Although osteoarthritis is a common disease, there are currently no disease-modifying availible. For a long time osteoarthritis was considered a purely degenerative disease without inflammation of... Show moreAlthough osteoarthritis is a common disease, there are currently no disease-modifying availible. For a long time osteoarthritis was considered a purely degenerative disease without inflammation of the synovium (synovitis). However, recent research has shown that synovitis is of importance in patients with osteoarthritis. Therefore, this thesis aimed to understand the role synovitis in ossteoarthritis. In the first part of this thesis, we investigated the nature of synovitis by examining the synovium of osteoarthritis patients using differnt laboratory techniques. Furthermore, we validated a new synovitis scoring system on MRI with contrast. In the second part of this thesis, we investigated role of synovitis in relation to clinical characteristics such as pain and structural damage. This thesis shows that synovial inflammation in osteoarthritis is not only frequently present, but may also play a role in the pathophysiology of osteoarthritis and development of clinical features. Results presented in this thesis provide insight into different aspects of synovial inflammation aimed at increasing our understanding of the pathophysiology of OA and aiding to the development of disease-modifying drugs in OA. Show less
Osteoarthritis is a prevalent disease causing pain and disability. It__s aetiology is unknown and no curative treatment is available. Osteoarthritis research is complicated due to heterogeneity of... Show moreOsteoarthritis is a prevalent disease causing pain and disability. It__s aetiology is unknown and no curative treatment is available. Osteoarthritis research is complicated due to heterogeneity of the disease, slow progression and poor association of clinical features with radiographic abnormalities, imaging modality of choice until now. In this thesis the role of synovitis in osteoarthritis is studied in relationship with clinical features and structural damage. The studies described made especially use of data derived a prospective follow-up study in symptomatic hand osteoarthritis patients. Synovitis detected on ultrasound was associated with clinical features and with progression of structural damage after 2.3 years in hand osteoarthritis. In erosive osteoarthritis, a subtype of hand osteoarthritis, more synovitis was found in all hand joints, even in non-erosive joints, when compared to joints of patients without erosive osteoarthritis. Also, associations were found between synovitis and erosive development at follow-up. All analyses were performed on joint level, using GEE analyses, thereby taking into account patient effects. Associations were poor/absent when analyses were done on patient level. This is important for further research. These results indicate that synovitis plays a role in pain and in development of structural damage in osteoarthritis and could be a therapeutic target. Show less