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Inadequate pain relief and large functional loss among patients with knee osteoarthritis: evidence from a prospective multinational study of osteoarthritis real-world therapies

Inadequate pain relief and large functional loss among patients with knee osteoarthritis: evidence from a prospective multinational study of osteoarthritis real-world therapies
Inadequate pain relief and large functional loss among patients with knee osteoarthritis: evidence from a prospective multinational study of osteoarthritis real-world therapies
Objective. To estimate the prevalence of inadequate pain relief (IPR) among patients with symptomatic knee OA prescribed analgesic therapy and to characterize patients with IPR.

Methods. Patients ?50 years old with physician-diagnosed knee OA who had taken topical or oral pain medication for at least 14 days were recruited for this prospective non-interventional study in six European countries. Pain and function were assessed using the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) and the WOMAC; quality of life (QoL) was assessed using the 12-item short form. IPR was defined as an average pain score of >4 out of 10 on BPI question 5.

Results. Of 1187 patients enrolled, 68% were female and the mean age was 68 years (s.d. 9); 639 (54%) met the definition of IPR. Patient responses for the BPI average pain question were well correlated with responses on the WOMAC pain subscale (Spearman r = 0.64, P < 0.001). In multivariate logistic regression, patients with IPR had greater odds of being female [adjusted odds ratio (adjOR) 1.90 (95% CI 1.46, 2.48)] and having OA in both knees [adjOR 1.48 (95% CI 1.15, 1.90)], higher BMI, longer OA duration, depression or diabetes. Patients with IPR (vs non-IPR) were more likely to have worse QoL, greater function loss and greater pain interference.

Conclusion. IPR is common among patients with knee OA requiring analgesics and is associated with large functional loss and impaired QoL. Patients at particular risk of IPR, as characterized in this study, may require greater attention towards their analgesic treatment options.
analgesic therapy, inadequate pain relief, knee, osteoarthritis
270-277
Conaghan, P.G.
fcfa7b96-7335-4cab-a643-faa6e400b47d
Peloso, P.M.
ecf841d6-bac1-414f-a999-f3d0ce8151a8
Everett, S.V.
7d8a68d2-6ef6-4710-9268-f6733a2e3b0b
Rajagopalan, S.
20ff7e70-6de9-47a3-b7b3-75d3f799820d
Black, C.M.
45a0eb15-5746-40e1-a5f3-a1b1109f547b
Mavros, P.
953dd895-9001-4318-978e-08320687f764
Arden, N.K.
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Phillips, C.J.
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Rannou, F.
ddca60fd-e7fe-4f90-89d4-dae0639dcec4
van der Laar, M.A.
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Moore, R.A.
bc674d77-ecb3-46f3-96bb-de2e3103e03f
Taylor, S.D.
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Conaghan, P.G.
fcfa7b96-7335-4cab-a643-faa6e400b47d
Peloso, P.M.
ecf841d6-bac1-414f-a999-f3d0ce8151a8
Everett, S.V.
7d8a68d2-6ef6-4710-9268-f6733a2e3b0b
Rajagopalan, S.
20ff7e70-6de9-47a3-b7b3-75d3f799820d
Black, C.M.
45a0eb15-5746-40e1-a5f3-a1b1109f547b
Mavros, P.
953dd895-9001-4318-978e-08320687f764
Arden, N.K.
23af958d-835c-4d79-be54-4bbe4c68077f
Phillips, C.J.
4cdbd207-cef9-46ea-934e-4f33746afb85
Rannou, F.
ddca60fd-e7fe-4f90-89d4-dae0639dcec4
van der Laar, M.A.
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Moore, R.A.
bc674d77-ecb3-46f3-96bb-de2e3103e03f
Taylor, S.D.
5bf248c6-7fcd-44d4-b04b-9c5fa45b0a2f

Conaghan, P.G., Peloso, P.M., Everett, S.V., Rajagopalan, S., Black, C.M., Mavros, P., Arden, N.K., Phillips, C.J., Rannou, F., van der Laar, M.A., Moore, R.A. and Taylor, S.D. (2015) Inadequate pain relief and large functional loss among patients with knee osteoarthritis: evidence from a prospective multinational study of osteoarthritis real-world therapies. Rheumatology, 54 (2), 270-277. (doi:10.1093/rheumatology/keu332). (PMID:25150513)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective. To estimate the prevalence of inadequate pain relief (IPR) among patients with symptomatic knee OA prescribed analgesic therapy and to characterize patients with IPR.

Methods. Patients ?50 years old with physician-diagnosed knee OA who had taken topical or oral pain medication for at least 14 days were recruited for this prospective non-interventional study in six European countries. Pain and function were assessed using the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) and the WOMAC; quality of life (QoL) was assessed using the 12-item short form. IPR was defined as an average pain score of >4 out of 10 on BPI question 5.

Results. Of 1187 patients enrolled, 68% were female and the mean age was 68 years (s.d. 9); 639 (54%) met the definition of IPR. Patient responses for the BPI average pain question were well correlated with responses on the WOMAC pain subscale (Spearman r = 0.64, P < 0.001). In multivariate logistic regression, patients with IPR had greater odds of being female [adjusted odds ratio (adjOR) 1.90 (95% CI 1.46, 2.48)] and having OA in both knees [adjOR 1.48 (95% CI 1.15, 1.90)], higher BMI, longer OA duration, depression or diabetes. Patients with IPR (vs non-IPR) were more likely to have worse QoL, greater function loss and greater pain interference.

Conclusion. IPR is common among patients with knee OA requiring analgesics and is associated with large functional loss and impaired QoL. Patients at particular risk of IPR, as characterized in this study, may require greater attention towards their analgesic treatment options.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 25 June 2014
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 August 2014
Published date: February 2015
Keywords: analgesic therapy, inadequate pain relief, knee, osteoarthritis
Organisations: Human Development & Health

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Local EPrints ID: 374666
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/374666
PURE UUID: e43d84eb-226a-40b3-b687-849bb01ee4e9

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Date deposited: 25 Feb 2015 14:36
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 19:10

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Contributors

Author: P.G. Conaghan
Author: P.M. Peloso
Author: S.V. Everett
Author: S. Rajagopalan
Author: C.M. Black
Author: P. Mavros
Author: N.K. Arden
Author: C.J. Phillips
Author: F. Rannou
Author: M.A. van der Laar
Author: R.A. Moore
Author: S.D. Taylor

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