| Literature DB >> 33097031 |
Charles D Hummer1, Felix Angst2, Wilson Ngai3, Craig Whittington3,4, Sophie S Yoon4, Lionel Duarte4, Colleen Manitt5, Emil Schemitsch6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The 2013 American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) guidelines made strong recommendations against intraarticular hyaluronic acid (IAHA) for patients with knee osteoarthritis (OA), as evidence supporting improvements in pain did not meet the minimal clinically important improvement (MCII) threshold. However, there may be important distinctions based on IAHA molecular weight (MW). Hence our objective was to evaluate the efficacy of IAHAs in knee OA based on molecular weight.Entities:
Keywords: Hyaluronic acid; Knee osteoarthritis; Meta-analysis; Molecular weight
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33097031 PMCID: PMC7585216 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-020-03729-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
AAOS inclusion/exclusion criteria [9]
| Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
|---|---|
• Study was of osteoarthritis of the knee • Study reported on 80% of the patient population of interest • Article provided full report of a clinical study • Study was published in a peer-reviewed journal • Study had a sample of 30 or more patients per treatment group • Study was of humans • Study was published in English • Study was published during or after 1966 • Study results were presented quantitatively • Study treatment follow up period was at least 4 weeks • At least 80% of the enrolled study population were 19 years of age or older • For any included study that used “paper-and-pencil” outcome measures (e.g. SF-36), only those that were validated were included [unless the outcome was identified a priori by the work group in the critical outcomes Delphi round] | • Retrospective non-comparative case series, medical records review, meeting abstracts, historical articles, editorials, letters, and commentaries • Case series studies that gave patients the treatment of interest AND another treatment • Case series studies that had non-consecutive enrollment of patients were excluded • Controlled trials in which patients were not stochastically assigned to groups AND in which there was heterogeneity in patient characteristics or outcomes at baseline AND where the authors did not statistically adjust for these differences when analyzing the results • All studies of “Very Limited” evidence strength • Composite measures or outcomes even if they were patient-oriented • Case series studies with no baseline values • “Paper and pencil” outcomes (e.g. SF-36) reported by a single group of investigators • Study performed on cadavers • In vitro study |
SF-36 36-Item Short Form Survey
PICO criteria
| PICO | Inclusion Criteria |
|---|---|
| Participants | • Persons with knee OA |
| Interventions | • Intraarticular corticosteroids o Triamcinolone o Methylprednisolone o Betamethasone o Triamcinolone Sustained Release • Intraarticular Hyaluronic Acids • Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs) o Diclofenac o Celecoxib o Naproxen • Acetaminophen • Oral Opioids |
| Comparators | • Any |
| Outcomes | • Efficacy (pain hierarchy from highest to lowest priority) o WOMAC pain subscale (Likert; 0–20) (VAS; 0–500) o Pain during activity (VAS; 0–100) o Pain during walking (VAS; 0–100) o Global knee pain (VAS; 0–100) o Pain at rest (VAS; 0–100) o SF-36 (bodily pain (BP) subscale; 0–100) o HAQ (pain subscale; 0–100/0–3), Lequesne algofunctional index (pain subscale; 0–8), AIMS (pain subscale; 0–10), Knee-Specific Pain Scale (KSPS), McGill Pain Questionnaire (pain intensity; 0–50), ASES (pain subscale; 10–100), SES (Schmerzempfindungsskala – pain perception scale) o Pain at night (VAS; 0–100), pain during activity (NRS; 0–10), pain on walking (NRS; 0–10), number of painful days (days) |
AIMS Arthritis Impact Measurement Scale; ASES Arthritis Self-Efficacy Scale; HAQ Health Assessment Questionnaire; NRS numerical rating scale; OA osteoarthritis; SF-36 36-Item Short Form Survey; VAS Visual Analogue Scale; WOMAC Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index
Hierarchy of pain measures
| Rank | Measure |
|---|---|
| 1 | WOMAC pain sub-scale (Likert: 0–20; VAS: 0–500) |
| 2 | Pain during activity (VAS: 0–100) |
| 3 | Pain during walking (VAS: 0–100) |
| 4 | Global knee pain (VAS: 0–100) |
| 5 | Pain at rest (VAS: 0–100) |
| 6 | SF-36 bodily pain (BP) sub-scale (0–100) |
| 7 | HAQ pain sub-scale (0–100; 0–3), Lequesne algofunctional index pain sub-scale (0–8), AIMS pain sub-scale (0–10) Knee-Specific Pain Scale (KSPS) McGill Pain Questionnaire – pain intensity (0–50) ASES pain sub-scale (10–100) Schmerzempfindungsskala (SES) Pain Perception Scale |
| 8 | Pain at night (VAS: 0–100), Pain during activity (NRS: 0–10), Pain on walking (NRS:0–10), Number of painful days (days) |
AIMS Arthritis Impact Measurement Scales; ASES American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons Shoulder Score; HAQ Health Assessment Questionnaire; NRS numeric rating scale; SF-36 36-Item Short Form Survey; WOMAC Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index; VAS visual analog scale
Fig. 1Confidence intervals of treatment effects that range in statistical and clinical significance adapted from the 2013 American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons clinical practice guidelines [9]. Footnote: MCII = minimum clinically important improvement
Fig. 2Network of trials comparing improvement in pain scores in patients with knee osteoarthritis receiving nonoperative treatments. Footnote: The size of the nodes is proportional to the total number of participants. HMW = high molecular weight; LMW = low molecular weight; IA = intraarticular; IAHA = intraarticular hyaluronic acid
Fig. 3Standardized mean differences (and 95% credible intervals) for each intervention node compared to intraarticular placebo. Footnote: Crl = credible interval; HMW = high molecular weight; IA = intraarticular; IAHA = intraarticular hyaluronic acid; LMW = low molecular weight; MCII = minimal clinically important improvement. Blue dotted line indicates MCII threshold used by AAOS CPG [9]. Red dotted line indicates conservative MCII threshold used in the current analysis as established by Angst et al. 2017 [15]
League table
| HMW IAHA | IA Corticosteroids | LMW IAHA | Conventional Therapy | IA Placebo |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| −0.23 (− 0.72, 0.30) | −0.34 (− 0.82, 0.13) | −0.59 (− 1.52, 0.34) | ||
| −0.11 (− 0.66, 0.39) | −0.36 (− 1.44, 0.72) | −0.34 (− 0.92, 0.19) | ||
| −0.25 (− 1.27, 0.82) | − 0.23 (− 0.67, 0.20) | |||
| 0.02 (−1.02, 1.05) | ||||
Each cell represents the comparison (SMDs and 95% CrI) of the row versus the column interventions. Italicized values are statistically significant. Negative values favor the row treatment. HMW high molecular weight; IA intraarticular; IAHA intraarticular hyaluronic acid; LMW low molecular weight
Fig. 4Absolute efficacy on WOMAC pain 0–100 scale. Footnote: SMDs were multiplied by median SD (25.8) to convert effect estimates back to WOMAC Pain Scale (0–100). AAOS = American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons; HMW = high molecular weight; IA = intraarticular; IAHA = intraarticular hyaluronic acid; LMW = low molecular weight; MCII = minimal clinically important improvement; SMD = standardized mean difference; WOMAC = Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index
Fig. 5Cluster graph showing absolute efficacy (change from baseline on WOMAC 0–100 scale) plotted against relative efficacy (compared to IA Placebo). Footnote: HMW = high molecular weight; IA = intraarticular; IAHA = intraarticular hyaluronic acid; LMW = low molecular weight; SMD = standardized mean difference; WOMAC = Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index
Probability of treatment being a certain rank
| Treatment | Rank 1 | Rank 2 | Rank 3 | Rank 4 | Rank 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HMW IAHA | 22.55 | 5.50 | 0.90 | 0.00 | |
| IA Corticosteroids | 15.55 | 41.20 | 28.20 | 11.20 | 3.85 |
| Conventional Therapy | 8.85 | 12.00 | 10.95 | 18.05 | 50.15 |
| LMW IAHA | 4.32 | 21.32 | 45.15 | 23.60 | 5.60 |
| IA Placebo | 0.22 | 2.93 | 10.20 | 46.25 | 40.40 |
aHMW high molecular weight; IA intraarticular; IAHA intraarticular hyaluronic acid; LMW low molecular weight
Fig. 6Rankogram. Footnote: HMW = high molecular weight; IA = intraarticular; IAHA = intraarticular hyaluronic acid; LMW = low molecular weight