Incidence and progression of foot osteoarthritis in a longitudinal cohort: the Johnston County Osteoarthritis Project
Incidence and progression of foot osteoarthritis in a longitudinal cohort: the Johnston County Osteoarthritis Project
Introduction: To examine the incidence and progression of foot osteoarthritis (OA), as well as associated factors, in a community-based cohort.
Methods: Baseline (2013-2015) and follow-up (2016-2018) foot radiographs were available for 541 participants (71% women, mean age 69 years; 35% Black, 53% with obesity). The LaTrobe Foot Atlas was used to examine osteophytes (OP, score 0-3) and joint space narrowing (JSN, score 0-3) at 5 joint sites. Incident foot radiographic OA (rOA) was a baseline score <2 OP and JSN in all 5 joints with ≥2 OP or JSN at follow-up in any of the joints. Progression was a worsening OP or JSN score in a joint with baseline foot rOA. At baseline and follow-up, participants reported presence/absence of foot symptoms and completed the Foot and Ankle Outcome Score (FAOS) for each foot. Joint-based logistic regression models with generalized estimating equations were used to examine associations (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 95% confidence interval [CI]) of foot rOA incidence and progression and with covariates.
Results: Among 928 feet without baseline rOA, 4% developed incident foot rOA (2% of those developed symptoms). Among 154 feet with baseline foot rOA, 55% had radiographic progression (16% of those had symptoms). Women and those with higher body mass index (BMI) were more likely to have incident foot rOA (aOR [95% CI] = 4.10 [1.22, 13.8] and 1.60 [1.31, 1.97], respectively); history of gout was associated with incidence or progression of foot rOA (2.75 [1.24, 6.07]. BMI was associated with worse scores on all FAOS subscale (aORs range 1.21-1.40).
Conclusion: Progression of foot rOA is common but not necessarily related to worsening symptoms. BMI may be a modifiable risk factor for foot OA.
foot, osteoarthritis, pain, cohort, epidemiology
1013-1022
Eltaraboulsi, Rami
fe91ee4a-7f49-4941-98e4-bf28f440c6fd
Nelson, Amanda E.
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Alvarez, Carolina
60adfac5-f00d-4e99-8555-65927643e4c6
Renner, Jordan R.
340a4587-03dd-44cb-af3f-c2bc45907578
Bowen, Catherine
fd85c3c5-96d9-49b8-86c6-caa94e1a222b
Gates, Lucy S.
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Golightly, Yvonne M.
166be13c-31ad-427b-8447-1339a33909fd
22 June 2024
Eltaraboulsi, Rami
fe91ee4a-7f49-4941-98e4-bf28f440c6fd
Nelson, Amanda E.
c4c6d521-bffa-465b-bba3-3a2b89dd80f7
Alvarez, Carolina
60adfac5-f00d-4e99-8555-65927643e4c6
Renner, Jordan R.
340a4587-03dd-44cb-af3f-c2bc45907578
Bowen, Catherine
fd85c3c5-96d9-49b8-86c6-caa94e1a222b
Gates, Lucy S.
0cbba3d2-be6b-431a-a4bb-833da8322f16
Golightly, Yvonne M.
166be13c-31ad-427b-8447-1339a33909fd
Eltaraboulsi, Rami, Nelson, Amanda E., Alvarez, Carolina, Renner, Jordan R., Bowen, Catherine, Gates, Lucy S. and Golightly, Yvonne M.
(2024)
Incidence and progression of foot osteoarthritis in a longitudinal cohort: the Johnston County Osteoarthritis Project.
Gerontology, 70 (10), , [38934139].
(doi:10.1159/000539908).
Abstract
Introduction: To examine the incidence and progression of foot osteoarthritis (OA), as well as associated factors, in a community-based cohort.
Methods: Baseline (2013-2015) and follow-up (2016-2018) foot radiographs were available for 541 participants (71% women, mean age 69 years; 35% Black, 53% with obesity). The LaTrobe Foot Atlas was used to examine osteophytes (OP, score 0-3) and joint space narrowing (JSN, score 0-3) at 5 joint sites. Incident foot radiographic OA (rOA) was a baseline score <2 OP and JSN in all 5 joints with ≥2 OP or JSN at follow-up in any of the joints. Progression was a worsening OP or JSN score in a joint with baseline foot rOA. At baseline and follow-up, participants reported presence/absence of foot symptoms and completed the Foot and Ankle Outcome Score (FAOS) for each foot. Joint-based logistic regression models with generalized estimating equations were used to examine associations (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 95% confidence interval [CI]) of foot rOA incidence and progression and with covariates.
Results: Among 928 feet without baseline rOA, 4% developed incident foot rOA (2% of those developed symptoms). Among 154 feet with baseline foot rOA, 55% had radiographic progression (16% of those had symptoms). Women and those with higher body mass index (BMI) were more likely to have incident foot rOA (aOR [95% CI] = 4.10 [1.22, 13.8] and 1.60 [1.31, 1.97], respectively); history of gout was associated with incidence or progression of foot rOA (2.75 [1.24, 6.07]. BMI was associated with worse scores on all FAOS subscale (aORs range 1.21-1.40).
Conclusion: Progression of foot rOA is common but not necessarily related to worsening symptoms. BMI may be a modifiable risk factor for foot OA.
Text
Incidence_Progression_Foot_OA-_Manuscript_R2
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 14 June 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 June 2024
Published date: 22 June 2024
Keywords:
foot, osteoarthritis, pain, cohort, epidemiology
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 495269
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495269
ISSN: 0304-324X
PURE UUID: 40e4deea-f3fc-47c9-8bcb-5be0e04ecd92
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Date deposited: 05 Nov 2024 17:44
Last modified: 07 Nov 2024 02:37
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Contributors
Author:
Rami Eltaraboulsi
Author:
Amanda E. Nelson
Author:
Carolina Alvarez
Author:
Jordan R. Renner
Author:
Lucy S. Gates
Author:
Yvonne M. Golightly
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