학술논문

Outcomes of imaging-guided corticosteroid injections in hip and knee osteoarthritis patients: a systematic review.
Document Type
Article
Source
Skeletal Radiology. Nov2023, Vol. 52 Issue 11, p2297-2308. 12p.
Subject
*INJECTIONS
*KNEE pain
*CORTICOSTEROIDS
*HYALURONIC acid
*KNEE
*OSTEOARTHRITIS
Language
ISSN
0364-2348
Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this systematic review is to evaluate the current literature on the use of image-guided corticosteroid injections in the treatment of patients with knee and hip OA. Evidence acquisition: We conducted a comprehensive literature search through June 30, 2022. Publication type, study design, imaging guidance modality, osteoarthritis severity, number of injections, steroid type and dose, anesthetic type and dose, the total number of patients, follow-up intervals, and measured outcomes were extracted from the included studies. Evidence synthesis: There were 23 included studies (10 hips, 12 knees, 1 both hip and knee). Hip injections were found to be effective in treating short- and long-term pain and more effective than hyaluronic acid, Mepivacaine, NSAIDs, and normal saline in terms of improvement in pain and/or function. There was less impact on QoL. Knee injections were found either to have little or no impact or were similar or inferior to comparison injections (intra-articular hyaluronic acid, PRP, NSAIDs, normal saline, adductor canal blocks). Study data could not be aggregated because the corticosteroid types and doses, methods of outcome assessment, and follow-up time points varied widely. Conclusion: Our systematic review found generally positive outcomes for the hip, but overall negative outcomes for the knee, although hip injections may carry a risk of serious adverse outcomes. A larger trial with uniform methodology is warranted. Specific studies on the adverse effects of corticosteroid injections are also warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]