Patient characteristics associated with a poor response to non-surgical multidisciplinary management of knee osteoarthritis: A multisite prospective longitudinal study in an advanced practice physiotherapist-led tertiary service

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O'Leary, S
Raymer, M
Window, P
Swete Kelly, P
Elwell, B
McLoughlin, I
O'Sullivan, W
Phillips, B
Wake, A
Ralph, A
O'Gorman, H
Jang, E
Groves, K
Comans, T
et al.
Griffith University Author(s)
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2020
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Abstract

Objectives To explore patient characteristics recorded at the initial consultation associated with a poor response to non-surgical multidisciplinary management of knee osteoarthritis (KOA) in tertiary care. Design Prospective multisite longitudinal study. Setting Advanced practice physiotherapist-led multidisciplinary orthopaedic service within eight tertiary hospitals. Participants 238 patients with KOA. Primary and secondary outcome measures Standardised measures were recorded in all patients prior to them receiving non-surgical multidisciplinary management in a tertiary hospital service across multiple sites. These measures were examined for their relationship with a poor response to management 6 months after the initial consultation using a 15-point Global Rating of Change measure (poor response (scores -7 to +1)/positive response (scores+2 to+7)). Generalised linear models with binomial family and logit link were used to examine which patient characteristics yielded the strongest relationship with a poor response to management as estimated by the OR (95% CI). Results Overall, 114 out of 238 (47.9%) participants recorded a poor response. The odds of a poor response decreased with higher patient expectations of benefit (OR 0.74 (0.63 to 0.87) per 1/10 point score increase) and higher self-reported knee function (OR 0.67 (0.51 to 0.89) per 10/100 point score increase) (p<0.01). The odds of a poor response increased with a greater degree of varus frontal knee alignment (OR 1.35 (1.03 to 1.78) per 5° increase in varus angle) and a severe (compared with mild) radiological rating of medial compartment degenerative change (OR 3.11 (1.04 to 9.3)) (p<0.05). Conclusions These characteristics may need to be considered in patients presenting for non-surgical multidisciplinary management of KOA in tertiary care. Measurement of these patient characteristics may potentially better inform patient-centred management and flag the need for judicious monitoring of outcome for some patients to avoid unproductive care.

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BMJ Open

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10

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10

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© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.

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Clinical sciences

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knee

musculoskeletal disorders

rehabilitation medicine

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O'Leary, S; Raymer, M; Window, P; Swete Kelly, P; Elwell, B; McLoughlin, I; O'Sullivan, W; Phillips, B; Wake, A; Ralph, A; O'Gorman, H; Jang, E; Groves, K; Comans, T; et al., Patient characteristics associated with a poor response to non-surgical multidisciplinary management of knee osteoarthritis: A multisite prospective longitudinal study in an advanced practice physiotherapist-led tertiary service, BMJ Open, 2020, 10 (10), pp. e037070

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