4.4 Article

Dextrose Prolotherapy for Knee Osteoarthritis: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Journal

ANNALS OF FAMILY MEDICINE
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages 229-237

Publisher

ANNALS FAMILY MEDICINE
DOI: 10.1370/afm.1504

Keywords

randomized controlled trial; osteoarthritis, knee; prolotherapy; dextrose

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health: National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine [5K23AT001879-02]

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PURPOSE Knee osteoarthritis is a common, debilitating chronic disease. Prolotherapy is an injection therapy for chronic musculoskeletal pain. We conducted a 3-arm, blinded (injector, assessor, injection group participants), randomized controlled trial to assess the efficacy of prolotherapy for knee osteoarthritis. METHODS Ninety adults with at least 3 months of painful knee osteoarthritis were randomized to blinded injection (dextrose prolotherapy or saline) or at-home exercise. Extra-and intra-articular injections were done at 1, 5, and 9 weeks with as-needed additional treatments at weeks 13 and 17. Exercise participants received an exercise manual and in-person instruction. Outcome measures included a composite score on the Western Ontario McMaster University Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC; 100 points); knee pain scale (KPS; individual knee), postprocedure opioid medication use, and participant satisfaction. Intention-to-treat analysis using analysis of variance was used. RESULTS No baseline differences existed between groups. All groups reported improved composite WOMAC scores compared with baseline status (P < .01) at 52 weeks. Adjusted for sex, age, and body mass index, WOMAC scores for patients receiving dextrose prolotherapy improved more (P < .05) at 52 weeks than did scores for patients receiving saline and exercise (score change: 15.3 +/- 3.5 vs 7.6 +/- 3.4, and 8.2 +/- 3.3 points, respectively) and exceeded the WOMAC-based minimal clinically important difference. Individual knee pain scores also improved more in the prolotherapy group (P = .05). Use of prescribed postprocedure opioid medication resulted in rapid diminution of injection-related pain. Satisfaction with prolotherapy was high. There were no adverse events. CONCLUSIONS Prolotherapy resulted in clinically meaningful sustained improvement of pain, function, and stiffness scores for knee osteoarthritis compared with blinded saline injections and at-home exercises.

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