One year effectiveness of neuromuscular exercise compared with instruction in analgesic use on knee function in patients with early knee osteoarthritis: the EXERPHARMA randomized trial

A Holsgaard-Larsen, R Christensen, B Clausen, J Søndergaard, T P Andriacchi, E M Roos, A Holsgaard-Larsen, R Christensen, B Clausen, J Søndergaard, T P Andriacchi, E M Roos

Abstract

Objective: To test long-term effectiveness of neuromuscular exercise (NEMEX) with instructions in optimized pharmacological treatment (PHARMA) on activities of daily living (ADL) in patients with early knee osteoarthritis.

Design: 12-months follow-up from a randomized controlled trial. Participants with mild-to-moderate medial tibiofemoral knee osteoarthritis were randomly allocated to 8 weeks NEMEX or PHARMA. The primary outcome measure was the ADL-subscale of the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS). Secondary outcome measures included the other four KOOS-subscales, the University of California Activity Score (UCLA) and the European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions.

Results: Ninety-three patients (57% women, 58 ± 8 years, body mass index 27 ± 4 kg/m2) were randomized to NEMEX (n = 47) or PHARMA group (n = 46) with data from 85% being available at 12-months follow-up. Good compliance was achieved for 49% of the participants in NEMEX (≥12 sessions) and 7% in PHARMA (half the daily dose of acetaminophen/NSAIDs ≥ 28 days). Within-group improvements in NEMEX were considered to be clinically relevant (≥10 points) for all KOOS-subscales, except Sport/Rec whereas, no between-groups difference in the primary outcome KOOS ADL (3.6 [-2.1 to 9.2]; P = 0.216) was observed. For KOOS Symptoms, a statistically significant difference of 7.6 points (2.6-12.7; P = 0.004) was observed in favor of NEMEX with 47% improving ≥10 points.

Conclusions: No difference in improvement in difficulty with ADL was observed. NEMEX improved knee symptoms to a greater extent with half of patients reporting clinically relevant improvements. CLINICALTRIALS.

Gov identifier: NCT01638962 (July 3, 2012).

Ethical committee: S-20110153.

Keywords: Exercise; Knee; Knee joint; Osteoarthritis; Pain management.

Copyright © 2017 Osteoarthritis Research Society International. All rights reserved.

Source: PubMed

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