Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Acute Flares of Knee Osteoarthritis (the ACT-FLARE Study): Protocol for a Web-Based Case-Crossover Study in Community-Dwelling Adults

Thomas, Martin J.; Rathod-Mistry, Trishna; Harper, Stephen; Parry, Emma L.; Pope, Christopher; Neogi, Tuhina; Peat, George

Authors

Trishna Rathod-Mistry

Stephen Harper

Christopher Pope

Tuhina Neogi

George Peat



Abstract

Background:
The cardinal feature of osteoarthritis (OA) is pain. Although heterogeneity in pain and function have been demonstrated in the long-term course of OA, the more proximate determinants of acute flare-ups remain less clear. How short-term intermittent or transient exposures trigger acute flare-ups has important implications for effective and sustainable self-management strategies.

Objective:
The primary objective of this study is to identify potential triggers of acute flares in knee OA. Secondary objectives are to determine their course and consequences and describe high-risk participant profiles.

Methods:
We carried out a Web-based case-crossover study. This study aims to recruit 620 community-dwelling adults aged ≥40 years, resident in England, and who have knee pain, with or without a recorded diagnosis of knee OA, and no preexisting diagnosis of inflammatory arthropathy. Participants will be recruited via 3 routes: (1) general practice registers, (2) offline community advertisement, and (3) online social media advertisement. By using questionnaires comparing periods before participants’ self-reported flare-up episodes (hazard periods) with periods during the study when their knee OA symptoms are stable (control periods), triggers preceding flare-ups will be identified and examined using conditional logistic regression. Time-to-resolution of flare-up will be examined by monitoring people’s daily pain, bothersomeness, and medication usage until the participant reports when their flare-up episode ends. Rates of flare-ups will be examined across different participant and flare characteristics using regression models to identify high-risk participant profiles. A study-specific Patient Advisory Group (PAG) is providing suggestion, input, and ongoing support for all stages of the research process.

Results:
Participant recruitment opened in July 2018 and is anticipated to continue for 6 months. The study results will be disseminated through a number of channels, including relevant national or international conferences and peer-reviewed publication in a medical journal, via advocacy or charity organizations, such as Versus Arthritis and across social media. Findings will be fed back to members of our PAG, study participants, and clinicians from participating primary care general practices. The PAG will also take an active role in the overall dissemination strategy.

Conclusions:
This study will provide empirical evidence to help patients identify common knee OA flare triggers and provide health care professionals with questions to identify patients at most risk of frequent flare-ups.

Citation

Thomas, M. J., Rathod-Mistry, T., Harper, S., Parry, E. L., Pope, C., Neogi, T., & Peat, G. (2019). Acute Flares of Knee Osteoarthritis (the ACT-FLARE Study): Protocol for a Web-Based Case-Crossover Study in Community-Dwelling Adults. JMIR Research Protocols, 8(4), Article e13428. https://doi.org/10.2196/13428

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Apr 22, 2019
Deposit Date Aug 15, 2023
Journal JMIR RESEARCH PROTOCOLS
Print ISSN 1929-0748
Publisher JMIR Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 8
Issue 4
Article Number e13428
DOI https://doi.org/10.2196/13428
Publisher URL https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6658279/