학술논문

Association of Metabolic Risk Factors With Cartilage Degradation Assessed by T2 Relaxation Time at the Knee: Data From the Osteoarthritis Initiative
Document Type
article
Source
Arthritis Care & Research. 65(12)
Subject
Public Health
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Health Sciences
Osteoarthritis
Nutrition
Prevention
Arthritis
Aging
Clinical Research
Diabetes
Pain Research
Chronic Pain
Cardiovascular
Metabolic and endocrine
Musculoskeletal
Cartilage
Articular
Diabetes Mellitus
Diet
Dietary Fats
Female
Humans
Hypertension
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Metabolic Syndrome
Middle Aged
Multivariate Analysis
Osteoarthritis
Knee
Risk Factors
Waist Circumference
Public Health and Health Services
Psychology
Clinical sciences
Allied health and rehabilitation science
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveTo evaluate the association of metabolic risk factors with severity and 2-year progression of early degenerative cartilage changes at the knee, measured with T2 relaxation times in middle-aged subjects from the Osteoarthritis Initiative.MethodsCartilage segmentation and T2 map generation were performed in knee 3T magnetic resonance images from 403 subjects ages 45-60 years without radiographic osteoarthritis (OA). The influence of risk factors on baseline T2 and longitudinal progression of T2 was analyzed using linear regression, adjusting for age, sex, and other OA risk factors.ResultsFour metabolic risk factors, i.e., high abdominal circumference (P < 0.001), hypertension (P = 0.041), high fat consumption (P = 0.023), and self-reported diabetes mellitus (P = 0.010), were individually associated with higher baseline T2. When the 4 metabolic risk factors were considered in a multivariate regression model, higher T2 remained significantly associated with abdominal circumference (P < 0.001) and diabetes mellitus (P = 0.026), and there was a trend for high fat consumption (P = 0.096). For the individual risk factors, only diabetes mellitus remained associated with higher baseline T2 after adjustment for body mass index (BMI). After adjustment for BMI, baseline T2 increased in a dose-response manner with the number of metabolic risk factors present (P = 0.032 for linear trend), and subjects with ≥3 metabolic factors (versus