This thesis describes research done in the field of hand osteoarthritis, and had the following three aims:1) To evaluate the current state of treatment options in hand osteoarthritis;2) To... Show moreThis thesis describes research done in the field of hand osteoarthritis, and had the following three aims:1) To evaluate the current state of treatment options in hand osteoarthritis;2) To investigate the role of inflammation as a treatment target in hand osteoarthritis; and3) To facilitate development of new treatment options by improving outcome measurement in hand osteoarthritis. Show less
Stadt, L.A. van de; Kroon, F.P.B.; Kloppenburg, M. 2020
Objective: To improve the interpretation of the Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) in individual patients, we explored associations with age, sex, BMI, history of knee injury and... Show moreObjective: To improve the interpretation of the Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) in individual patients, we explored associations with age, sex, BMI, history of knee injury and presence of clinical knee osteoarthritis, and developed percentile curves.Methods: We used cross-sectional data of middle-aged individuals from the population-based Netherlands Epidemiology of Obesity (NEO) study. Clinical knee osteoarthritis was defined using the ACR classification criteria. KOOS scores were handled according to the manual (zero = extreme problems, 100 = no problems). Patient characteristics associated with KOOS were explored using ordered logistic regression, and sex and body mass index (BMI)-specific percentile curves were developed using quantile regression with fractional polynomials. The curves were applied as a benchmark for comparison of KOOS scores of participants with knee osteoarthritis and comorbidities.Results: The population consisted of 6,643 participants (56% women, mean (SD) age 56(6) years). Population-based KOOS subscale scores (median; interquartile range) near optimum: pain (100;94-100), symptoms (96;86-100), ADL function (100;96-100), sport/recreation function (100;80-100), quality of life (100;75-100). Worse KOOS scores were observed in women and in participants with higher BMI. Clinical knee osteoarthritis was defined in 15% of participants, and was, in comparison to other patient characteristics, associated with the highest odds of worse KOOS scores. Furthermore, presence of any comorbidity and cardiovascular disease specifically, was associated with worse KOOS scores, particularly in women.Conclusions: In the middle-aged Dutch population KOOS scores were generally good, but worse in women and with higher BMI. These percentile curves may be used as benchmarks in research and clinical practice. (c) 2020 Osteoarthritis Research Society International. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Show less
Objectives Further knowledge about typical hand osteoarthritis (OA) characteristics is needed for the development of new classification criteria for hand OA.Methods In a cross-sectional multi... Show moreObjectives Further knowledge about typical hand osteoarthritis (OA) characteristics is needed for the development of new classification criteria for hand OA.Methods In a cross-sectional multi-centre international study, a convenience sample of patients from primary and secondary/tertiary care with a physician-based hand OA diagnosis (n = 128) were compared with controls with hand complaints due to inflammatory or non-inflammatory conditions (n = 70). We examined whether self-reported, clinical, radiographic and laboratory findings were associated with hand OA using logistic regression analyses. Discrimination between groups was assessed by calculating the area under receiver operating curves (AUC).Results Strong associations with hand OA were observed for radiographic osteophytes (OR = 1.62, 95% CI 1.40 to 1.88) and joint space narrowing (JSN) (OR = 1.57, 95% CI 1.36 to 1.82) in the distal interphalangeal (DIP) joints with excellent discrimination (AUC = 0.82 for both). For osteophytes and JSN, we found acceptable discrimination between groups in the proximal interphalangeal joints (AUC = 0.77 and 0.78, respectively), but poorer discrimination in the first carpometacarpal joints (AUC = 0.67 and 0.63, respectively). Painful DIP joints were associated with hand OA, but were less able to discriminate between groups (AUC = 0.67). Age and family history of OA were positively associated with hand OA, whereas negative associations were found for pain, stiffness and soft tissue swelling in metacarpophalangeal joints, pain and marginal erosions in wrists, longer morning stiffness, inflammatory biomarkers and autoantibodies.Conclusions Differences in symptoms, clinical findings, radiographic changes and laboratory tests were found in patients with hand OA versus controls. Radiographic OA features, especially in DIP joints, were best suited to discriminate between groups. Show less
Kroon, F.P.B.; Damman, W.; Plas, J.L. van der; Beest, S. van; Rosendaal, F.R.; Heijde, D. van der; Kloppenburg, M. 2020
Objectives. To evaluate self-reported and assessor-reported joint counts for pain and their value in measuring pain and joint activity in hand OA patients.Methods. A total of 524 patients marked... Show moreObjectives. To evaluate self-reported and assessor-reported joint counts for pain and their value in measuring pain and joint activity in hand OA patients.Methods. A total of 524 patients marked painful joints on hand diagrams. Nurses assessed tenderness upon palpation. Pain was measured with a visual analogue scale pain and the Australian/Canadian hand OA index subscale pain. Synovitis and bone marrow lesions in right hand distal/proximal interphalangeal joints on MRI served as measure of joint activity. Agreement was assessed on the patient (intraclass correlation coefficient, Bland-Altman plot) and joint level (percentage absolute agreement). Correlations with measures of pain and joint activity were analysed, and joint level associations with synovitis/bone marrow lesions were calculated.Results. Self-reported painful joint count (median 8, interquartile range 4-13) was consistently higher than assessor-reported tender joint count (3, 1-7). Agreement between patients and nurses on overall scores was low. Percentage absolute agreement on the joint level was 61-89%. Joint counts correlated similarly but weakly with measures of pain and joint activity (r = 0.14-0.38). On the joint level, assessor-reported tenderness was more strongly associated with synovitis/bone marrow lesions than self-reported pain.Conclusion. In hand OA, self- and assessor-reported joint counts cannot be used interchangeably, and measure other pain aspects than questionnaires. Assessor-reported tenderness was most closely related to MRI-defined joint activity. Show less