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Observational Study
Pain trajectory defines knee osteoarthritis subgroups: a prospective observational study.
- Maja R Radojčić, Nigel K Arden, Xiaotian Yang, Victoria Y Strauss, Fraser Birrell, Cyrus Cooper, Stefan Kluzek, and VIDEO Trial Investigators.
- Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
- Pain. 2020 Dec 1; 161 (12): 284128512841-2851.
AbstractKnee osteoarthritis (OA) is a heterogeneous disease, and identification of its subgroups/phenotypes can improve patient treatment and drug development. We aimed to identify homogeneous OA subgroups/phenotypes using pain development over time; to understand the interplay between pain and functional limitation in time course; and to investigate subgroups' responses to available pharmacological and surgical treatments. We used group-based trajectory modelling to identify pain trajectories in the phase-3 VIDEO trial (n = 474, 3-year follow-up) and also in the Osteoarthritis Initiative cohort study (n = 4796, 9-year follow-up). We extended trajectory models by (1) fitting dual trajectories to investigate the interplay between pain and functional limitation over time, and (2) including analgesic use as a time-varying covariate. Also, we investigated the relationship between trajectory groups and knee replacement in regression models. We identified 4 pain trajectory groups in the trial and 6 in the cohort. These overlapped and led us to define 4 OA phenotypes: low-fluctuating, mild-increasing, moderate-treatment-sensitive, and severe-treatment-insensitive pain. Over time, functional knee limitation followed the same trajectory as pain with almost complete concordance (94.3%) between pain and functional limitation trajectory groups. Notably, we identified a phenotype with severe pain that did not benefit from available treatments, and another one most likely to benefit from knee replacement. Thus, knee OA subgroups/phenotypes can be identified based on patients' pain experiences in studies with long and regular follow-up. We provided a robust approach, reproducible between different study designs, which informs clinicians about symptom development and delivery of treatment options and opens a new avenue toward personalized medicine in OA.
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