| Literature DB >> 33801304 |
Dragan Primorac1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9, Vilim Molnar1,6, Vid Matišić1, Damir Hudetz1,6,10, Željko Jeleč1,11, Eduard Rod1, Fabijan Čukelj1,4,12,13, Dinko Vidović1,13, Trpimir Vrdoljak1,10, Borut Dobričić1,14, Darko Antičević1, Martina Smolić5,6, Mladen Miškulin4,15, Damir Ćaćić16, Igor Borić1,4,7,9,12.
Abstract
Osteoarthritis is the most common musculoskeletal progressive disease, with the knee as the most commonly affected joint in the human body. While several new medications are still under research, many symptomatic therapy options, such as analgesics (opioid and non-opioid), nonsteroid anti-inflammatory drugs, symptomatic slow-acting drugs in osteoarthritis, and preparations for topical administration, are being used, with a diverse clinical response and inconsistent conclusions across various professional societies guidelines. The concept of pharmacogenomic-guided therapy, which lies on principles of the right medication for the right patient in the right dose at the right time, can significantly increase the patient's response to symptom relief therapy in knee osteoarthritis. Corticosteroid intra-articular injections and hyaluronic acid injections provoke numerous discussions and disagreements among different guidelines, even though they are currently used in daily clinical practice. Biological options, such as platelet-rich plasma and mesenchymal stem cell injections, have shown good results in the treatment of osteoarthritis symptoms, greatly increasing the patient's quality of life, especially when combined with other therapeutic options. Non-inclusion of the latter therapies in the guidelines, and their inconsistent stance on numerous therapy options, requires larger and well-designed studies to examine the true effects of these therapies and update the existing guidelines.Entities:
Keywords: drug therapy; guidelines; intra-articular injections; knee osteoarthritis; mesenchymal stem cells; pharmacogenomics
Year: 2021 PMID: 33801304 PMCID: PMC8001498 DOI: 10.3390/ph14030205
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Guideline recommendations for most commonly used oral and topical pharmacological agents in osteoarthritis treatment.
| Guideline Author | Year of Issue | Acetaminophen | Opioid Analgesics | Peroral NSAIDs | SYSADOA | Topical NSAIDs | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tramadol | Other | ||||||
| AAOS | 2013 | Unable to give any recommendation | Positive recommendation | Inconclusive | Positive recommendation | Strong recommendation against use | Positive recommendation |
| ACR/AF | 2020 | Conditional recommendation for | Conditional recommendation for | Conditional recommendation against | Recommended as first-line treatment | Strong recommendation against use | Strong recommendation for use prior to oral NSAIDs |
| OARSI | 2019 | Conditional recommendation against | Strong recommendation against | Recommended as first-line treatment | Not included | Recommended as first-line treatment | |
| ESCEO | 2019 | Weak recommendation against as single therapy, should be used as rescue medicine in addition to first-line treatment with SYSADOA | Conditional recommendation for as third-line treatment | Recommended as first-line, short-term treatment | Recommended as first-line, long-term treatment for pharmaceutical-grade products | Recommended in addition to SYSADOA and acetaminophen prior to oral NSAIDs | |
AAOS—American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons; ACR/AF—American College of Rheumatology/Arthritis Foundation; OARSI—Osteoarthritis Research Society International; ESCEO—European Society for Clinical and Economic Aspects of Osteoporosis, Osteoarthritis and Musculoskeletal Diseases; NSAIDs—nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; SYSADOA—systemic slow-acting drugs in osteoarthritis.
Guideline recommendations for most commonly used intra-articular options in osteoarthritis treatment.
| Guideline Author | Year of Issue | IACS | IAHA | PRP | MSCs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AAOS | 2013 | Unable to give any recommendation | Not recommended | Unable to give any recommendation | Not included |
| ACR/AF | 2020 | Strong recommendation for short-term analgesia | Conditional recommendation against | Strong recommendation against, (heterogeneous studies, lack of preparation and application standardization) | Strong recommendation against (heterogeneous studies, lack of preparation and application standardization) |
| OARSI | 2019 | Conditional recommendation for short-term analgesia | Conditional recommendation for a long-term effect where multiple IACS are contraindicated | Strong recommendation against (non-standardized formulations, low-quality evidence) | Strong recommendation against (non-standardized formulations, low-quality evidence) |
| ESCEO | 2019 | Weak recommendation for short-term analgesia when patients have a contraindication for the use of NSAIDs or have insufficient analgesia on NSAID therapy | Weak recommendation for, only to be used when patients have a contraindication for the use of NSAIDs or have insufficient analgesia on NSAID therapy | Not included | Not included |
AAOS—American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons; ACR/AF—American College of Rheumatology/Arthritis Foundation; OARSI—Osteoarthritis Research Society International; ESCEO—European Society for Clinical and Economic Aspects of Osteoporosis, Osteoarthritis and Musculoskeletal Diseases; IACS—intra-articular corticosteroids; IAHA—intra-articular hyaluronic acid; PRP—platelet-rich plasma; MSCs—mesenchymal stem cells; NSAIDs—nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.