Martin Thomas m.thomas@keele.ac.uk
Short-term recovery trajectories of acute flares in knee pain: a UK-Netherlands multi-centre prospective cohort analysis
Thomas, Martin; Yu, Dahai; Nicholls, Elaine; Bierma‐Zeinstra, Sita; Conaghan, Philip G; Stoner, Karen J; Neogi, Tuhina; Parry, Emma L; Peat, George
Authors
Dr. Dahai Yu d.yu@keele.ac.uk
Elaine Nicholls e.nicholls@keele.ac.uk
Sita Bierma‐Zeinstra
Philip G Conaghan
Karen J Stoner
Tuhina Neogi
Emma Parry e.parry@keele.ac.uk
George Peat
Abstract
Objective
To identify distinct recovery trajectories of acute flares of knee pain and associated participant characteristics.
Methods
Data were from FLARE RCT, a multicentre trial in 27 primary care centres in UK and Netherlands of three regimes of oral nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory therapy for acute flares of knee pain. Individuals with a history of inflammatory/crystal arthritis, fibromyalgia, and chronic pain syndrome were excluded. Latent class growth analysis was applied to measures of pain intensity repeated over five days to identify distinct recovery trajectories. The concurrent courses of interference with activity, stiffness, and swelling for each trajectory group were modelled using generalised estimating equations. Participant age, sex, obesity, and osteoarthritis diagnosis were described for each trajectory group.
Results
449 participants were included (median age 55 years, 41% female, 35% obese, 42% diagnosed osteoarthritis). A six-group cubic model was deemed optimal, with trajectories distinguished by rate of pain reduction and absolute level at final measurement. At the extremes, were rapid and near-complete resolution (n=41, 9%) and persistent, high pain (n=25, 6%), but most showed a reduction and plateau in pain severity within 3-5 days. Within each pain trajectory group, interference with activity, stiffness, and swelling followed the same course as pain. Baseline characteristics did not differ substantially between trajectory groups.
Conclusion
Even under a well-adhered to regime of oral nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medication, recovery following acute flares of knee pain is heterogeneous. Our observations that favourable trajectories are apparent within 3-5 days can help to inform treatment decision-making in the patient-healthcare professional consultation.
Citation
Thomas, M., Yu, D., Nicholls, E., Bierma‐Zeinstra, S., Conaghan, P. G., Stoner, K. J., …Peat, G. (2020). Short-term recovery trajectories of acute flares in knee pain: a UK-Netherlands multi-centre prospective cohort analysis. Arthritis Care and Research, 72(12), 1687-1692. https://doi.org/10.1002/acr.24088
Journal Article Type | Article |
---|---|
Acceptance Date | Oct 1, 2019 |
Online Publication Date | Oct 10, 2019 |
Publication Date | 2020-12 |
Journal | Arthritis Care & Research |
Print ISSN | 2151-464X |
Publisher | Wiley |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Volume | 72 |
Issue | 12 |
Pages | 1687-1692 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1002/acr.24088 |
Publisher URL | https://doi.org/10.1002/acr.24088 |
PMID | 31600034 |
Files
Thomas et al Manuscript R2 track changed.docx
(3.1 Mb)
Document
Publisher Licence URL
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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