| Literature DB >> 30961569 |
Jonathon Charlesworth1, Jane Fitzpatrick2,3,4, Nirmala Kanthi Panagodage Perera2,5, John Orchard2,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is no cure for knee osteoarthritis (KOA) and typically patients live approximately 30-years with the disease. Most common medical treatments result in short-term palliation of symptoms with little consideration of long-term risk. This systematic review aims to appraise the current evidence for the long-term (≥12 months) safety of common treatments for knee osteoarthritis (KOA).Entities:
Keywords: Exercise; Injections; Knee; Osteoarthritis; Surgery
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30961569 PMCID: PMC6454763 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-019-2525-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Fig. 1Study selection flow diagram
Summary of Studies providing overview of the treatment options for knee osteoarthritis
| Treatment option | Level of evidence (type of trial) | Reference | Study population characteristic | Intervention | Outcome measure | Medium-long term impact on the disease | Non-disease side effects (with potential to last 12 months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lifestyle | |||||||
| | |||||||
| II (RCT) | Messier et al. (2004) [ | 252 patients older than 60 with BMI > 28 | Exercise and diet, diet only, exercise only | WOMAC | Positive | 1 patient tripped with laceration to forehead | |
| II (RCT) | Nejati, et al. (2015) [ | 56 patients with grade 2–4 Kellgren-Lawrence (KL) | Stretching and leg exercises | VAS and KOOS | Positive | Nil | |
| II (RCT) | Jenkinson et al. (2009) [ | 389 patients older than 45 with BMI > 28 | Diet and exercise, diet only, exercise only | WOMAC | Positive | Nil | |
| II (RCT) | Kawasaki et al. (2008) [ | 142 female patients with moderate knee-OA | Exercise with or without glucosamine or risendronate | WOMAC | Neutral | Nil | |
| | |||||||
| III(Prospective Cohort) | Gersing et al. (2017) [ | 640 patients | Weight loss > 10% or 5–10% | MRI WORMS | Positive | Nil | |
| Pharmacological | |||||||
| | |||||||
| II (RCT) | Pavelká et al. (2002) [ | 202 patients aged 45–70 | Glucosamine 1500 mg daily for 3 years | WOMAC | Positive | Gastrointestinal side effects | |
| II (RCT) | Reginster et al. (2001) [ | 212 patients | Glucosamine 1500 mg daily for 3 years | WOMAC | Positive | Gastrointestinal side effects | |
| II (RCT) | Sawitzke et al. (2008) [ | 572 patients with KL grade 2–3 | Glucosamine or chondroitin | JSW | Neutral | Gastrointestinal side effects | |
| | |||||||
| II (RCT) | Temple et al. (2006) [ | 571 patients with knee or hip OA | Paracetamol or Naproxen for 6 or 12 months | WOMAC | Positive | Hepatic, renal and gastrointestinal side effects | |
|
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| II (RCT) | Temple et al. (2006) [ | 571 patients with knee or hip OA | Paracetamol or Naproxen for 6 or 12 months | WOMAC | Positive | Hepatic, renal and gastrointestinal side effects | |
| II (RCT) | Sawitzke et al. (2010) [ | 662 patients with KL grade 2–3 | Celecoxib 2oomg for 2 years | WOMAC | Neutral | Gastrointestinal side effects | |
| Injectables | |||||||
| | |||||||
| II (RCT) | McAlindon et al. (2017) [ | 140 patients with KL grade 2–3 | Triamcinolone 3 monthly for 2 years | MRI cartilage loss | Negative | Facial flushing, injection site pain | |
| II (RCT) | Raynauld et al. (2003) [ | 68 patients with KL grade 2–3 | Triamcinolone 3 monthly for 2 years | WOMAC | Positive | Nil | |
| | |||||||
| III (Prospective cohort) | Benazzo et al. 2016) [ | 50 patients, older than 40 | 2 x Hymovis 3 ml a week apart, then again at 6 months | WOMAC, JSW | Positive | Increase in knee pain, HA, flu like symptoms, back pain | |
| III (Prospective cohort) | Conrozier et al. (2003) [ | 155 patients | 3 x intraarticular Hylan GF-20 a week apart | Patient satisfaction and safety | Neutral | Nil | |
| III (Prospective cohort) | Huskin et al. (2008) [ | 62 patients KL grade 1–2 | 3 x intraarticular Hylan GF-20 a week apart | WOMAC | Positive | Pain, swelling and synovitis | |
| II (RCT) | Jorgensen et al. (2010) [ | 337 patients | Intra-articular Hyaluron weekly for 5 weeks | LFI, pain on VAS walking > 50 m | Neutral | ||
| II (RCT) | Juni et al. (2007) [ | 660 patients | 3 intra-articular injections of 3 different HAs | WOMAC | Neutral | Pain, swelling and synovitis | |
| II (RCT) | Navarro-Sarabia et al. (2011) [ | 306 patients KL grade 2–3 | 5 intra-articular injections at 6 month intervals | OARSI responder criteria | Positive | Pain, swelling, rash and bleeding | |
| II (RCT) | Ozturk et al. (2006) [ | 24 patients | 3 injections as week apart and then repeat at 6 months with or without triamcinolone | WOMAC | Positive | ||
| II (RCT) | Vaquerizo et al. (2013) [ | 96 patients | 3 x PRGF-Endoret or 1 x Durolane | WOMAC | Positive | ||
| III (Prospective cohort) | Kearey et al. (2017) [ | 119 patients | Single intra-articular injection of 6-mL hylan G-F | WOMAC | Positive | ||
| III (Prospective case) | Yan et al. (2015) [ | 110 knees from 95 patients | Single intra-articular injection of 6-mL hylan G-F | Pain VAS and Likert scales | Positive | Self-limiting pain and swelling over injection site | |
| | |||||||
| II(RCT) | Filardo et al. (2012) [ | 144 patients | 3 injections of single or double spinning PRP | IKDC, EQ-VAS and Tegner scores | Positive | Swelling and pain over injection site | |
| II (RCT) | Smith (2016) [ | 30 patients | 3 weekly leucocyte poor PRP | WOMAC | Positive | Nil | |
| | |||||||
| III (Prospective case) | Emadedin et al. (2012) [ | 6 patients | Bone marrow MSCs | MRI cartilage mapping | Positive | Nil | |
| III (Prospective case) | Emadedin et al. (2015) [ | 18 patients | Bone marrow MSCs | WOMAC | Positive | Rash and erythema | |
| III (Prospective case) | Orozco et al. (2013) [ | 12 patients | Bone marrow MSCs | MRI cartilage mapping | Positive | Nil | |
| II (RCT) | Vega et al. (2015) [ | 30 patients | Allogenic bone marrow MSCs vs IAHA | MRI cartilage mapping | Positive | Transient joint pain and swelling | |
| III (Prospective case) | Fodor and Paulseth (2016) [ | 8 knees in 6 patients KL grade 1–3 | Adipose derived SVF cells | WOMAC | Positive | Nil | |
| Surgical | |||||||
| | |||||||
| III (Prospective cohort) | Rongen et al. (2017) [ | 4674 patients with 335 meniscectomies | Arthroscopic meniscectomy | Progression to TKA | Negative | Nil | |
| | |||||||
| III (Prospective cohort) | Brophy et al. (2014) [ | 1268 patients | Previous knee surgery | Progression to TKA | Neutral | Nil | |
| III (Prospective cohort) | El-Galaly et al. (2017) [ | 1421 patients | Post-traumatic fracture TKA | Failure of implant | Neutral | Nil | |
| II(RCT) | Skou et al. (2015) [ | 95 patients with moderate to severe OA | TKA | KOOS | Positive | Major medical side effects | |
| III(Matched Cohort) | Ansari et al. (2017) [ | 21 patients with KOA having previous micro fracture | TKA | KSS score | Positive | 1 x arthrofibrosis | |
Narrative review search strategy
| Database | Search terms |
|
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | Medical condition terms | TX (Osteoarthritis, knee) | 1 | Human |
| Treatment terms AND safety | Treatments OR Diet therapy[Mesh] OR Drug therapy[Mesh] OR Rehabilitation[Mesh] OR Surgery [Mesh] OR Therapy AND Safety | 2 | ||
| Medical condition terms AND treatment terms AND safety | 1 AND 2 | 3 | ||
| Medline | Treatment terms | TX (osteoarthritis OR degenerative arthritis OR degenerative joint disease) | 1 | Human Language filter (English) |
| Treatment terms AND safety | Treatment OR Surgery OR Knee replacement OR TKR OR knee arthroscopy OR Tibial Osteotomy OR NSAIDs OR Opiates OR Paracetamol OR Glucosamine OR Cortisone OR Hyaluronan Gel OR PRP OR Stem Cells OR Exercise Program OR Weight Loss AND Safety | 2 | ||
| Medical condition terms AND treatment terms AND safety | 1 AND 2 | 3 | ||
| PubMed | Medical condition terms | “Osteoarthritis, Knee”[Mesh] OR TITLE-ABS-KEY (osteoarthritis OR degenerative arthritis OR degenerative joint disease) | 1 | Human Language filter (English) |
| Treatment terms AND safety | “Osteoarthritis, Knee/diet therapy”[Mesh] OR “Osteoarthritis, Knee/drug therapy”[Mesh] OR “Osteoarthritis, Knee/prevention and control”[Mesh] OR OR “Osteoarthritis, Knee/rehabilitation”[Mesh] OR “Osteoarthritis, Knee/surgery”[Mesh] OR “Osteoarthritis, Knee/therapy”[Mesh] OR TITLE-ABS-KEY (Treatment OR Surgery OR Knee replacement OR TKR OR knee arthroscopy OR NSAIDs OR Paracetamol OR Glucosamine OR Opiates OR Cortisone OR PRP OR Stem Cells OR Hyaluronan Gel OR Exercise Program) AND “Safety” [MeSH] | 2 | ||
| 1 AND 2 | 1 AND 2 | 3 |
Footnote to Supplement 2: TX: All text; MeSH Medical Subject Headings
Inclusion/exclusion criteria for the risks and harms associated with commonly used treatment for knee osteoarthritis literature search
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | Rationale for this criteria | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Publication type | Peer-reviewed original research articles, systematic reviews and meta-analysis only | Non-peer-reviewed articles, newspapers, opinion pieces, editorials, commentaries and letters to the editor. Conference proceedings/abstracts. Book chapters. Downs and Black [ | The aim of this review was to investigate the risks and harms associated with commonly used treatment for knee osteoarthritis. For reasons of practicality, it was deemed acceptable to include only studies published in peer-reviewed journals. |
| Language | English language | Non-English | For reasons of practicality, it was deemed acceptable to include only studies published in English. |
| Population | Knee osteoarthritis in patients 18-years and older | Knee osteoarthritis in patients 17-years and younger | Average age of knee osteoarthritis diagnosis is 55-years and typically people live about 30-years with the disease. |
| Intervention | Operative and non-operative management of knee osteoarthritis treatments treatments listed in the Australian Clinical Care Standard [ | Operative and non-operative management of knee osteoarthritis not listed in the Australian Clinical Care Standard [ | Commonly accepted treatments were sought out and the authors decided upon treatments listed in Australian Clinical Care Standard [ |
| Outcome measures | Studies specifically addressed safety of the treatments with ≥12 months of follow-up. Long-term effect of a treatment could be either: (1) Positive OR negative effect of index treatment vs comparison treatment in any trial persisting at ≥12 months; or (2) Positive OR negative effect of index treatment vs comparison treatment in any trial showing significant change in any objective disease indicator (e.g. cartilage thickness on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or X-ray) at ≥12 months; or (3) Effect of index treatment showing significantly increased OR reduced risk of progression to TKA; or (4) Significant increase in side-effect or harm related to treatment with a potential for ongoing harm from this condition to persist beyond 12 months. | Short-term effects of osteoarthritis treatments. Side effects and adverse effects were not included in this review as they are typically short-term issues (e.g. allergic rash, post-procedure soreness). | The primary outcomes of interest for this review was to describe the long-term effects of the knee osteoarthritis treatments. As there is no curative treatment for OA currently, treatments are aimed at reducing pain and improving function. The prevalence of osteoarthritis increases with age, particularly after the age of 55-years such that the average person lives 30-years with knee OA. Therefore, it is important to appraise the long-term effects of knee OA treatment. |