Predictive factors for new onset or progression of knee osteoarthritis one year after trauma: MRI follow-up in general practice
July 2011
Article
| Related Files |
|---|
|
(21380741_OA.pdf, 0.2MB) |
Objective: To prospectively evaluate prognostic factors for new onset or progression of degenerative change on follow-up MRI one year after knee trauma and the association with clinical outcome. Methods: Within a prospective observational cohort study in general practice, we studied a subgroup of 117 patients with acute knee trauma (mean age 41 years, 43% women). Degenerative change was scored on MRI at baseline and after one year follow-up. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed to evaluate prognostic factors for new onset or progressive degenerative change on follow-up MRI. Association between new or progressive degeneration and clinical outcome after one year was assessed. Results: On follow-up MRI 15% of patients with pre-existing knee osteoarthritis showed progression and 26% of patients demonstrated new degenerative change. The only statistically significant prognostic variable in the multivariate analysis was bone marrow oedema on initial MRI (OR 5.29 (95% CI 1.64-17.1), pā=ā0.005). A significant association between new or progressive degenerative change and clinical outcome was found (pā=ā0.003). Conclusion: Bone marrow oedema on MRI for acute knee injury is strongly predictive of new onset or progression of degenerative change of the femorotibial joint on follow-up MRI one year after trauma, which is reflected in clinical outcome.
- patient
- bone marrow oedema
- study
- follow-up
- osteoarthritis
- progression
- change
- trauma
- marrow
- analysis
- knee osteoarthritis
- injury
- follow-up mri
- score
- oedema
- recovery
- grade
- regression analysis
- onset
- lesion