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Subclinical deformities of the hip are significant predictors of radiographic osteoarthritis and joint replacement in women. A 20 year longitudinal cohort study

Subclinical deformities of the hip are significant predictors of radiographic osteoarthritis and joint replacement in women. A 20 year longitudinal cohort study
Subclinical deformities of the hip are significant predictors of radiographic osteoarthritis and joint replacement in women. A 20 year longitudinal cohort study
Objective
Femoroacetabular Impingement (FAI) and Acetabular Dysplasia are common deformities, which have been implicated as a major cause of hip osteoarthritis (OA). We examined whether these subtle deformities of the hip are associated with the development of radiographic OA and total hip replacement (THR) in women.

Design
A population-based, longitudinal cohort of 1003 women underwent pelvis radiographs at years 2 and 20. Alpha Angle, Triangular Index Height, Lateral Centre Edge (LCE) angle and Extrusion Index were measured. An alpha angle of greater than 65° was defined as Cam-type FAI. Radiographic OA and the presence of a THR were then determined at 20 years.

Results
Cam-type FAI was significantly associated with the development of radiographic OA. Each degree increase in alpha angle above 65° was associated with an increase in risk of 5% (Odds Ratio (OR) 1.05 [95% confidence interval (CI) 1.01–1.09]) for radiographic OA and 4% (OR 1.04 [95% CI 1.00–1.08]) for THR. For Acetabular Dysplasia, each degree reduction in LCE angle below 28° was associated with an increase in risk of 13.0% (OR 0.87 [95% CI 0.78–0.96]) for radiographic OA and 18% (OR 0.82 [95% CI 0.75–0.89]) for THR.

Conclusions
This study demonstrates that Cam-type FAI and mild Acetabular Dysplasia are predictive of subsequent OA and THR in a large female population cohort. These are independent of age, BMI and joint space and significantly improve current predictive models of hip OA development
osteoarthritis, epidemiology, hip osteoarthritis, femoroacetabular impingement, acetabular dysplasia
1063-4584
1504-1510
Thomas, G.E.
af927412-354d-4400-a6af-ca9743e8639f
Palmer, A.J.
1c97fe1c-021d-4003-a1f6-3c9278d85c7c
Batra, R.N.
1dcf5c66-3a03-4e58-8f59-c07b48044257
Kiran, A.
5c4f2210-4951-4226-a44b-e6ecfb9c5c71
Hart, D.
1c3946f4-9356-4b25-8da1-4f9bf753080e
Spector, T.
1fd13fc5-08aa-44c9-b920-c41e925e79d6
Javaid, M.K.
51d3310b-032e-4c15-83ac-b878bce090f3
Judge, A.
c6a83964-1d7c-4aa8-b2bf-9c264d1e487d
Murray, D.W.
f581b8f8-3f6d-46c4-8c90-0642ae6048b9
Carr, A.J.
8989b4b9-e986-4599-8595-f17ab2f0c960
Arden, N.K.
23af958d-835c-4d79-be54-4bbe4c68077f
Thomas, G.E.
af927412-354d-4400-a6af-ca9743e8639f
Palmer, A.J.
1c97fe1c-021d-4003-a1f6-3c9278d85c7c
Batra, R.N.
1dcf5c66-3a03-4e58-8f59-c07b48044257
Kiran, A.
5c4f2210-4951-4226-a44b-e6ecfb9c5c71
Hart, D.
1c3946f4-9356-4b25-8da1-4f9bf753080e
Spector, T.
1fd13fc5-08aa-44c9-b920-c41e925e79d6
Javaid, M.K.
51d3310b-032e-4c15-83ac-b878bce090f3
Judge, A.
c6a83964-1d7c-4aa8-b2bf-9c264d1e487d
Murray, D.W.
f581b8f8-3f6d-46c4-8c90-0642ae6048b9
Carr, A.J.
8989b4b9-e986-4599-8595-f17ab2f0c960
Arden, N.K.
23af958d-835c-4d79-be54-4bbe4c68077f

Thomas, G.E., Palmer, A.J., Batra, R.N., Kiran, A., Hart, D., Spector, T., Javaid, M.K., Judge, A., Murray, D.W., Carr, A.J. and Arden, N.K. (2014) Subclinical deformities of the hip are significant predictors of radiographic osteoarthritis and joint replacement in women. A 20 year longitudinal cohort study. Osteoarthritis and Cartilage, 22 (10), 1504-1510. (doi:10.1016/j.joca.2014.06.038). (PMID:25047637)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective
Femoroacetabular Impingement (FAI) and Acetabular Dysplasia are common deformities, which have been implicated as a major cause of hip osteoarthritis (OA). We examined whether these subtle deformities of the hip are associated with the development of radiographic OA and total hip replacement (THR) in women.

Design
A population-based, longitudinal cohort of 1003 women underwent pelvis radiographs at years 2 and 20. Alpha Angle, Triangular Index Height, Lateral Centre Edge (LCE) angle and Extrusion Index were measured. An alpha angle of greater than 65° was defined as Cam-type FAI. Radiographic OA and the presence of a THR were then determined at 20 years.

Results
Cam-type FAI was significantly associated with the development of radiographic OA. Each degree increase in alpha angle above 65° was associated with an increase in risk of 5% (Odds Ratio (OR) 1.05 [95% confidence interval (CI) 1.01–1.09]) for radiographic OA and 4% (OR 1.04 [95% CI 1.00–1.08]) for THR. For Acetabular Dysplasia, each degree reduction in LCE angle below 28° was associated with an increase in risk of 13.0% (OR 0.87 [95% CI 0.78–0.96]) for radiographic OA and 18% (OR 0.82 [95% CI 0.75–0.89]) for THR.

Conclusions
This study demonstrates that Cam-type FAI and mild Acetabular Dysplasia are predictive of subsequent OA and THR in a large female population cohort. These are independent of age, BMI and joint space and significantly improve current predictive models of hip OA development

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 28 June 2014
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 July 2014
Published date: October 2014
Keywords: osteoarthritis, epidemiology, hip osteoarthritis, femoroacetabular impingement, acetabular dysplasia
Organisations: Human Development & Health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 375418
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/375418
ISSN: 1063-4584
PURE UUID: ca13ed3e-3103-4f09-b243-c941390dc061

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Date deposited: 24 Mar 2015 13:43
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 19:25

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Contributors

Author: G.E. Thomas
Author: A.J. Palmer
Author: R.N. Batra
Author: A. Kiran
Author: D. Hart
Author: T. Spector
Author: M.K. Javaid
Author: A. Judge
Author: D.W. Murray
Author: A.J. Carr
Author: N.K. Arden

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