4.7 Article

A randomised trial of a brace for patellofemoral osteoarthritis targeting knee pain and bone marrow lesions

Journal

ANNALS OF THE RHEUMATIC DISEASES
Volume 74, Issue 6, Pages 1164-1170

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/annrheumdis-2014-206376

Keywords

Knee Osteoarthritis; Treatment; Rehabilitation

Categories

Funding

  1. Arthritis Research UK [18676]
  2. NIHR Biomedical Research Unit at the University of Manchester
  3. NIH [AR47785]
  4. Arthritis Research UK
  5. NIHR
  6. US NIH
  7. Versus Arthritis [18676] Funding Source: researchfish

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Objective Braces used to treat (PF) osteoarthritis (OA) may reduce contact stress across the PF joint. We hypothesised that in PF OA, braces would decrease knee pain and shrink PF bone marrow lesions (BMLs). Methods Eligible subjects had painful PF OA. Subjects were randomly allocated to brace or no brace for 6weeks. Knee MRIs were acquired at baseline and 6weeks. We measured BMLs on post-contrast fat suppressed sagittal and proton density weighted axial images. The primary symptom outcome was change in pain at 6weeks during a preselected painful activity, and the primary structural outcome was BML volume change in the PF joint. Analyses used multiple linear regression. Results We randomised 126 subjects aged 40-70years (mean age 55.5 years; 72 females (57.1%)). Mean nominated visual analogue scale (0-10cm) pain score at baseline was 6.5cm. 94 knees (75%) had PF BMLs at baseline. Subjects wore the brace for a mean of 7.4h/day. 6 subjects withdrew during the trial. After accounting for baseline values, the brace group had lower knee pain than the control group at 6weeks (difference between groups -1.3cm, 95% CI -2.0 to -0.7; p<0.001) and reduced PF BML volume (difference -490.6mm(3), 95% CI -929.5 to -51.7; p=0.03) but not tibiofemoral volume (difference -53.9mm(3), 95% CI -625.9 to 518.2; p=0.85). Conclusions A PF brace reduces BML volume in the targeted compartment of the knee, and relieves knee pain. Trial registration number UK. ISRCTN50380458.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available