness, a score for activities of daily living, a social activities score, and the patient’s health conditions.

Overall, 41.3% of the participants had sleep disturbances, based on a score of 6 or higher on the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index–Japanese. More women (55.7%) than men experienced sleep problems (P < .001), but there were no significant differences in the average age between those who did and those who did not have sleep issues. There were also no significance differences in BMI, joint space width, or femorotibial angle, which was an average 177.5 degrees in group with no sleep problems and 177.6 degrees in the group with sleep disturbances.

The proportion of participants experiencing sleep disturbances increased with increasing K/L grade of OA: 56.8% of those with K/L grade 4 had sleep problems, compared with 40.9% of those with K/L grade 3, 42.1% of those with K/L grade 2, and 33.7% of those with K/L grade 1, resulting in 30% greater odds of sleep disturbance with a higher K/L grade (odds ratio, 1.3; P = .011).

Knee pain at night was also significantly associated with severity of OA based on the K/L grade. While only 6.9% of participants reported pain at night overall, nearly 1 in 3 (29.5%) of those with K/L grade 4 reported pain at night, compared with 3.4% of those with K/L grade 1 (P < .001). (Night pain occurred in 5.4% of those with K/L grade 2 and 16.1% with K/L grade 3.)

However, after adjusting for age, gender, and BMI, the severity of knee OA was not significantly associated with sleep disturbance based on K/L grade, joint space width, femoro-tibial angle, and/or WORMS. But knee pain remained significantly associated with sleep disturbance after adjustment based on the visual analog scale and the JKOM (P < .001 for both).

Sleep problems were also significantly associated with each subcategory of the JKOM after adjustment (P < .001 for all but social activities, which was P = .014).

“Activities of daily living may affect the occurrence of knee pain at night,” Mr. Sasahara said, and “sleep disturbance may also disturb quality of life.” If sleep disturbances related to nighttime knee pain are linked to activities of daily living, then “not only knee pain but also activities of daily living need to be improved in order to improve sleep.”

He noted several of the study’s limitations, including the fact that lifestyle habits and work were not taken into account, nor did the researchers evaluate sleep disturbances potentially resulting from a medical illness. The researchers also only examined knee pain, not pain in other parts of the body.

The research was funded by Juntendo University; the Strategic Research Foundation at Private Universities; KAKENHI from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan; the Mizuno Sports Promotion Foundation; and the Mitsui Life Social Welfare Foundation. Mr. Sasahara and Ms. Cedin had no disclosures.

– The relationship between nighttime knee pain from osteoarthritis and sleep disturbances is more complex than a simple association, according to new research presented at the Osteoarthritis Research Society International 2023 World Congress.

The findings suggested that the association between knee OA pain and sleep problems was also linked to activities of daily living, which can contribute to pain but are also affected by OA, Takahiro Sasahara, of the department of orthopedics at Juntendo University, Tokyo, and Koshigaya Municipal Hospital, Saitama, Japan, told attendees. The study also found that knee pain and mobility impairment were associated with sleep disturbances in older adults regardless of the severity of knee OA.

Luisa Cedin, a PhD student at Rush University, Chicago, who attended the presentation, noted the clinical implications of the interaction of daily activities with knee pain.

”I’m a physical therapist, and this could have a significant impact on the performance of the exercises that I’m requiring as a physical therapist,” Ms. Cedin said in an interview. “When you ask somebody who is not getting enough rest during the night – not only enough time but enough quality of rest – we know that we can expect a lower performance with any type of exercises, whether it’s less strength or force, less power, less agility, or less resistance or endurance, so this has a big impact on their quality of life.”

Mr. Sasahara cited research noting that acute pain occurs at the beginning of movement and during weight bearing and walking while chronic pain frequently occurs at night and in early morning awakenings. The prevalence of sleep disturbances in patients with chronic pain ranges from 50% to 80%, he said, and past evidence has shown the relationship between sleep and pain to be bidirectional.

For example, insomnia frequency and severity, sleep-onset problems, and sleep efficiency are all positively associated with pain sensitivity, and increasing severity of OA is linked to increasing prevalence of night knee pain and sleep problems, affecting quality of life, he said.

In this new study examining the relationship between sleep disturbance and knee pain and mobility, the researchers focused specifically on a population of older adults with knee OA. They analyzed data from the Bunkyo Health Study, which was conducted at Juntendo University’s Sportology Center to examine the association between metabolic, cardiovascular, cognitive dysfunction, and motor organ disorders in older adults from November 2015 to September 2018.

From the initial population of 1,630 adults, aged 65-84, who did not need medical treatment because of knee pain, the researchers analyzed data from 1,145 adults who the met this study’s criteria, which included MRI imaging of medial type knee OA. A little over half (55.7%) were women, with an average age of 73 and an average body mass index (BMI) of 22.8 kg/m2.

In addition to blood and urine sampling, the researchers determined the severity of knee OA based on joint space width, femorotibial angle, and Kellgren and Lawrence (K/L) grade from x-rays in standing position. They also assessed the structure of knee OA using a whole-organ MRI score (WORMS), and pain and mobility with a visual analog scale, the Japan Knee Osteoarthritis Measure (JKOM), and the 25-question geriatric locomotive function scale.

The JKOM, based on the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities quality of life index for general knee OA, is adjusted to account for the Japanese lifestyle and covers four categories: knee pain and stiffness, a score for activities of daily living, a social activities score, and the patient’s health conditions.

Overall, 41.3% of the participants had sleep disturbances, based on a score of 6 or higher on the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index–Japanese. More women (55.7%) than men experienced sleep problems (P < .001), but there were no significant differences in the average age between those who did and those who did not have sleep issues. There were also no significance differences in BMI, joint space width, or femorotibial angle, which was an average 177.5 degrees in group with no sleep problems and 177.6 degrees in the group with sleep disturbances.

The proportion of participants experiencing sleep disturbances increased with increasing K/L grade of OA: 56.8% of those with K/L grade 4 had sleep problems, compared with 40.9% of those with K/L grade 3, 42.1% of those with K/L grade 2, and 33.7% of those with K/L grade 1, resulting in 30% greater odds of sleep disturbance with a higher K/L grade (odds ratio, 1.3; P = .011).

Knee pain at night was also significantly associated with severity of OA based on the K/L grade. While only 6.9% of participants reported pain at night overall, nearly 1 in 3 (29.5%) of those with K/L grade 4 reported pain at night, compared with 3.4% of those with K/L grade 1 (P < .001). (Night pain occurred in 5.4% of those with K/L grade 2 and 16.1% with K/L grade 3.)

However, after adjusting for age, gender, and BMI, the severity of knee OA was not significantly associated with sleep disturbance based on K/L grade, joint space width, femoro-tibial angle, and/or WORMS. But knee pain remained significantly associated with sleep disturbance after adjustment based on the visual analog scale and the JKOM (P < .001 for both).

Sleep problems were also significantly associated with each subcategory of the JKOM after adjustment (P < .001 for all but social activities, which was P = .014).

“Activities of daily living may affect the occurrence of knee pain at night,” Mr. Sasahara said, and “sleep disturbance may also disturb quality of life.” If sleep disturbances related to nighttime knee pain are linked to activities of daily living, then “not only knee pain but also activities of daily living need to be improved in order to improve sleep.”

He noted several of the study’s limitations, including the fact that lifestyle habits and work were not taken into account, nor did the researchers evaluate sleep disturbances potentially resulting from a medical illness. The researchers also only examined knee pain, not pain in other parts of the body.

The research was funded by Juntendo University; the Strategic Research Foundation at Private Universities; KAKENHI from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan; the Mizuno Sports Promotion Foundation; and the Mitsui Life Social Welfare Foundation. Mr. Sasahara and Ms. Cedin had no disclosures.

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<root generator="drupal.xsl" gversion="1.7"> <header> <fileName>162768</fileName> <TBEID>0C0492CF.SIG</TBEID> <TBUniqueIdentifier>MD_0C0492CF</TBUniqueIdentifier> <newsOrJournal>News</newsOrJournal> <publisherName>Frontline Medical Communications</publisherName> <storyname>SleepKneeOA_OARSI2023_Haelle</storyname> <articleType>2</articleType> <TBLocation>QC Done-All Pubs</TBLocation> <QCDate>20230324T105354</QCDate> <firstPublished>20230324T113030</firstPublished> <LastPublished>20230324T113030</LastPublished> <pubStatus qcode="stat:"/> <embargoDate/> <killDate/> <CMSDate>20230324T113030</CMSDate> <articleSource>AT OARSI 2023</articleSource> <facebookInfo/> <meetingNumber>3588-23</meetingNumber> <byline>Tara Haelle</byline> <bylineText>TARA HAELLE</bylineText> <bylineFull>TARA HAELLE</bylineFull> <bylineTitleText>MDedge News</bylineTitleText> <USOrGlobal/> <wireDocType/> <newsDocType>News</newsDocType> <journalDocType/> <linkLabel/> <pageRange/> <citation/> <quizID/> <indexIssueDate/> <itemClass qcode="ninat:text"/> <provider qcode="provider:imng"> <name>IMNG Medical Media</name> <rightsInfo> <copyrightHolder> <name>Frontline Medical News</name> </copyrightHolder> <copyrightNotice>Copyright (c) 2015 Frontline Medical News, a Frontline Medical Communications Inc. company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, copied, or otherwise reproduced or distributed without the prior written permission of Frontline Medical Communications Inc.</copyrightNotice> </rightsInfo> </provider> <abstract/> <metaDescription>DENVER – The relationship between nighttime knee pain from osteoarthritis and sleep disturbances is more complex than a simple association, according to new res</metaDescription> <articlePDF/> <teaserImage/> <teaser>Findings suggested that it’s only knee pain, not the severity of knee osteoarthritis, that’s significantly associated with sleep disturbances, and daily activities are part of that dynamic. </teaser> <title>Link between knee pain, sleep disturbance related to daily activities</title> <deck/> <disclaimer/> <AuthorList/> <articleURL/> <doi/> <pubMedID/> <publishXMLStatus/> <publishXMLVersion>1</publishXMLVersion> <useEISSN>0</useEISSN> <urgency/> <pubPubdateYear/> <pubPubdateMonth/> <pubPubdateDay/> <pubVolume/> <pubNumber/> <wireChannels/> <primaryCMSID/> <CMSIDs/> <keywords/> <seeAlsos/> <publications_g> <publicationData> <publicationCode>rn</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>im</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>fp</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> </publications_g> <publications> <term canonical="true">26</term> <term>21</term> <term>15</term> </publications> <sections> <term canonical="true">53</term> <term>39313</term> </sections> <topics> <term canonical="true">265</term> <term>268</term> <term>296</term> <term>290</term> </topics> <links/> </header> <itemSet> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>Main</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title>Link between knee pain, sleep disturbance related to daily activities</title> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> <p><span class="dateline">DENVER </span>– The relationship between nighttime knee pain from osteoarthritis and sleep disturbances is more complex than a simple association, according to new research presented at the Osteoarthritis Research Society International 2023 World Congress.</p> <p>The findings suggested that the association between knee OA pain and sleep problems was also linked to activities of daily living, which can contribute to pain but are also affected by OA, Takahiro Sasahara, of the department of orthopedics at Juntendo University, Tokyo, and Koshigaya Municipal Hospital, Saitama, Japan, told attendees. The study also found that knee pain and mobility impairment were associated with sleep disturbances in older adults regardless of the severity of knee OA.<br/><br/>Luisa Cedin, a PhD student at Rush University, Chicago, who attended the presentation, noted the clinical implications of the interaction of daily activities with knee pain. <br/><br/>”I’m a physical therapist, and this could have a significant impact on the performance of the exercises that I’m requiring as a physical therapist,” Ms. Cedin said in an interview. “When you ask somebody who is not getting enough rest during the night – not only enough time but enough quality of rest – we know that we can expect a lower performance with any type of exercises, whether it’s less strength or force, less power, less agility, or less resistance or endurance, so this has a big impact on their quality of life.” <br/><br/>Mr. Sasahara <span class="Hyperlink">cited</span> <span class="Hyperlink">research</span> noting that acute pain occurs at the beginning of movement and during weight bearing and walking while chronic pain frequently occurs at night and in early morning awakenings. The prevalence of sleep disturbances in patients with chronic pain <span class="Hyperlink">ranges</span> from 50% to 80%, he said, and past evidence has shown the relationship between sleep and pain to be bidirectional.<br/><br/>For example, insomnia frequency and severity, sleep-onset problems, and sleep efficiency are all positively <span class="Hyperlink">associated</span> with pain sensitivity, and increasing severity of OA is <span class="Hyperlink">linked</span> to increasing prevalence of night knee pain and sleep problems, affecting quality of life, he said. <br/><br/>In this new study examining the relationship between sleep disturbance and knee pain and mobility, the researchers focused specifically on a population of older adults with knee OA. They analyzed data from the <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/9/9/e031584.long">Bunkyo Health Study</a></span>, which was conducted at Juntendo University’s Sportology Center to examine the association between metabolic, cardiovascular, cognitive dysfunction, and motor organ disorders in older adults from November 2015 to September 2018. <br/><br/>From the initial population of 1,630 adults, aged 65-84, who did not need medical treatment because of knee pain, the researchers analyzed data from 1,145 adults who the met this study’s criteria, which included MRI imaging of medial type knee OA. A little over half (55.7%) were women, with an average age of 73 and an average body mass index (BMI) of 22.8 kg/m<sup>2</sup>.<br/><br/>In addition to blood and urine sampling, the researchers determined the severity of knee OA based on joint space width, femorotibial angle, and <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://radiopaedia.org/articles/kellgren-and-lawrence-system-for-classification-of-osteoarthritis?lang=us">Kellgren and Lawrence</a></span> (K/L) grade from x-rays in standing position. They also assessed the structure of knee OA using a whole-organ MRI score (WORMS), and pain and mobility with a visual analog scale, the Japan Knee Osteoarthritis Measure (JKOM), and the 25-question geriatric locomotive function scale. <br/><br/>The JKOM, based on the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities quality of life index for general knee OA, is adjusted to account for the Japanese lifestyle and covers four categories: knee pain and stiffness, a score for activities of daily living, a social activities score, and the patient’s health conditions. <br/><br/>Overall, 41.3% of the participants had sleep disturbances, based on a score of 6 or higher on the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index–Japanese. More women (55.7%) than men experienced sleep problems (<em>P</em> &lt; .001), but there were no significant differences in the average age between those who did and those who did not have sleep issues. There were also no significance differences in BMI, joint space width, or femorotibial angle, which was an average 177.5 degrees in group with no sleep problems and 177.6 degrees in the group with sleep disturbances.<br/><br/>The proportion of participants experiencing sleep disturbances increased with increasing K/L grade of OA: 56.8% of those with K/L grade 4 had sleep problems, compared with 40.9% of those with K/L grade 3, 42.1% of those with K/L grade 2, and 33.7% of those with K/L grade 1, resulting in 30% greater odds of sleep disturbance with a higher K/L grade (odds ratio, 1.3; <em>P</em> = .011). <br/><br/>Knee pain at night was also significantly associated with severity of OA based on the K/L grade. While only 6.9% of participants reported pain at night overall, nearly 1 in 3 (29.5%) of those with K/L grade 4 reported pain at night, compared with 3.4% of those with K/L grade 1 (<em>P</em> &lt; .001). (Night pain occurred in 5.4% of those with K/L grade 2 and 16.1% with K/L grade 3.) <br/><br/>However, after adjusting for age, gender, and BMI, the severity of knee OA was not significantly associated with sleep disturbance based on K/L grade, joint space width, femoro-tibial angle, and/or WORMS. But knee pain remained significantly associated with sleep disturbance after adjustment based on the visual analog scale and the JKOM (<em>P</em> &lt; .001 for both). <br/><br/>Sleep problems were also significantly associated with each subcategory of the JKOM after adjustment (<em>P</em> &lt; .001 for all but social activities, which was <em>P</em> = .014). <br/><br/>“Activities of daily living may affect the occurrence of knee pain at night,” Mr. Sasahara said, and “sleep disturbance may also disturb quality of life.” If sleep disturbances related to nighttime knee pain are linked to activities of daily living, then “not only knee pain but also activities of daily living need to be improved in order to improve sleep.” <br/><br/>He noted several of the study’s limitations, including the fact that lifestyle habits and work were not taken into account, nor did the researchers evaluate sleep disturbances potentially resulting from a medical illness. The researchers also only examined knee pain, not pain in other parts of the body.<br/><br/>The research was funded by Juntendo University; the Strategic Research Foundation at Private Universities; KAKENHI from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan; the Mizuno Sports Promotion Foundation; and the Mitsui Life Social Welfare Foundation. Mr. Sasahara and Ms. Cedin had no disclosures.</p> </itemContent> </newsItem> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>teaser</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title/> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> </itemContent> </newsItem> </itemSet></root>
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Presurgical expectations may influence patients’ attitudes, experiences after knee replacement

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– People with lower expectations of how they would be able to use their knees during work activities after a total knee arthroplasty were more dissatisfied with their knee abilities 6 months after their surgery, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress.

Two out of 10 patients are dissatisfied after total knee arthroplasty, which is increasingly performed in younger and working patients who may have higher demands, presenter Yvonne van Zaanen, a physiotherapist in occupational health and ergonomics and a PhD candidate at Amsterdam University Medical Center, told attendees.

The findings suggest a correlation between patients’ low presurgical expectations of their ability to use their knees and having more difficulty with their knees postoperatively, she said. “We should take better care of working patients with low expectations by managing their preoperative expectations and improving their ability to perform work-related knee-straining activities in rehabilitation,” Ms. van Zaanen told attendees.

The researchers conducted a multicenter, prospective cohort study involving seven hospitals. They surveyed 175 employed individuals aged 18-65 years who were scheduled for a total knee arthroplasty and intended to return to work after their surgery. The first survey occurred before the operation, and the follow-up occurred 6 months after the surgery.

Just over half the participants were women (53%), and the average participant age was 59. Respondents had a mean body mass index (BMI) of 29 kg/m2, and had a Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) pain score of 42 (on a 0-to-100 scale in which lower scores are worse). About half the respondents (51%) had a job that involved knee-straining activities.

The researchers assessed participants’ ability to perform work-related, knee-straining activities using the Work, Osteoarthritis, or joint-Replacement Questionnaire (WORQ) tool, which considers the following activities: kneeling, crouching, clambering, taking the stairs, walking on rough terrain, working with hands below knee height, standing, lifting or carrying, pushing or pulling, walking on ground level, operating a vehicle, operating foot pedals, and sitting. The 0-to-100 scale rates the difficulty of using knees for each particular activity, with higher scores indicating greater ease and less pain in doing that activity.

Among the 107 patients who expected to be satisfied after their surgery, half (n = 53) were satisfied, compared with 12% (n = 13) who were unsatisfied; the remaining participants (n = 41, 38%) were neither satisfied nor dissatisfied. Among the 24 patients who expected to be dissatisfied after their surgery, one-third (n = 8) were satisfied and 42% (n = 10) were dissatisfied. The remaining 44 patients didn’t expect to be satisfied or dissatisfied before their surgery, and 41% of them were satisfied while 23% were dissatisfied.

The researchers found that patients’ expectation of their satisfaction level going into the surgery was the only preoperative factor to be prognostic for dissatisfaction 6 months after surgery, based on their WORQ score. That is, patients who expected to be dissatisfied before their surgery had approximately five times greater odds of being dissatisfied after their surgery than did those who expected to be satisfied with their ability to do knee-straining activities at work (odds ratio, 5.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.7-15.5). Among those with a WORQ score of 40, indicating a greater expectation of difficulty using their knees postoperatively, 55% were dissatisfied after their surgery, compared with 19% of those with a WORQ score of 85, who expected greater knee ability after their surgery.

[embed:render:related:node:261878]

The other factors that the researchers examined, which had no effect on WORQ scores, included age, sex, BMI, education, comorbidities, KOOS pain subscale, having a knee-straining job, having needed surgery because of work, or having preoperative sick leave.

One discussion prompted by the presentation focused specifically on individuals’ ability to kneel without much difficulty after their surgery, an activity that’s not typically considered likely, Ms. van Zaanen noted. One audience member, Gillian Hawker, MD, MSc, a professor of medicine in the division of rheumatology at the University of Toronto, questioned whether the field should accept that current reality from surgical intervention. Dr. Hawker described a cohort she had analyzed in which two-thirds of the participants had expected they would be able to kneel after their surgery, regardless of whether it was related to work or other activities.

“Kneeling is important, not just for work; it’s important for culture and religion and lots of other things,” Dr. Hawker said. “How will you help these people to kneel after knee replacement when the surgery isn’t really performed to enable people to do that?” In response, Ms. van Zaanen noted it might not be achievable, as the research literature demonstrates, but Dr. Hawker suggested that is itself problematic.

“I guess what I’m asking is, why are we settling for that? If it’s important to so many people, and an expectation of so many people, why don’t we technologically improve such that, post arthroplasty, people can kneel?”

Another commenter suggested that the study’s findings may not indicate a need to manage patients’ expectations prior to surgery so much as showing that some patients simply have realistic expectations of what they will and will not be able to do after knee replacement.

“Is it possible that people who had low expectations – those who expected to be dissatisfied afterwards – were appropriately understanding that they were likely to be dissatisfied afterwards, in which case, managing their expectations might do nothing for their dissatisfaction afterwards?” the commenter asked. It is likely necessary to conduct additional research about expectations before surgery and experiences after surgery to address that question, Ms. van Zaanen suggested.

Ms. van Zaanen and Dr. Hawker reported having no relevant financial relationships. The presentation did not note any external funding. The Congress was sponsored by the Osteoarthritis Research Society International.

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– People with lower expectations of how they would be able to use their knees during work activities after a total knee arthroplasty were more dissatisfied with their knee abilities 6 months after their surgery, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress.

Two out of 10 patients are dissatisfied after total knee arthroplasty, which is increasingly performed in younger and working patients who may have higher demands, presenter Yvonne van Zaanen, a physiotherapist in occupational health and ergonomics and a PhD candidate at Amsterdam University Medical Center, told attendees.

The findings suggest a correlation between patients’ low presurgical expectations of their ability to use their knees and having more difficulty with their knees postoperatively, she said. “We should take better care of working patients with low expectations by managing their preoperative expectations and improving their ability to perform work-related knee-straining activities in rehabilitation,” Ms. van Zaanen told attendees.

The researchers conducted a multicenter, prospective cohort study involving seven hospitals. They surveyed 175 employed individuals aged 18-65 years who were scheduled for a total knee arthroplasty and intended to return to work after their surgery. The first survey occurred before the operation, and the follow-up occurred 6 months after the surgery.

Just over half the participants were women (53%), and the average participant age was 59. Respondents had a mean body mass index (BMI) of 29 kg/m2, and had a Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) pain score of 42 (on a 0-to-100 scale in which lower scores are worse). About half the respondents (51%) had a job that involved knee-straining activities.

The researchers assessed participants’ ability to perform work-related, knee-straining activities using the Work, Osteoarthritis, or joint-Replacement Questionnaire (WORQ) tool, which considers the following activities: kneeling, crouching, clambering, taking the stairs, walking on rough terrain, working with hands below knee height, standing, lifting or carrying, pushing or pulling, walking on ground level, operating a vehicle, operating foot pedals, and sitting. The 0-to-100 scale rates the difficulty of using knees for each particular activity, with higher scores indicating greater ease and less pain in doing that activity.

Among the 107 patients who expected to be satisfied after their surgery, half (n = 53) were satisfied, compared with 12% (n = 13) who were unsatisfied; the remaining participants (n = 41, 38%) were neither satisfied nor dissatisfied. Among the 24 patients who expected to be dissatisfied after their surgery, one-third (n = 8) were satisfied and 42% (n = 10) were dissatisfied. The remaining 44 patients didn’t expect to be satisfied or dissatisfied before their surgery, and 41% of them were satisfied while 23% were dissatisfied.

The researchers found that patients’ expectation of their satisfaction level going into the surgery was the only preoperative factor to be prognostic for dissatisfaction 6 months after surgery, based on their WORQ score. That is, patients who expected to be dissatisfied before their surgery had approximately five times greater odds of being dissatisfied after their surgery than did those who expected to be satisfied with their ability to do knee-straining activities at work (odds ratio, 5.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.7-15.5). Among those with a WORQ score of 40, indicating a greater expectation of difficulty using their knees postoperatively, 55% were dissatisfied after their surgery, compared with 19% of those with a WORQ score of 85, who expected greater knee ability after their surgery.

[embed:render:related:node:261878]

The other factors that the researchers examined, which had no effect on WORQ scores, included age, sex, BMI, education, comorbidities, KOOS pain subscale, having a knee-straining job, having needed surgery because of work, or having preoperative sick leave.

One discussion prompted by the presentation focused specifically on individuals’ ability to kneel without much difficulty after their surgery, an activity that’s not typically considered likely, Ms. van Zaanen noted. One audience member, Gillian Hawker, MD, MSc, a professor of medicine in the division of rheumatology at the University of Toronto, questioned whether the field should accept that current reality from surgical intervention. Dr. Hawker described a cohort she had analyzed in which two-thirds of the participants had expected they would be able to kneel after their surgery, regardless of whether it was related to work or other activities.

“Kneeling is important, not just for work; it’s important for culture and religion and lots of other things,” Dr. Hawker said. “How will you help these people to kneel after knee replacement when the surgery isn’t really performed to enable people to do that?” In response, Ms. van Zaanen noted it might not be achievable, as the research literature demonstrates, but Dr. Hawker suggested that is itself problematic.

“I guess what I’m asking is, why are we settling for that? If it’s important to so many people, and an expectation of so many people, why don’t we technologically improve such that, post arthroplasty, people can kneel?”

Another commenter suggested that the study’s findings may not indicate a need to manage patients’ expectations prior to surgery so much as showing that some patients simply have realistic expectations of what they will and will not be able to do after knee replacement.

“Is it possible that people who had low expectations – those who expected to be dissatisfied afterwards – were appropriately understanding that they were likely to be dissatisfied afterwards, in which case, managing their expectations might do nothing for their dissatisfaction afterwards?” the commenter asked. It is likely necessary to conduct additional research about expectations before surgery and experiences after surgery to address that question, Ms. van Zaanen suggested.

Ms. van Zaanen and Dr. Hawker reported having no relevant financial relationships. The presentation did not note any external funding. The Congress was sponsored by the Osteoarthritis Research Society International.

– People with lower expectations of how they would be able to use their knees during work activities after a total knee arthroplasty were more dissatisfied with their knee abilities 6 months after their surgery, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress.

Two out of 10 patients are dissatisfied after total knee arthroplasty, which is increasingly performed in younger and working patients who may have higher demands, presenter Yvonne van Zaanen, a physiotherapist in occupational health and ergonomics and a PhD candidate at Amsterdam University Medical Center, told attendees.

The findings suggest a correlation between patients’ low presurgical expectations of their ability to use their knees and having more difficulty with their knees postoperatively, she said. “We should take better care of working patients with low expectations by managing their preoperative expectations and improving their ability to perform work-related knee-straining activities in rehabilitation,” Ms. van Zaanen told attendees.

The researchers conducted a multicenter, prospective cohort study involving seven hospitals. They surveyed 175 employed individuals aged 18-65 years who were scheduled for a total knee arthroplasty and intended to return to work after their surgery. The first survey occurred before the operation, and the follow-up occurred 6 months after the surgery.

Just over half the participants were women (53%), and the average participant age was 59. Respondents had a mean body mass index (BMI) of 29 kg/m2, and had a Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) pain score of 42 (on a 0-to-100 scale in which lower scores are worse). About half the respondents (51%) had a job that involved knee-straining activities.

The researchers assessed participants’ ability to perform work-related, knee-straining activities using the Work, Osteoarthritis, or joint-Replacement Questionnaire (WORQ) tool, which considers the following activities: kneeling, crouching, clambering, taking the stairs, walking on rough terrain, working with hands below knee height, standing, lifting or carrying, pushing or pulling, walking on ground level, operating a vehicle, operating foot pedals, and sitting. The 0-to-100 scale rates the difficulty of using knees for each particular activity, with higher scores indicating greater ease and less pain in doing that activity.

Among the 107 patients who expected to be satisfied after their surgery, half (n = 53) were satisfied, compared with 12% (n = 13) who were unsatisfied; the remaining participants (n = 41, 38%) were neither satisfied nor dissatisfied. Among the 24 patients who expected to be dissatisfied after their surgery, one-third (n = 8) were satisfied and 42% (n = 10) were dissatisfied. The remaining 44 patients didn’t expect to be satisfied or dissatisfied before their surgery, and 41% of them were satisfied while 23% were dissatisfied.

The researchers found that patients’ expectation of their satisfaction level going into the surgery was the only preoperative factor to be prognostic for dissatisfaction 6 months after surgery, based on their WORQ score. That is, patients who expected to be dissatisfied before their surgery had approximately five times greater odds of being dissatisfied after their surgery than did those who expected to be satisfied with their ability to do knee-straining activities at work (odds ratio, 5.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.7-15.5). Among those with a WORQ score of 40, indicating a greater expectation of difficulty using their knees postoperatively, 55% were dissatisfied after their surgery, compared with 19% of those with a WORQ score of 85, who expected greater knee ability after their surgery.

[embed:render:related:node:261878]

The other factors that the researchers examined, which had no effect on WORQ scores, included age, sex, BMI, education, comorbidities, KOOS pain subscale, having a knee-straining job, having needed surgery because of work, or having preoperative sick leave.

One discussion prompted by the presentation focused specifically on individuals’ ability to kneel without much difficulty after their surgery, an activity that’s not typically considered likely, Ms. van Zaanen noted. One audience member, Gillian Hawker, MD, MSc, a professor of medicine in the division of rheumatology at the University of Toronto, questioned whether the field should accept that current reality from surgical intervention. Dr. Hawker described a cohort she had analyzed in which two-thirds of the participants had expected they would be able to kneel after their surgery, regardless of whether it was related to work or other activities.

“Kneeling is important, not just for work; it’s important for culture and religion and lots of other things,” Dr. Hawker said. “How will you help these people to kneel after knee replacement when the surgery isn’t really performed to enable people to do that?” In response, Ms. van Zaanen noted it might not be achievable, as the research literature demonstrates, but Dr. Hawker suggested that is itself problematic.

“I guess what I’m asking is, why are we settling for that? If it’s important to so many people, and an expectation of so many people, why don’t we technologically improve such that, post arthroplasty, people can kneel?”

Another commenter suggested that the study’s findings may not indicate a need to manage patients’ expectations prior to surgery so much as showing that some patients simply have realistic expectations of what they will and will not be able to do after knee replacement.

“Is it possible that people who had low expectations – those who expected to be dissatisfied afterwards – were appropriately understanding that they were likely to be dissatisfied afterwards, in which case, managing their expectations might do nothing for their dissatisfaction afterwards?” the commenter asked. It is likely necessary to conduct additional research about expectations before surgery and experiences after surgery to address that question, Ms. van Zaanen suggested.

Ms. van Zaanen and Dr. Hawker reported having no relevant financial relationships. The presentation did not note any external funding. The Congress was sponsored by the Osteoarthritis Research Society International.

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<root generator="drupal.xsl" gversion="1.7"> <header> <fileName>162718</fileName> <TBEID>0C049139.SIG</TBEID> <TBUniqueIdentifier>MD_0C049139</TBUniqueIdentifier> <newsOrJournal>News</newsOrJournal> <publisherName>Frontline Medical Communications</publisherName> <storyname>TKAexpecs_OARSI2023_Haelle</storyname> <articleType>2</articleType> <TBLocation>QC Done-All Pubs</TBLocation> <QCDate>20230321T131602</QCDate> <firstPublished>20230321T135053</firstPublished> <LastPublished>20230321T135053</LastPublished> <pubStatus qcode="stat:"/> <embargoDate/> <killDate/> <CMSDate>20230321T135053</CMSDate> <articleSource>AT OARSI 2023</articleSource> <facebookInfo/> <meetingNumber>3588-23</meetingNumber> <byline>Tara Haelle</byline> <bylineText>TARA HAELLE</bylineText> <bylineFull>TARA HAELLE</bylineFull> <bylineTitleText>MDedge News</bylineTitleText> <USOrGlobal/> <wireDocType/> <newsDocType>News</newsDocType> <journalDocType/> <linkLabel/> <pageRange/> <citation/> <quizID/> <indexIssueDate/> <itemClass qcode="ninat:text"/> <provider qcode="provider:imng"> <name>IMNG Medical Media</name> <rightsInfo> <copyrightHolder> <name>Frontline Medical News</name> </copyrightHolder> <copyrightNotice>Copyright (c) 2015 Frontline Medical News, a Frontline Medical Communications Inc. company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, copied, or otherwise reproduced or distributed without the prior written permission of Frontline Medical Communications Inc.</copyrightNotice> </rightsInfo> </provider> <abstract/> <metaDescription>DENVER – People with lower expectations of how they would be able to use their knees during work activities after a total knee arthroplasty were more dissatisfi</metaDescription> <articlePDF/> <teaserImage/> <teaser>It may be worthwhile to discuss patients’ expectations about what they will be able to do with their knees postoperatively, but it’s unclear whether some patients’ expectations are too low or simply realistic before surgery. </teaser> <title>Presurgical expectations may influence patients’ attitudes, experiences after knee replacement</title> <deck/> <disclaimer/> <AuthorList/> <articleURL/> <doi/> <pubMedID/> <publishXMLStatus/> <publishXMLVersion>1</publishXMLVersion> <useEISSN>0</useEISSN> <urgency/> <pubPubdateYear/> <pubPubdateMonth/> <pubPubdateDay/> <pubVolume/> <pubNumber/> <wireChannels/> <primaryCMSID/> <CMSIDs/> <keywords/> <seeAlsos/> <publications_g> <publicationData> <publicationCode>rn</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>mdsurg</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> <journalTitle/> <journalFullTitle/> <copyrightStatement>2018 Frontline Medical Communications Inc.,</copyrightStatement> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>im</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>fp</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> </publications_g> <publications> <term canonical="true">26</term> <term>52226</term> <term>21</term> <term>15</term> </publications> <sections> <term canonical="true">53</term> <term>39313</term> </sections> <topics> <term canonical="true">264</term> <term>265</term> <term>237</term> <term>290</term> </topics> <links/> </header> <itemSet> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>Main</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title>Presurgical expectations may influence patients’ attitudes, experiences after knee replacement</title> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> <p><span class="dateline">DENVER </span>– People with lower expectations of how they would be able to use their knees during work activities after a total knee arthroplasty were more dissatisfied with their knee abilities 6 months after their surgery, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress. </p> <p>Two out of 10 patients are dissatisfied after total knee arthroplasty, which is increasingly performed in younger and working patients who may have higher demands, presenter <span class="Hyperlink">Yvonne van Zaanen</span>, a physiotherapist in occupational health and ergonomics and a PhD candidate at Amsterdam University Medical Center, told attendees. <br/><br/>The findings suggest a correlation between patients’ low presurgical expectations of their ability to use their knees and having more difficulty with their knees postoperatively, she said. “We should take better care of working patients with low expectations by managing their preoperative expectations and improving their ability to perform work-related knee-straining activities in rehabilitation,” Ms. van Zaanen told attendees. <br/><br/>The researchers conducted a <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.oarsijournal.com/article/S1063-4584(23)00540-X/fulltext">multicenter, prospective cohort study</a></span> involving seven hospitals. They surveyed 175 employed individuals aged 18-65 years who were scheduled for a total knee arthroplasty and intended to return to work after their surgery. The first survey occurred before the operation, and the follow-up occurred 6 months after the surgery.<br/><br/>Just over half the participants were women (53%), and the average participant age was 59. Respondents had a mean body mass index (BMI) of 29 kg/m<sup>2</sup>, and had a <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://hqlo.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1477-7525-1-64">Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS)</a></span> pain score of 42 (on a 0-to-100 scale in which lower scores are worse). About half the respondents (51%) had a job that involved knee-straining activities. <br/><br/>The researchers assessed participants’ ability to perform work-related, knee-straining activities using the <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.arthroplastyjournal.org/article/S0883-5403(14)00038-2/fulltext">Work, Osteoarthritis, or joint-Replacement Questionnaire (WORQ) tool</a></span>, which considers the following activities: kneeling, crouching, clambering, taking the stairs, walking on rough terrain, working with hands below knee height, standing, lifting or carrying, pushing or pulling, walking on ground level, operating a vehicle, operating foot pedals, and sitting. The 0-to-100 scale rates the difficulty of using knees for each particular activity, with higher scores indicating greater ease and less pain in doing that activity.<br/><br/>Among the 107 patients who expected to be satisfied after their surgery, half (n = 53) were satisfied, compared with 12% (n = 13) who were unsatisfied; the remaining participants (n = 41, 38%) were neither satisfied nor dissatisfied. Among the 24 patients who expected to be dissatisfied after their surgery, one-third (n = 8) were satisfied and 42% (n = 10) were dissatisfied. The remaining 44 patients didn’t expect to be satisfied or dissatisfied before their surgery, and 41% of them were satisfied while 23% were dissatisfied.<br/><br/>The researchers found that patients’ expectation of their satisfaction level going into the surgery was the only preoperative factor to be prognostic for dissatisfaction 6 months after surgery, based on their WORQ score. That is, patients who expected to be dissatisfied before their surgery had approximately five times greater odds of being dissatisfied after their surgery than did those who expected to be satisfied with their ability to do knee-straining activities at work (odds ratio, 5.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.7-15.5). Among those with a WORQ score of 40, indicating a greater expectation of difficulty using their knees postoperatively, 55% were dissatisfied after their surgery, compared with 19% of those with a WORQ score of 85, who expected greater knee ability after their surgery.<br/><br/>The other factors that the researchers examined, which had no effect on WORQ scores, included age, sex, BMI, education, comorbidities, KOOS pain subscale, having a knee-straining job, having needed surgery because of work, or having preoperative sick leave.<br/><br/>One discussion prompted by the presentation focused specifically on individuals’ ability to kneel without much difficulty after their surgery, an activity that’s not typically considered likely, Ms. van Zaanen noted. One audience member, <span class="Hyperlink">Gillian Hawker</span>, MD, MSc, a professor of medicine in the division of rheumatology at the University of Toronto, questioned whether the field should accept that current reality from surgical intervention. Dr. Hawker described a cohort she had analyzed in which two-thirds of the participants had expected they would be able to kneel after their surgery, regardless of whether it was related to work or other activities. <br/><br/>“Kneeling is important, not just for work; it’s important for culture and religion and lots of other things,” Dr. Hawker said. “How will you help these people to kneel after knee replacement when the surgery isn’t really performed to enable people to do that?” In response, Ms. van Zaanen noted it might not be achievable, as the research literature demonstrates, but Dr. Hawker suggested that is itself problematic.<br/><br/>“I guess what I’m asking is, why are we settling for that? If it’s important to so many people, and an expectation of so many people, why don’t we technologically improve such that, post arthroplasty, people can kneel?” <br/><br/>Another commenter suggested that the study’s findings may not indicate a need to manage patients’ expectations prior to surgery so much as showing that some patients simply have realistic expectations of what they will and will not be able to do after knee replacement. <br/><br/>“Is it possible that people who had low expectations – those who expected to be dissatisfied afterwards – were appropriately understanding that they were likely to be dissatisfied afterwards, in which case, managing their expectations might do nothing for their dissatisfaction afterwards?” the commenter asked. It is likely necessary to conduct additional research about expectations before surgery and experiences after surgery to address that question, Ms. van Zaanen suggested.<br/><br/>Ms. van Zaanen and Dr. Hawker reported having no relevant financial relationships. The presentation did not note any external funding. The Congress was sponsored by the Osteoarthritis Research Society International.<span class="end"/></p> </itemContent> </newsItem> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>teaser</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title/> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> </itemContent> </newsItem> </itemSet></root>
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Early exercise intervention improves knee osteoarthritis

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– Initiating exercise therapy early on in people who develop symptoms of knee osteoarthritis – even within their first year of pain or reduced function – is associated with modestly lower pain scores and modestly better function than in those whose symptoms have lasted longer, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress.

Although the benefits of exercise therapy for advanced knee osteoarthritis had already been well established, this study looked specifically at benefits from exercise therapy earlier on, in patients with a shorter duration of symptoms.

“Exercise indeed seems especially beneficial in patients with shorter symptom duration and should therefore be encouraged at first symptom presentation,” Marienke van Middelkoop, PhD, of Erasmus MC Medical University in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, told attendees at the meeting, sponsored by Osteoarthritis Research Society International. “It is, however, still a challenge how we can identify patients but also how we can motivate these patients with early symptoms of osteoarthritis.” She noted that a separate pilot study had experienced difficulty recruiting people with short-term symptom duration.

[embed:render:related:node:261887]

The researchers compared the effect of exercise therapy and no exercise among adults at least 45 years old with knee osteoarthritis, relying on individual participant data from the STEER OA study, a meta-analysis of 31 studies that involved 4,241 participants. After excluding studies that didn’t report symptom duration, lacked a control group or consent, or focused on hip osteoarthritis, the researchers ended up with 10 studies involving 1,895 participants. These participants were stratified based on the duration of their symptoms: up to 1 year (14.4%), 1-2 years (11%), and 2 years or longer (74%).

About two-thirds of the participants were women (65.9%), with an average age of 65 years and an average body mass index (BMI) of 30.7 kg/m2. Any land-based or water-based therapeutic exercise counted for the 62% of participants in the intervention group, while the control group had no exercise. Outcomes were assessed based on self-reported pain or physical function at short-term and long-term follow-up, which were as close as possible to 3 months for short-term and the closest date to 12 months for longer term. At baseline, the participants reported an average pain score of 41.7 on a 0-to-100 scale and an average physical function score of 37.4 on a 0-to-100 scale where lower scores indicate better function.

Among those doing exercise therapy, average pain scores dropped 4.56 points in the short term and 7.43 points in the long term. Short-term and long-term pain scores were lower among those whose symptom durations were shorter. For example, those with symptoms for less than a year reported a short-term pain score of 29, compared with 30 for those with 1-2 years of pain and 32 for those with at least 2 years of pain. Results were similar for long-term pain (a score of 26, compared with 28 and 33, respectively).

Participants engaging in exercise therapy also improved average function scores, with a pattern of improvement that was similar to pain scores based on patients’ symptom duration. The average short-term function score was 26 among those with less than a year of symptoms, compared with 28 for those with symptoms for 1-2 years, and 30 for those with symptoms for at least 2 years. Longer-term function scores were 21, 24, and 29, respectively, based on increasing symptom durations.

Chris Yun Lane, PT, DPT, a physical therapist and a fourth-year PhD student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, was not surprised at the exercise benefit given the extensive evidence already showing that exercise is beneficial for patients with osteoarthritis whose symptoms have lasted longer.

“Just spending a little bit of time on education, designing kind of simple exercise programs, such as walking programs, can be very helpful,” Dr. Lane said in an interview. “Of course, some of it is dependent on the patient itself, but strengthening range of motion is often very helpful.” Dr. Lane said it’s particularly important for physicians and physical therapists to emphasize the importance of exercise to their patients because that guidance doesn’t always occur as often as it should.

[embed:render:related:node:259529]

Ron Ellis Jr., DO, MBA, chief strategy officer of Pacira BioSciences in Tampa, Fla., noted that a lot of patients with knee osteoarthritis have weakness in their quads, so quad strengthening is “a typical part of our improvement program for patients with osteoarthritis,” he said in an interview. Dr. Ellis also referenced a session he attended the previous day that showed exercise results in reduced inflammation.

“So you may not have weight loss, but you can lower the inflammatory state of the overall body and of the specific joints,” Dr. Ellis said, “so that would support [this study’s] conclusion.”

The STEER OA study was funded by the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy Charitable Trust and the National Institute for Health Research School of Primary Care Research. Dr. van Middelkoop and Dr. Lane both reported having no relevant financial relationships.

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– Initiating exercise therapy early on in people who develop symptoms of knee osteoarthritis – even within their first year of pain or reduced function – is associated with modestly lower pain scores and modestly better function than in those whose symptoms have lasted longer, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress.

Although the benefits of exercise therapy for advanced knee osteoarthritis had already been well established, this study looked specifically at benefits from exercise therapy earlier on, in patients with a shorter duration of symptoms.

“Exercise indeed seems especially beneficial in patients with shorter symptom duration and should therefore be encouraged at first symptom presentation,” Marienke van Middelkoop, PhD, of Erasmus MC Medical University in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, told attendees at the meeting, sponsored by Osteoarthritis Research Society International. “It is, however, still a challenge how we can identify patients but also how we can motivate these patients with early symptoms of osteoarthritis.” She noted that a separate pilot study had experienced difficulty recruiting people with short-term symptom duration.

[embed:render:related:node:261887]

The researchers compared the effect of exercise therapy and no exercise among adults at least 45 years old with knee osteoarthritis, relying on individual participant data from the STEER OA study, a meta-analysis of 31 studies that involved 4,241 participants. After excluding studies that didn’t report symptom duration, lacked a control group or consent, or focused on hip osteoarthritis, the researchers ended up with 10 studies involving 1,895 participants. These participants were stratified based on the duration of their symptoms: up to 1 year (14.4%), 1-2 years (11%), and 2 years or longer (74%).

About two-thirds of the participants were women (65.9%), with an average age of 65 years and an average body mass index (BMI) of 30.7 kg/m2. Any land-based or water-based therapeutic exercise counted for the 62% of participants in the intervention group, while the control group had no exercise. Outcomes were assessed based on self-reported pain or physical function at short-term and long-term follow-up, which were as close as possible to 3 months for short-term and the closest date to 12 months for longer term. At baseline, the participants reported an average pain score of 41.7 on a 0-to-100 scale and an average physical function score of 37.4 on a 0-to-100 scale where lower scores indicate better function.

Among those doing exercise therapy, average pain scores dropped 4.56 points in the short term and 7.43 points in the long term. Short-term and long-term pain scores were lower among those whose symptom durations were shorter. For example, those with symptoms for less than a year reported a short-term pain score of 29, compared with 30 for those with 1-2 years of pain and 32 for those with at least 2 years of pain. Results were similar for long-term pain (a score of 26, compared with 28 and 33, respectively).

Participants engaging in exercise therapy also improved average function scores, with a pattern of improvement that was similar to pain scores based on patients’ symptom duration. The average short-term function score was 26 among those with less than a year of symptoms, compared with 28 for those with symptoms for 1-2 years, and 30 for those with symptoms for at least 2 years. Longer-term function scores were 21, 24, and 29, respectively, based on increasing symptom durations.

Chris Yun Lane, PT, DPT, a physical therapist and a fourth-year PhD student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, was not surprised at the exercise benefit given the extensive evidence already showing that exercise is beneficial for patients with osteoarthritis whose symptoms have lasted longer.

“Just spending a little bit of time on education, designing kind of simple exercise programs, such as walking programs, can be very helpful,” Dr. Lane said in an interview. “Of course, some of it is dependent on the patient itself, but strengthening range of motion is often very helpful.” Dr. Lane said it’s particularly important for physicians and physical therapists to emphasize the importance of exercise to their patients because that guidance doesn’t always occur as often as it should.

[embed:render:related:node:259529]

Ron Ellis Jr., DO, MBA, chief strategy officer of Pacira BioSciences in Tampa, Fla., noted that a lot of patients with knee osteoarthritis have weakness in their quads, so quad strengthening is “a typical part of our improvement program for patients with osteoarthritis,” he said in an interview. Dr. Ellis also referenced a session he attended the previous day that showed exercise results in reduced inflammation.

“So you may not have weight loss, but you can lower the inflammatory state of the overall body and of the specific joints,” Dr. Ellis said, “so that would support [this study’s] conclusion.”

The STEER OA study was funded by the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy Charitable Trust and the National Institute for Health Research School of Primary Care Research. Dr. van Middelkoop and Dr. Lane both reported having no relevant financial relationships.

– Initiating exercise therapy early on in people who develop symptoms of knee osteoarthritis – even within their first year of pain or reduced function – is associated with modestly lower pain scores and modestly better function than in those whose symptoms have lasted longer, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress.

Although the benefits of exercise therapy for advanced knee osteoarthritis had already been well established, this study looked specifically at benefits from exercise therapy earlier on, in patients with a shorter duration of symptoms.

“Exercise indeed seems especially beneficial in patients with shorter symptom duration and should therefore be encouraged at first symptom presentation,” Marienke van Middelkoop, PhD, of Erasmus MC Medical University in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, told attendees at the meeting, sponsored by Osteoarthritis Research Society International. “It is, however, still a challenge how we can identify patients but also how we can motivate these patients with early symptoms of osteoarthritis.” She noted that a separate pilot study had experienced difficulty recruiting people with short-term symptom duration.

[embed:render:related:node:261887]

The researchers compared the effect of exercise therapy and no exercise among adults at least 45 years old with knee osteoarthritis, relying on individual participant data from the STEER OA study, a meta-analysis of 31 studies that involved 4,241 participants. After excluding studies that didn’t report symptom duration, lacked a control group or consent, or focused on hip osteoarthritis, the researchers ended up with 10 studies involving 1,895 participants. These participants were stratified based on the duration of their symptoms: up to 1 year (14.4%), 1-2 years (11%), and 2 years or longer (74%).

About two-thirds of the participants were women (65.9%), with an average age of 65 years and an average body mass index (BMI) of 30.7 kg/m2. Any land-based or water-based therapeutic exercise counted for the 62% of participants in the intervention group, while the control group had no exercise. Outcomes were assessed based on self-reported pain or physical function at short-term and long-term follow-up, which were as close as possible to 3 months for short-term and the closest date to 12 months for longer term. At baseline, the participants reported an average pain score of 41.7 on a 0-to-100 scale and an average physical function score of 37.4 on a 0-to-100 scale where lower scores indicate better function.

Among those doing exercise therapy, average pain scores dropped 4.56 points in the short term and 7.43 points in the long term. Short-term and long-term pain scores were lower among those whose symptom durations were shorter. For example, those with symptoms for less than a year reported a short-term pain score of 29, compared with 30 for those with 1-2 years of pain and 32 for those with at least 2 years of pain. Results were similar for long-term pain (a score of 26, compared with 28 and 33, respectively).

Participants engaging in exercise therapy also improved average function scores, with a pattern of improvement that was similar to pain scores based on patients’ symptom duration. The average short-term function score was 26 among those with less than a year of symptoms, compared with 28 for those with symptoms for 1-2 years, and 30 for those with symptoms for at least 2 years. Longer-term function scores were 21, 24, and 29, respectively, based on increasing symptom durations.

Chris Yun Lane, PT, DPT, a physical therapist and a fourth-year PhD student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, was not surprised at the exercise benefit given the extensive evidence already showing that exercise is beneficial for patients with osteoarthritis whose symptoms have lasted longer.

“Just spending a little bit of time on education, designing kind of simple exercise programs, such as walking programs, can be very helpful,” Dr. Lane said in an interview. “Of course, some of it is dependent on the patient itself, but strengthening range of motion is often very helpful.” Dr. Lane said it’s particularly important for physicians and physical therapists to emphasize the importance of exercise to their patients because that guidance doesn’t always occur as often as it should.

[embed:render:related:node:259529]

Ron Ellis Jr., DO, MBA, chief strategy officer of Pacira BioSciences in Tampa, Fla., noted that a lot of patients with knee osteoarthritis have weakness in their quads, so quad strengthening is “a typical part of our improvement program for patients with osteoarthritis,” he said in an interview. Dr. Ellis also referenced a session he attended the previous day that showed exercise results in reduced inflammation.

“So you may not have weight loss, but you can lower the inflammatory state of the overall body and of the specific joints,” Dr. Ellis said, “so that would support [this study’s] conclusion.”

The STEER OA study was funded by the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy Charitable Trust and the National Institute for Health Research School of Primary Care Research. Dr. van Middelkoop and Dr. Lane both reported having no relevant financial relationships.

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All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, copied, or otherwise reproduced or distributed without the prior written permission of Frontline Medical Communications Inc.</copyrightNotice> </rightsInfo> </provider> <abstract/> <metaDescription>DENVER – Initiating exercise therapy early on in people who develop symptoms of knee osteoarthritis – even within their first year of pain or reduced function –</metaDescription> <articlePDF/> <teaserImage/> <teaser>Even patients whose symptoms have lasted less than a year experience improvements in pain and physical function when they initiate exercise therapy for knee osteoarthritis. </teaser> <title>Early exercise intervention improves knee osteoarthritis</title> <deck/> <disclaimer/> <AuthorList/> <articleURL/> <doi/> <pubMedID/> <publishXMLStatus/> <publishXMLVersion>1</publishXMLVersion> <useEISSN>0</useEISSN> <urgency/> <pubPubdateYear/> <pubPubdateMonth/> <pubPubdateDay/> <pubVolume/> <pubNumber/> <wireChannels/> <primaryCMSID/> <CMSIDs/> <keywords/> <seeAlsos/> <publications_g> <publicationData> <publicationCode>rn</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>im</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>fp</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> </publications_g> <publications> <term canonical="true">26</term> <term>21</term> <term>15</term> </publications> <sections> <term canonical="true">53</term> <term>39313</term> </sections> <topics> <term canonical="true">265</term> <term>290</term> </topics> <links/> </header> <itemSet> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>Main</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title>Early exercise intervention improves knee osteoarthritis</title> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> <p><span class="dateline">DENVER </span>– Initiating exercise therapy early on in people who develop symptoms of knee osteoarthritis – even within their first year of pain or reduced function – is associated with modestly lower pain scores and modestly better function than in those whose symptoms have lasted longer, according to a <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.oarsijournal.com/article/S1063-4584(23)00521-6/fulltext">study presented</a></span> at the OARSI 2023 World Congress.</p> <p>Although the benefits of exercise therapy for advanced knee osteoarthritis had already been well established, this study looked specifically at benefits from exercise therapy earlier on, in patients with a shorter duration of symptoms.<br/><br/>“Exercise indeed seems especially beneficial in patients with shorter symptom duration and should therefore be encouraged at first symptom presentation,” Marienke van Middelkoop, PhD, of Erasmus MC Medical University in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, told attendees at the meeting, sponsored by Osteoarthritis Research Society International. “It is, however, still a challenge how we can identify patients but also how we can motivate these patients with early symptoms of osteoarthritis.” She noted that a separate pilot study had experienced difficulty recruiting people with short-term symptom duration.<br/><br/>The researchers compared the effect of exercise therapy and no exercise among adults at least 45 years old with knee osteoarthritis, relying on individual participant data from the <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/7/12/e018971.long">STEER OA study</a></span>, a meta-analysis of 31 studies that involved 4,241 participants. After excluding studies that didn’t report symptom duration, lacked a control group or consent, or focused on hip osteoarthritis, the researchers ended up with 10 studies involving 1,895 participants. These participants were stratified based on the duration of their symptoms: up to 1 year (14.4%), 1-2 years (11%), and 2 years or longer (74%).<br/><br/>About two-thirds of the participants were women (65.9%), with an average age of 65 years and an average body mass index (BMI) of 30.7 kg/m<sup>2</sup>. Any land-based or water-based therapeutic exercise counted for the 62% of participants in the intervention group, while the control group had no exercise. Outcomes were assessed based on self-reported pain or physical function at short-term and long-term follow-up, which were as close as possible to 3 months for short-term and the closest date to 12 months for longer term. At baseline, the participants reported an average pain score of 41.7 on a 0-to-100 scale and an average physical function score of 37.4 on a 0-to-100 scale where lower scores indicate better function. <br/><br/>Among those doing exercise therapy, average pain scores dropped 4.56 points in the short term and 7.43 points in the long term. Short-term and long-term pain scores were lower among those whose symptom durations were shorter. For example, those with symptoms for less than a year reported a short-term pain score of 29, compared with 30 for those with 1-2 years of pain and 32 for those with at least 2 years of pain. Results were similar for long-term pain (a score of 26, compared with 28 and 33, respectively). <br/><br/>Participants engaging in exercise therapy also improved average function scores, with a pattern of improvement that was similar to pain scores based on patients’ symptom duration. The average short-term function score was 26 among those with less than a year of symptoms, compared with 28 for those with symptoms for 1-2 years, and 30 for those with symptoms for at least 2 years. Longer-term function scores were 21, 24, and 29, respectively, based on increasing symptom durations. <br/><br/>Chris Yun Lane, PT, DPT, a physical therapist and a fourth-year PhD student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, was not surprised at the exercise benefit given the extensive evidence already showing that exercise is beneficial for patients with osteoarthritis whose symptoms have lasted longer. <br/><br/>“Just spending a little bit of time on education, designing kind of simple exercise programs, such as walking programs, can be very helpful,” Dr. Lane said in an interview. “Of course, some of it is dependent on the patient itself, but strengthening range of motion is often very helpful.” Dr. Lane said it’s particularly important for physicians and physical therapists to emphasize the importance of exercise to their patients because that guidance doesn’t always occur as often as it should. <br/><br/>Ron Ellis Jr., DO, MBA, chief strategy officer of Pacira BioSciences in Tampa, Fla., noted that a lot of patients with knee osteoarthritis have weakness in their quads, so quad strengthening is “a typical part of our improvement program for patients with osteoarthritis,” he said in an interview. Dr. Ellis also referenced a session he attended the previous day that showed exercise results in reduced inflammation. <br/><br/>“So you may not have weight loss, but you can lower the inflammatory state of the overall body and of the specific joints,” Dr. Ellis said, “so that would support [this study’s] conclusion.”<br/><br/>The STEER OA study was funded by the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy Charitable Trust and the National Institute for Health Research School of Primary Care Research. Dr. van Middelkoop and Dr. Lane both reported having no relevant financial relationships.<span class="end"/></p> </itemContent> </newsItem> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>teaser</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title/> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> </itemContent> </newsItem> </itemSet></root>
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