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Patterns of interphalangeal hand joint involvement of osteoarthritis among men and women: a British cohort study

Patterns of interphalangeal hand joint involvement of osteoarthritis among men and women: a British cohort study
Patterns of interphalangeal hand joint involvement of osteoarthritis among men and women: a British cohort study
Objective: To characterize the pattern of involvement of osteoarthritis (OA) of the hand among men and women of the same age.
Methods: Structured hand examinations were performed on 1,467 men and 1,519 women who were age 53 years and born in England, Scotland, or Wales during the first week of March 1946 (identified through the United Kingdom National Survey of Health and Development). OA at each joint site was characterized using a previously validated examination schedule. The interrelationship of involvement of different hand joints was analyzed by logistic regression and cluster analyses.
Results: There was clear evidence of polyarticular involvement in the hand joints of both the men and the women. Among the women, 161 subjects had 4 joints involved, compared with only 41 subjects expected in this category (P < 0.001). Among the men, 87 subjects were observed to have 4 joints involved, in contrast with only 7 subjects expected (P < 0.001). The pattern of hand joint involvement (characterized by clustering primarily by row and symmetric joint involvement, rather than clustering by ray) was found to be almost identical between the men and the women.
Conclusion: This study confirms the existence of a polyarticular subset of OA among men that has characteristics similar to those of the variant observed among women. The data suggest that the genetic or metabolic influences underlying this particular variant of OA acts similarly in both sexes.
0004-3591
3371-3376
Poole, Jason
88c69acd-8ff1-4d82-bd3d-8ea1720557e1
Aihie-Sayer, Avan
fb4c2053-6d51-4fc1-9489-c3cb431b0ffb
Hardy, Rebecca
99fecbaf-fc92-4354-aa02-cb904dd2bd32
Wadsworth, Michael
d8940d69-fadc-4f36-b0bb-edc5f6b1a6b3
Kuh, Diana
4f3b51aa-21a0-4d68-be14-e1ed75448aaf
Cooper, Cyrus
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Poole, Jason
88c69acd-8ff1-4d82-bd3d-8ea1720557e1
Aihie-Sayer, Avan
fb4c2053-6d51-4fc1-9489-c3cb431b0ffb
Hardy, Rebecca
99fecbaf-fc92-4354-aa02-cb904dd2bd32
Wadsworth, Michael
d8940d69-fadc-4f36-b0bb-edc5f6b1a6b3
Kuh, Diana
4f3b51aa-21a0-4d68-be14-e1ed75448aaf
Cooper, Cyrus
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6

Poole, Jason, Aihie-Sayer, Avan, Hardy, Rebecca, Wadsworth, Michael, Kuh, Diana and Cooper, Cyrus (2003) Patterns of interphalangeal hand joint involvement of osteoarthritis among men and women: a British cohort study. Arthritis and Rheumatism, 48 (12), 3371-3376. (doi:10.1002/art.11339).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: To characterize the pattern of involvement of osteoarthritis (OA) of the hand among men and women of the same age.
Methods: Structured hand examinations were performed on 1,467 men and 1,519 women who were age 53 years and born in England, Scotland, or Wales during the first week of March 1946 (identified through the United Kingdom National Survey of Health and Development). OA at each joint site was characterized using a previously validated examination schedule. The interrelationship of involvement of different hand joints was analyzed by logistic regression and cluster analyses.
Results: There was clear evidence of polyarticular involvement in the hand joints of both the men and the women. Among the women, 161 subjects had 4 joints involved, compared with only 41 subjects expected in this category (P < 0.001). Among the men, 87 subjects were observed to have 4 joints involved, in contrast with only 7 subjects expected (P < 0.001). The pattern of hand joint involvement (characterized by clustering primarily by row and symmetric joint involvement, rather than clustering by ray) was found to be almost identical between the men and the women.
Conclusion: This study confirms the existence of a polyarticular subset of OA among men that has characteristics similar to those of the variant observed among women. The data suggest that the genetic or metabolic influences underlying this particular variant of OA acts similarly in both sexes.

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More information

Published date: 2003
Organisations: Dev Origins of Health & Disease

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 25911
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/25911
ISSN: 0004-3591
PURE UUID: 3deed229-97cc-4cf8-bdfb-4ff6c23eb55e
ORCID for Cyrus Cooper: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3510-0709

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Date deposited: 20 Apr 2006
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:44

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Contributors

Author: Jason Poole
Author: Avan Aihie-Sayer
Author: Rebecca Hardy
Author: Michael Wadsworth
Author: Diana Kuh
Author: Cyrus Cooper ORCID iD

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