4.4 Review

Linking physical activity with clinical, functional, and structural outcomes: an evidence map using the Osteoarthritis Initiative

期刊

CLINICAL RHEUMATOLOGY
卷 41, 期 4, 页码 965-975

出版社

SPRINGER LONDON LTD
DOI: 10.1007/s10067-021-05995-y

关键词

Exercise; Knee joint; Osteoarthritis; Rehabilitation

资金

  1. Nova Scotia Research and Innovation Graduate Scholarship
  2. Scotia Scholars Award (Research Nova Scotia)
  3. MSSU Student Award (Maritime SPOR SUPPORT Unit)
  4. Killam Level II Predoctoral Scholarship

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study reviewed evidence published from the Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI) linking physical activity with clinical, functional, and structural knee osteoarthritis outcomes. Positive effects of physical activity were consistently reported in clinical and functional outcomes, with limited impact on structural outcomes. The evidence maps generated serve as a framework for future investigations into the effects of physical activity on knee osteoarthritis.
Physical activity is consistently recommended across clinical practice guidelines for managing knee osteoarthritis, yet prescription rates are low. Evidence mapping uses a systematic approach to visually illustrate and summarize published evidence, highlight gaps in the literature, and formulate research questions. The purpose of this study was to review and summarize evidence published from the Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI) linking physical activity with clinical, functional, and structural knee osteoarthritis outcomes. Electronic databases were searched until June 2021. Studies from the OAI reporting subjective (Physical Activity Scale for the Elderly, PASE) or objective (accelerometry) physical activity data were included. Scatter plots were created to represent each outcome group (clinical, functional, structural) and physical activity measure (PASE, accelerometry) to map the evidence by the directional effect (positive, interaction, negative, or no effect) associated with physical activity. Forty-two articles were included in this review. Physical activity was quantified using PASE (n = 21), accelerometry (n = 20), or both (n = 1). Studies reported consistently positive physical activity effects on clinical (n = 22) and functional (n = 20) outcomes, with few exceptions. Structural (n = 15) outcomes were largely reported as interaction effects by physical activity intensity or sex, or as no significant effect. A network of interconnected outcomes emerged, with clinical and functional outcomes often reported together, and structural outcomes reported individually. This study provides an overview of current evidence linking physical activity to multiple interrelated knee osteoarthritis outcomes using an OAI-driven model. These evidence maps can be used as a framework to guide future investigations of the effects of physical activity on knee osteoarthritis.

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