Osteoarthritis Cartilage. 2015 Mar; 23(3): 391–396.

Knee Osteoarthritis Radiographic Progression and Associations with Pain and Function Prior to Knee Arthroplasty: A Multicenter Comparative Cohort Study

Daniel L. Riddle and William A. Jiranek
Knee

Objectives

We determined the radiographic osteoarthritic worsening rate prior to knee arthroplasty (TKA) and whether this worsening was associated with worsening pain and function as compared to a non-surgical matched sample.

Methods

We used the Osteoarthritis Initiative 5-year datasets. Extent of knee OA two years prior to TKA was matched to knees of persons who did not undergo TKA. WOMAC Function and KOOS Pain scales were used to quantify functional deficit and functionally relevant pain respectively. A total of 167 persons with isolated TKA and 300 persons with matched symptomatic knee OA but no TKA were studied.

Results

During the two years prior to TKA, worsening by at least one Kellgren and Lawrence (KL) grade occurred in 27.4% (95% CI = 20.6 to 34.2) of the surgical knees compared to 6.6% (95% CI = 3.8 to 9.4) of matched non-surgical knees. Osteoarthritis radiographic progression was strongly associated with WOMAC Function and KOOS Pain worsening (p<0.001) in the two years prior to TKA. KL worsening was strongly associated with future arthroplasty (Odds ratio = 5.0, 95%CI = 2.6 to 9.8) after adjustment for potential confounders.

Conclusions

Persons undergoing TKA two years later had substantial worsening pain and function over the two-year pre-operative period as compared to a non-surgical sample matched based on KL grades. Almost 30% of persons who elect to undergo TKA undergo rapid disease progression and symptom worsening during the 2 years prior to TKA.


Link to article