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Injury and local injection and the risk of foot/ankle osteoarthritis: a case-control study in retired UK male professional footballers

Injury and local injection and the risk of foot/ankle osteoarthritis: a case-control study in retired UK male professional footballers
Injury and local injection and the risk of foot/ankle osteoarthritis: a case-control study in retired UK male professional footballers
Objectives: to examine whether foot/ankle injury and injection contribute to the risk of foot/ankle OA in retired UK male professional footballers.

Methods: this was a case-control study within retired UK male footballers, where cases reported General Practitioner diagnosed foot/ankle OA or forefoot/ankle surgery after retirement, and controls reported neither. Injury was defined as significant foot/ankle injury with pain for most days over three months during their career. Injection was defined as injection of corticosteroid or other agents into foot/ankle joints during their career. Adjusted odds ratio (aOR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated using logistic regression. Area Under the Curve (AUC) and 95% CI were estimated to examine the contribution of injury and/or injection in the context of other available risk factors.

Results: of 424 footballers studied, 63 had foot/ankle OA and 361 had neither. Cases had similar mean age (63.2 versus 63.0, p=0.457) and body mass index (27.7 versus 27.0, p=0.240) as controls, but more foot/ankle injury (73.3% versus 42.5%, p<0.001) and injections (75.0% versus 48.4%, p<0.001), with aORs of 4.23 (95% CI 1.88-9.48) and 2.62 (95% CI 1.19-5.78), respectively. AUC was 0.69 (95% CI 0.62-0.77) for injury, 0.74 (95% CI 0.66-0.81) for injury and injection, and 0.78 (95% CI 0.70-0.85) for all risk factors. Similar results were observed in footballers with ankle OA only.

Conclusion: injury was a major risk factor for foot/ankle OA in retired UK male professional footballers. The role of injection needs cautious interpretation due to potential confounding by indication.
1462-0324
Thanoon, Ahmed Ali
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Espahbodi, Shima
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Shuaib, Monirah Ali
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Millar, Bonnie
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Bowen, Catherine J.
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Duncan, Ashely
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O’Neill, Terence W.
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Wakefield, Richard
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Watt, Fiona E.
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Walsh, David A.
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Fuller, Gordon
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Batt, Mark E.
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Parekh, Sanjay M.
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Fernandes, Gwen Sascha
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Doherty, Michael
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Zhang, Weiya
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Thanoon, Ahmed Ali
9ce45983-fb36-4463-b8b4-5473fd524a56
Espahbodi, Shima
6565f446-2a9e-4ac6-9966-9f59db917526
Shuaib, Monirah Ali
9c83cf37-0537-4834-b85e-3838d3451dd9
Millar, Bonnie
58ba0f2e-e232-48a8-aced-8d851a494d7a
Bowen, Catherine J.
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Duncan, Ashely
87e0cfd2-eae7-4802-9eec-491bdc56c7af
O’Neill, Terence W.
a2cbe119-4023-4861-a320-e7631fb56576
Wakefield, Richard
a61310c2-9ae7-4b4b-93f5-af75584f4bc9
Watt, Fiona E.
6b02d743-fc3b-41db-a021-bc6cc9d18ac3
Walsh, David A.
07054453-7e78-4df8-a7a9-1b4a952b4d3e
Fuller, Gordon
13d2435a-a749-42c2-9aae-e7437b175a0d
Batt, Mark E.
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Parekh, Sanjay M.
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Fernandes, Gwen Sascha
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Doherty, Michael
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Zhang, Weiya
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Thanoon, Ahmed Ali, Espahbodi, Shima, Shuaib, Monirah Ali, Millar, Bonnie, Bowen, Catherine J., Duncan, Ashely, O’Neill, Terence W., Wakefield, Richard, Watt, Fiona E., Walsh, David A., Fuller, Gordon, Batt, Mark E., Parekh, Sanjay M., Fernandes, Gwen Sascha, Doherty, Michael and Zhang, Weiya (2025) Injury and local injection and the risk of foot/ankle osteoarthritis: a case-control study in retired UK male professional footballers. Rheumatology (United Kingdom), [keaf518]. (doi:10.1093/rheumatology/keaf518).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: to examine whether foot/ankle injury and injection contribute to the risk of foot/ankle OA in retired UK male professional footballers.

Methods: this was a case-control study within retired UK male footballers, where cases reported General Practitioner diagnosed foot/ankle OA or forefoot/ankle surgery after retirement, and controls reported neither. Injury was defined as significant foot/ankle injury with pain for most days over three months during their career. Injection was defined as injection of corticosteroid or other agents into foot/ankle joints during their career. Adjusted odds ratio (aOR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated using logistic regression. Area Under the Curve (AUC) and 95% CI were estimated to examine the contribution of injury and/or injection in the context of other available risk factors.

Results: of 424 footballers studied, 63 had foot/ankle OA and 361 had neither. Cases had similar mean age (63.2 versus 63.0, p=0.457) and body mass index (27.7 versus 27.0, p=0.240) as controls, but more foot/ankle injury (73.3% versus 42.5%, p<0.001) and injections (75.0% versus 48.4%, p<0.001), with aORs of 4.23 (95% CI 1.88-9.48) and 2.62 (95% CI 1.19-5.78), respectively. AUC was 0.69 (95% CI 0.62-0.77) for injury, 0.74 (95% CI 0.66-0.81) for injury and injection, and 0.78 (95% CI 0.70-0.85) for all risk factors. Similar results were observed in footballers with ankle OA only.

Conclusion: injury was a major risk factor for foot/ankle OA in retired UK male professional footballers. The role of injection needs cautious interpretation due to potential confounding by indication.

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Accepted/In Press date: 2 September 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 October 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 506948
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506948
ISSN: 1462-0324
PURE UUID: dbadac7c-87c7-4ca9-81ea-bfdbde882f22
ORCID for Catherine J. Bowen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7252-9515

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Date deposited: 21 Nov 2025 18:13
Last modified: 22 Nov 2025 02:37

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Contributors

Author: Ahmed Ali Thanoon
Author: Shima Espahbodi
Author: Monirah Ali Shuaib
Author: Bonnie Millar
Author: Ashely Duncan
Author: Terence W. O’Neill
Author: Richard Wakefield
Author: Fiona E. Watt
Author: David A. Walsh
Author: Gordon Fuller
Author: Mark E. Batt
Author: Sanjay M. Parekh
Author: Gwen Sascha Fernandes
Author: Michael Doherty
Author: Weiya Zhang

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