| Literature DB >> 26700937 |
Yuanyuan Wang1, Andrew Tonkin2, Graeme Jones3, Catherine Hill4,5, Changhai Ding6,7, Anita E Wluka8, Andrew Forbes9, Flavia M Cicuttini10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Osteoarthritis (OA) is a major clinical and public health problem, with no current medications approved as having disease modifying effects. HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors, or "statins", a drug class widely used to prevent cardiovascular events, could potentially affect OA progression via a number of mechanisms including their effects on lipid metabolism and inflammation. The aim of this multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial is to determine whether atorvastatin reduces the progression of knee structural changes and symptoms over 2 years in patients with symptomatic knee OA. METHODS/Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26700937 PMCID: PMC4688994 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-015-1122-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Summary of findings from human epidemiological studies for association between statin use and risk of osteoarthritis
| Author, year | Study design | Participants | Outcome measure | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beattie MS, et al. 2005 [ | Prospective cohort study | 5,674 elderly women aged ≥65 years from the Study of Osteoporotic Fractures | Radiographic hip OA | Statin use was associated with an increased risk of developing radiographic hip OA, but did not adversely affect the progression of established disease. |
| Chodick G, et al. 2010 [ | Retrospective population-based cohort study | 193,770 individuals from the computerised medical databases of a large health organisation | International Classification of Diseases, 9th revision, diagnosis codes | Persistent statin use was associated with a reduced incidence of OA. |
| Clockaerts S, et al. 2012 [ | Prospective population-based cohort study | 2,921 participants aged ≥55 years in the Rotterdam study | Radiographic knee and hip OA | Statin use was associated with reduced incidence and progression of radiographic knee OA, but not radiographic hip OA over 6.5 years. |
| Kadam UT, et al. 2013 [ | Retrospective cohort study | 16,609 adults aged ≥40 years from the UK General Practice Research Database | Clinically defined OA: OA-related diagnostic categories from a standard clinical classification, recorded by GPs in the actual consultations | Higher statin dose and larger statin increments were associated with reduced incident episode of clinically defined OA over 2–10 years. |
| Mansi IA, et al. 2013 [ | Retrospective cohort study | 92,360 patients in the San Antonio Military Multi-Service Market | International Classification of Diseases, 9th edition, diagnosis codes | Statin use was associated with an increased incidence of OA and arthropathy over 4 years. |
| Riddle DL, et al. 2013 [ | Prospective cohort study | 2,207 participants with radiographically suspected or confirmed knee OA in the Osteoarthritis Initiative | Knee pain, function, and radiographic knee OA | Statin use was not associated with improvement in knee pain, function, or structural progression of knee OA over 4 years. |
Timetable and measures to be made
| Screening | Month 0 (baseline) | Week 4 | Month 6 | Month 12 | Month 18 | Month 24 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| X-ray | √ | ||||||
| Biochemical testing | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | ||
| Questionnaires | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | ||
| Knee VAS | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | ||
| Knee WOMAC | √ | √ | √ | √ | |||
| IPAQ | √ | √ | |||||
| SF-36 | √ | √ | |||||
| Concomitant medications | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | ||
| Smoking | √ | √ | |||||
| History of joint disease | √ | √ | √ | ||||
| Co-morbidities | √ | √ | √ | ||||
| Education and occupation | √ | ||||||
| Physical examination | √ | √ | |||||
| Height and weight | √ | √ | |||||
| Lower limb muscle strength | √ | √ | √ | ||||
| Knee MRI | √ | √ | |||||
| Compliance and adverse events | √ | √ | √ | √ | |||
| Medication dispensing | √ | √ | √ | √ |
Magnetic resonance imaging sequences and parameters at three study sites
| Machine and coil | T1 sagittal | Proton density sagittal | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Melbourne | 3.0 T whole body MR unit (Achieva, Philips Medical Systems), using a commercial 16-channel transmit-receive knee coil | T1-weighted fat suppressed 3D gradient recall acquisition in the steady state; flip angle 15 degrees; repetition time 25.9 msec; echo time 9.2 msec; field of view 16 cm; 320 × 320 matrix; one acquisition; partition thickness 0.5 mm | Proton density fat-saturated acquisition; flip angle 90 degrees; repetition time 3,817 msec; echo time 25 msec; field of view 16 cm; 720 × 720 matrix; slice thickness 2.5 mm |
| Hobart | 1.5 T whole-body MR unit (GE-Signa; GE Healthcare, Buckinghamshire, UK) using a dedicated 8-channel knee coil | T1-weighted fat-saturated 3D gradient-recalled acquisition; flip angle 30 degrees; repetition time 31 msec; echo time 6.8 msec; field of view 16 cm; 512 × 512 matrix; one excitation; slice thickness 1.5 mm | Proton density fat-saturated 2D fast spin echo sequence; flip angle 150 degrees; repetition time 3,800 msec; echo time 39 msec; field of view 16 cm; 512 × 512 matrix; 3 excitations; slice thickness 3 mm |
| Adelaide | 1.5 T whole-body MR unit (Aera, Siemens) using a dedicated 15-channel transmit-receive knee coil | T1-weighted fat-saturated 3D gradient-recalled acquisition; flip angle 30 degrees, repetition time 14.7 msec; echo time 6.74 msec; field of view 16 cm; 448 × 448 matrix; one excitation; slice thickness 1.5 mm | Proton density fat-saturated 2D fast spin echo sequence; flip angle 180 degrees; repetition time 3,200 msec; echo time 39 msec; field of view 16 cm; 320 × 320 matrix; 1 excitation; slice thickness 3 mm |