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Are there three main subgroups within the patellofemoral pain population? A detailed characterisation study of 127 patients to help develop targeted Intervention (TIPPs)

Are there three main subgroups within the patellofemoral pain population? A detailed characterisation study of 127 patients to help develop targeted Intervention (TIPPs)
Are there three main subgroups within the patellofemoral pain population? A detailed characterisation study of 127 patients to help develop targeted Intervention (TIPPs)
Background

Current multimodal approaches for the management of non-specific patellofemoral pain are not optimal, however, targeted intervention for subgroups could improve patient outcomes. This study explores whether subgrouping of non-specific patellofemoral pain patients, using a series of low cost simple clinical tests, is possible.

Method

The exclusivity and clinical importance of potential subgroups was assessed by applying à priori test thresholds (1 SD) from seven clinical tests in a sample of adult patients with non-specific patellofemoral pain. Hierarchical clustering and latent profile analysis, were used to gain additional insights into subgroups using data from the same clinical tests.

Results

One hundred and thirty participants were recruited, 127 had complete data: 84 (66%) female, mean age 26 years (SD 5.7) and mean BMI 25.4 (SD 5.83), median (IQR) time between onset of pain and assessment was 24 (7-60) months. Potential subgroups defined by the à priori test thresholds were not mutually exclusive and patients frequently fell into multiple subgroups. Using hierarchical clustering and latent profile analysis three subgroups were identified using 6 of the 7 clinical tests. These subgroups were given the following nomenclature: (i) ‘strong’, (ii) ‘weak and tighter’, and (iii) ‘weak and pronated foot’.

Conclusions

We conclude that three subgroups of patellofemoral patients may exist based on the results of six clinical tests which are feasible to perform in routine clinical practice. Further research is needed to validate these findings in other datasets and, if supported by external validation, to see if targeted interventions for these subgroups improve patient outcomes.
patellofemoral pain (PFP), subgroups, clinical assessment tests, patient related characteristics, classification
0306-3674
873-880
Janssen, Jessie
5709aec0-cb57-488e-9059-8947d3d3f64e
Callaghan, Michael
c2661a5f-593e-45c1-b1c1-266facbd37e9
Witvrouw, Erik
155cdf4b-9c30-4dad-8342-feb3459b2414
Sutton, Chris
3890014a-49ea-4c8c-906c-38d68f5e176b
Richards, Jim
8b98f601-a46d-41b2-bc8a-844a623bfc55
Stokes, Maria
71730503-70ce-4e67-b7ea-a3e54579717f
Denis, Denis
c960a56b-1142-43f7-9fb4-29e200847205
Dixon, John
afeed4fb-f973-472e-b88a-d480d5c2a35a
Hogarth, Russell
bae092d7-3a3b-494a-b2bb-56c92e9819c6
Baltzopoulos, Vasilios
ee145dbd-6675-46a1-a314-21858c05edc3
Ritchie, Elizabeth
e4cd4fee-76c2-48d3-bda4-46e3a463fe4a
Arden, Nigel
251ccf48-60a1-4b27-a079-e6ae0fbdb129
Dey, Paola
571b9c1c-930b-4e82-ad89-33b38251642b
Janssen, Jessie
5709aec0-cb57-488e-9059-8947d3d3f64e
Callaghan, Michael
c2661a5f-593e-45c1-b1c1-266facbd37e9
Witvrouw, Erik
155cdf4b-9c30-4dad-8342-feb3459b2414
Sutton, Chris
3890014a-49ea-4c8c-906c-38d68f5e176b
Richards, Jim
8b98f601-a46d-41b2-bc8a-844a623bfc55
Stokes, Maria
71730503-70ce-4e67-b7ea-a3e54579717f
Denis, Denis
c960a56b-1142-43f7-9fb4-29e200847205
Dixon, John
afeed4fb-f973-472e-b88a-d480d5c2a35a
Hogarth, Russell
bae092d7-3a3b-494a-b2bb-56c92e9819c6
Baltzopoulos, Vasilios
ee145dbd-6675-46a1-a314-21858c05edc3
Ritchie, Elizabeth
e4cd4fee-76c2-48d3-bda4-46e3a463fe4a
Arden, Nigel
251ccf48-60a1-4b27-a079-e6ae0fbdb129
Dey, Paola
571b9c1c-930b-4e82-ad89-33b38251642b

Janssen, Jessie, Callaghan, Michael, Witvrouw, Erik, Sutton, Chris, Richards, Jim, Stokes, Maria, Denis, Denis, Dixon, John, Hogarth, Russell, Baltzopoulos, Vasilios, Ritchie, Elizabeth, Arden, Nigel and Dey, Paola (2016) Are there three main subgroups within the patellofemoral pain population? A detailed characterisation study of 127 patients to help develop targeted Intervention (TIPPs). British Journal of Sports Medicine, 50, 873-880. (doi:10.1136/bjsports-2015-094792). (PMID:26834185)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background

Current multimodal approaches for the management of non-specific patellofemoral pain are not optimal, however, targeted intervention for subgroups could improve patient outcomes. This study explores whether subgrouping of non-specific patellofemoral pain patients, using a series of low cost simple clinical tests, is possible.

Method

The exclusivity and clinical importance of potential subgroups was assessed by applying à priori test thresholds (1 SD) from seven clinical tests in a sample of adult patients with non-specific patellofemoral pain. Hierarchical clustering and latent profile analysis, were used to gain additional insights into subgroups using data from the same clinical tests.

Results

One hundred and thirty participants were recruited, 127 had complete data: 84 (66%) female, mean age 26 years (SD 5.7) and mean BMI 25.4 (SD 5.83), median (IQR) time between onset of pain and assessment was 24 (7-60) months. Potential subgroups defined by the à priori test thresholds were not mutually exclusive and patients frequently fell into multiple subgroups. Using hierarchical clustering and latent profile analysis three subgroups were identified using 6 of the 7 clinical tests. These subgroups were given the following nomenclature: (i) ‘strong’, (ii) ‘weak and tighter’, and (iii) ‘weak and pronated foot’.

Conclusions

We conclude that three subgroups of patellofemoral patients may exist based on the results of six clinical tests which are feasible to perform in routine clinical practice. Further research is needed to validate these findings in other datasets and, if supported by external validation, to see if targeted interventions for these subgroups improve patient outcomes.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 16 November 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 February 2016
Published date: 30 June 2016
Keywords: patellofemoral pain (PFP), subgroups, clinical assessment tests, patient related characteristics, classification
Organisations: Physical & Rehabilitation Health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 384355
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/384355
ISSN: 0306-3674
PURE UUID: cd106b1c-2f04-4095-adee-2309983a5ba9
ORCID for Maria Stokes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4204-0890

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 24 Nov 2015 15:12
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:14

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Contributors

Author: Jessie Janssen
Author: Michael Callaghan
Author: Erik Witvrouw
Author: Chris Sutton
Author: Jim Richards
Author: Maria Stokes ORCID iD
Author: Denis Denis
Author: John Dixon
Author: Russell Hogarth
Author: Vasilios Baltzopoulos
Author: Elizabeth Ritchie
Author: Nigel Arden
Author: Paola Dey

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