| Literature DB >> 21387001 |
William M Reichmann1, Jeffrey N Katz, Elena Losina.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess self-reported health status (SRHS) in two cohorts of participants with radiographic knee osteoarthritis (OA) and examine the extent that differences in SRHS are due to study design.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21387001 PMCID: PMC3046148 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0017345
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Comparison of NHANES-III and OAI study characteristics.
| NHANES-III | OAI | |
| Sampling frame | Adults age 18+ residing in the United States | Adults 45–79 residing near one of the four clinical centers that have knee OA or are at risk for developing knee OA |
| Eligibility criteria (for a knee radiograph) | Age 60+ | Age 45–79 |
| Exclusion: Can not transport themselves onto the x-ray table | Exclusions: Inflammatory arthritis, Advanced knee OA, Bilateral TKR, Unable to have MRI done, Positive pregnancy test, Unable to provide a blood sample, Use of ambulatory aids other than a straight cane for greater than 50% of the time, Comorbid conditions that may interfere with ability to participate, Unlikely to reside in clinic are for at least 3 years, Current participation in a RCT | |
| Data collection period | 1991–1994 for radiographs | 2004–2006 for baseline data |
| Data collection methods | All data was collected via face-to-face interview except for radiographic data and BMI | All data was collected via self-administered questionnaire except for radiographic data and BMI |
| Coding of covariates | ||
| Age | Excluded those 80+; 4 groups: 60–64, 65–69, 70–74, 75–79 | Excluded those 45–59; 4 groups: 60–64, 65–69, 70–74, 75–79 |
| Gender | Male versus female | Male versus female |
| Race | White versus nonwhite | White versus nonwhite |
| Income | Income was inflated to 2004 dollars using CPI conversion then classified into five groups: <$20,000, $20,000–$34,999, $35,000–$49,999, ≥$50,000, and missing | Five groups: <$20,000, $20,000–$34,999, $35,000–$49,999, ≥$50,000, and missing |
| Obesity status | Non-obese (body mass index <30) versus obese (body mass index ≥30) | Non-obese (body mass index <30) versus obese (body mass index ≥30) |
| Comorbidity | 0–1 versus 2+ conditions (information on conditions collected in both studies) | 0–1 versus 2+ conditions (information on conditions collected in both studies) |
| Knee pain | Yes versus no; Yes defined as “having knee pain for most days for six weeks or more” | Yes versus no; Yes defined as “having knee pain most days for the past 30 days” |
| Radiographic Severity | K-L grades 2, 3, and 4 computed by trained radiologist | K-L grades 2, 3, and 4 computed OARSI/ATLAS grades for osteophytes and joint space narrowing, which were computed by trained radiologists |
Figure 1Distribution of propensity scores, defined as the probability of being selected into the NHANES-III cohort, by study (NHANES-III, OAI).
The propensity score (x-axis) is defined as the probability of being selected into the NHANES-III cohort. The percentage of individuals with that propensity score (estimated using Kernel density estimation) in each cohort is shown on the y-axis. The solid line represents NHANES-III, while the dashed line represents OAI.
Demographic and clinical features of NHANES-III and OAI participants between the ages of 60 and 79 with radiographic knee OA.
| NHANES-III (N = 756)N (% | OAI (N = 1,608)N (%) | |
| Age | ||
| 60–64 | 181 (24.6%) | 448 (27.9%) |
| 65–69 | 200 (28.7%) | 437 (27.2%) |
| 70–74 | 216 (26.2%) | 434 (27.0%) |
| 75–79 | 159 (20.6%) | 289 (18.0%) |
| Gender | ||
| Female | 463 (62.5%) | 1,003 (62.4%) |
| Male | 293 (37.5%) | 605 (37.6%) |
| Race | ||
| White | 353 (78.4%) | 1,304 (81.1%) |
| Non-white | 403 (21.6%) | 287 (17.8%) |
| Missing | 0 (0.0%) | 17 (1.1%) |
| Comorbidities | ||
| 0–1 | 556 (74.5%) | 1,485 (92.4%) |
| 2+ | 200 (25.5%) | 123 (7.6%) |
| Obesity Status | ||
| Normal | 157 (21.9%) | 319 (19.8%) |
| Overweight | 318 (44.1%) | 663 (41.2%) |
| Obese | 159 (23.1%) | 455 (28.3%) |
| Morbidly obese | 70 (7.7%) | 170 (10.6%) |
| Missing | 52 (3.1%) | 1 (0.1%) |
| K-L Grade | ||
| 2 | 534 (72.2%) | 458 (28.5%) |
| 3 | 164 (21.6%) | 762 (47.4%) |
| 4 | 58 (6.2%) | 388 (24.1%) |
| Knee Pain | ||
| No | 478 (65.9%) | 871 (54.2%) |
| Yes | 278 (34.1%) | 736 (45.8%) |
| Missing | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (0.1%) |
| Income | ||
| $50,000+ | 96 (19.7%) | 207 (12.9%) |
| $35,000–$49,999 | 68 (11.9%) | 527 (32.8%) |
| $20,000–$34,999 | 203 (31.2%) | 483 (30.0%) |
| <$20,000 | 323 (31.0%) | 266 (16.5%) |
| Missing | 66 (6.2%) | 125 (7.8%) |
*Percentages are weighted using the NHANES-III sampling weights.
Unadjusted proportion of being in fair or poor health for persons with radiographic knee OA from each study (OAI, NHANES-III).
| NHANES-III (N = 756)Percent | OAI (N = 1,608)Percent (95% CI) | |
| Age | ||
| 60–64 | 24.7% (13.9, 35.4) | 5.8% (3.6, 8.0) |
| 65–69 | 32.8% (25.7, 39.8) | 5.0% (3.0, 7.1) |
| 70–74 | 24.9% (16.5, 33.4) | 4.2% (2.3, 6.1) |
| 75–79 | 30.9% (22.6, 39.2) | 5.9% (3.2, 8.6) |
| Gender | ||
| Female | 32.2% (28.2, 36.2) | 5.4% (4.0, 6.8) |
| Male | 21.9% (13.7, 30.1) | 4.8% (3.1, 6.5) |
| Race | ||
| White | 25.1% (19.8, 30.5) | 3.2% (2.3, 4.2) |
| Non-white | 40.0% (32.0, 48.1) | 13.7% (9.7, 17.7) |
| Missing | N/A | 11.8% (0.0, 27.1%) |
| Comorbidities | ||
| 0–1 | 22.7% (17.8, 27.6) | 4.3% (3.3, 5.4) |
| 2+ | 44.8% (34.7, 54.9) | 15.4% (9.1, 21.8) |
| Obesity Status | ||
| Normal | 19.3% (10.6, 28.0) | 2.8% (1.0, 4.7) |
| Overweight | 29.0% (25.7, 32.3) | 4.2% (2.7, 5.8) |
| Obese | 29.4% (18.5, 40.2) | 4.9% (2.9, 6.9) |
| Morbidly obese | 35.8% (21.7, 49.9) | 14.1% (8.9, 19.4) |
| Missing | 56.1% (32.7, 79.6) | N/A |
| K-L Grade | ||
| 2 | 27.9% (23.0, 32.7) | 4.1% (2.3, 6.0) |
| 3 | 27.6% (16.9, 38.3) | 5.0% (3.6, 6.6) |
| 4 | 36.7% (18.1, 55.2) | 6.7% (4.2, 9.2) |
| Knee Pain | ||
| No | 27.3% (21.8, 32.7) | 2.4% (1.4, 3.4) |
| Yes | 30.4% (23.5, 37.4) | 8.5% (6.5, 10.5) |
| Missing | N/A | N/A |
| Income | ||
| $50,000+ | 8.3% (1.9, 14.8) | 1.0% (0.0, 2.3) |
| $35,000–$49,999 | 34.8% (17.2, 52.5) | 2.1% (0.9, 3.3) |
| $20,000–$34,999 | 21.9% (13.4, 30.4) | 6.4% (4.2, 8.6) |
| <$20,000 | 46.5% (36.8, 56.1) | 11.3% (7.5, 15.1) |
| Missing | 21.2% (8.0, 34.3) | 7.6% (2.8, 12.3) |
*Percentages are weighted using the NHANES-III sampling weights.
**Percentage of persons in fair/poor health was not estimated because there were zero persons with a missing race and missing knee pain in NHANES-III.
***Percentage of persons in fair/poor health was not estimated because there was only one person with a missing obesity status and missing knee pain status in OAI.
Figure 2Comparison of the proportion of participants in fair or poor health from in OAI and NHANES-III.
On the x-axis is the analysis type and on the y-axis is the percent in fair/poor health. The trimmed sample is defined as participants with propensity scores between 0.2 and 0.8. Dark bars represent OAI, while gray bars represent NHANES-III.