학술논문

Towards prevention of post-traumatic osteoarthritis: report from an international expert working group on considerations for the design and conduct of interventional studies following acute knee injury
Document Type
article
Source
Osteoarthritis and Cartilage. 27(1)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Health Sciences
Aging
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Arthritis
Osteoarthritis
Patient Safety
Prevention
Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects
Clinical Research
Musculoskeletal
Good Health and Well Being
Acute Disease
Clinical Trials as Topic
Evidence-Based Medicine
Humans
Knee Injuries
Osteoarthritis
Knee
Research Design
Treatment Outcome
Injury
Outcome
Clinical trial
Knee
Considerations
Arthritis Research UK Osteoarthritis and Crystal Disease Clinical Study Group Expert Working Group
Biomedical Engineering
Human Movement and Sports Sciences
Arthritis & Rheumatology
Clinical sciences
Sports science and exercise
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveThere are few guidelines for clinical trials of interventions for prevention of post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA), reflecting challenges in this area. An international multi-disciplinary expert group including patients was convened to generate points to consider for the design and conduct of interventional studies following acute knee injury.DesignAn evidence review on acute knee injury interventional studies to prevent PTOA was presented to the group, alongside overviews of challenges in this area, including potential targets, biomarkers and imaging. Working groups considered pre-identified key areas: eligibility criteria and outcomes, biomarkers, injury definition and intervention timing including multi-modality interventions. Consensus agreement within the group on points to consider was generated and is reported here after iterative review by all contributors.ResultsThe evidence review identified 37 studies. Study duration and outcomes varied widely and 70% examined surgical interventions. Considerations were grouped into three areas: justification of inclusion criteria including the classification of injury and participant age (as people over 35 may have pre-existing OA); careful consideration in the selection and timing of outcomes or biomarkers; definition of the intervention(s)/comparator(s) and the appropriate time-window for intervention (considerations may be particular to intervention type). Areas for further research included demonstrating the utility of patient-reported outcomes, biomarkers and imaging outcomes from ancillary/cohort studies in this area, and development of surrogate clinical trial endpoints that shorten the duration of clinical trials and are acceptable to regulatory agencies.ConclusionsThese considerations represent the first international consensus on the conduct of interventional studies following acute knee joint trauma.