Baseline articular contact stress levels predict incident symptomatic knee osteoarthritis development in the MOST cohort

Neil A. Segal, Donald D. Anderson, Krishna S. Iyer, Jennifer Baker, James C. Torner, John A. Lynch, David T. Felson, Cora E. Lewis, Thomas D. Brown

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    We studied whether contact stress estimates from knee magnetic resonance images (MRI) predict the development of incident symptomatic tibiofemoral osteoarthritis (OA) 15 months later in an at-risk cohort. This nested case-control study was conducted within a cohort of 3,026 adults, age 50 to79 years. Thirty cases with incident symptomatic tibiofemoral OA by their 15 month follow-up visit were randomly selected and matched with 30 control subjects. Symptomatic tibiofemoral OA was defined as daily knee pain/stiffness and Kellgren-Lawrence Grade ≥2 on weight bearing, fixed-flexion radiographs. Tibiofemoral geometry was segmented on baseline knee MRI, and contact stresses were estimated using discrete element analysis. Linear mixed models for repeated measures were used to examine the association between articular contact stress and case/control status. No significant intergroup differences were found for age, sex, BMI, weight, height, or limb alignment. However, the maximumarticular contact stress was 0.54 ± 0.77 MPa (mean ± SD) higher in incident OA cases compared to that in control knees (p = 0.0007). The interaction between case-control status and contact stress was significant above 3.20 MPa (p <0.0001). The presence of differences in estimated contact stress 15 months prior to incidence suggests a biomechanical mechanism for symptomatic tibiofemoral OA and supports the ability to identify risk by subject-specific biomechanical modeling. © 2009 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1562-1568
    Number of pages6
    JournalJournal of Orthopaedic Research
    Volume27
    Issue number12
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Dec 2009

    Keywords

    • Biomechanics
    • Epidemiology
    • Knee
    • Osteoarthritis
    • Risk

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