Jüni Peter, Hari Roman, Rutjes Anne W S, Fischer Roland, Silletta Maria G, Reichenbach Stephan, da Costa Bruno R
Institute of Primary Health Care (BIHAM), University of Bern, Gesellschaftsstrasse 49, Bern, Switzerland, 3012.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Oct 22;2015(10):CD005328. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD005328.pub3.
Knee osteoarthritis is a leading cause of chronic pain, disability, and decreased quality of life. Despite the long-standing use of intra-articular corticosteroids, there is an ongoing debate about their benefits and safety. This is an update of a Cochrane review first published in 2005.
To determine the benefits and harms of intra-articular corticosteroids compared with sham or no intervention in people with knee osteoarthritis in terms of pain, physical function, quality of life, and safety.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, and EMBASE (from inception to 3 February 2015), checked trial registers, conference proceedings, reference lists, and contacted authors.
We included randomised or quasi-randomised controlled trials that compared intra-articular corticosteroids with sham injection or no treatment in people with knee osteoarthritis. We applied no language restrictions.
We calculated standardised mean differences (SMDs) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for pain, function, quality of life, joint space narrowing, and risk ratios (RRs) for safety outcomes. We combined trials using an inverse-variance random-effects meta-analysis.
We identified 27 trials (13 new studies) with 1767 participants in this update. We graded the quality of the evidence as 'low' for all outcomes because treatment effect estimates were inconsistent with great variation across trials, pooled estimates were imprecise and did not rule out relevant or irrelevant clinical effects, and because most trials had a high or unclear risk of bias. Intra-articular corticosteroids appeared to be more beneficial in pain reduction than control interventions (SMD -0.40, 95% CI -0.58 to -0.22), which corresponds to a difference in pain scores of 1.0 cm on a 10-cm visual analogue scale between corticosteroids and sham injection and translates into a number needed to treat for an additional beneficial outcome (NNTB) of 8 (95% CI 6 to 13). An I(2) statistic of 68% indicated considerable between-trial heterogeneity. A visual inspection of the funnel plot suggested some asymmetry (asymmetry coefficient -1.21, 95%CI -3.58 to 1.17). When stratifying results according to length of follow-up, benefits were moderate at 1 to 2 weeks after end of treatment (SMD -0.48, 95% CI -0.70 to -0.27), small to moderate at 4 to 6 weeks (SMD -0.41, 95% CI -0.61 to -0.21), small at 13 weeks (SMD -0.22, 95% CI -0.44 to 0.00), and no evidence of an effect at 26 weeks (SMD -0.07, 95% CI -0.25 to 0.11). An I(2) statistic of ≥ 63% indicated a moderate to large degree of between-trial heterogeneity up to 13 weeks after end of treatment (P for heterogeneity≤0.001), and an I(2) of 0% indicated low heterogeneity at 26 weeks (P=0.43). There was evidence of lower treatment effects in trials that randomised on average at least 50 participants per group (P=0.05) or at least 100 participants per group (P=0.013), in trials that used concomittant viscosupplementation (P=0.08), and in trials that used concomitant joint lavage (P≤0.001).Corticosteroids appeared to be more effective in function improvement than control interventions (SMD -0.33, 95% CI -0.56 to -0.09), which corresponds to a difference in functions scores of -0.7 units on standardised Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index (WOMAC) disability scale ranging from 0 to 10 and translates into a NNTB of 10 (95% CI 7 to 33). An I(2) statistic of 69% indicated a moderate to large degree of between-trial heterogeneity. A visual inspection of the funnel plot suggested asymmetry (asymmetry coefficient -4.07, 95% CI -8.08 to -0.05). When stratifying results according to length of follow-up, benefits were small to moderate at 1 to 2 weeks after end of treatment (SMD -0.43, 95% CI -0.72 to -0.14), small to moderate at 4 to 6 weeks (SMD -0.36, 95% CI -0.63 to -0.09), and no evidence of an effect at 13 weeks (SMD -0.13, 95% CI -0.37 to 0.10) or at 26 weeks (SMD 0.06, 95% CI -0.16 to 0.28). An I(2) statistic of ≥ 62% indicated a moderate to large degree of between-trial heterogeneity up to 13 weeks after end of treatment (P for heterogeneity≤0.004), and an I(2) of 0% indicated low heterogeneity at 26 weeks (P=0.52). We found evidence of lower treatment effects in trials that randomised on average at least 50 participants per group (P=0.023), in unpublished trials (P=0.023), in trials that used non-intervention controls (P=0.031), and in trials that used concomitant viscosupplementation (P=0.06).Participants on corticosteroids were 11% less likely to experience adverse events, but confidence intervals included the null effect (RR 0.89, 95% CI 0.64 to 1.23, I(2)=0%). Participants on corticosteroids were 67% less likely to withdraw because of adverse events, but confidence intervals were wide and included the null effect (RR 0.33, 95% CI 0.05 to 2.07, I(2)=0%). Participants on corticosteroids were 27% less likely to experience any serious adverse event, but confidence intervals were wide and included the null effect (RR 0.63, 95% CI 0.15 to 2.67, I(2)=0%).We found no evidence of an effect of corticosteroids on quality of life compared to control (SMD -0.01, 95% CI -0.30 to 0.28, I(2)=0%). There was also no evidence of an effect of corticosteroids on joint space narrowing compared to control interventions (SMD -0.02, 95% CI -0.49 to 0.46).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Whether there are clinically important benefits of intra-articular corticosteroids after one to six weeks remains unclear in view of the overall quality of the evidence, considerable heterogeneity between trials, and evidence of small-study effects. A single trial included in this review described adequate measures to minimise biases and did not find any benefit of intra-articular corticosteroids.In this update of the systematic review and meta-analysis, we found most of the identified trials that compared intra-articular corticosteroids with sham or non-intervention control small and hampered by low methodological quality. An analysis of multiple time points suggested that effects decrease over time, and our analysis provided no evidence that an effect remains six months after a corticosteroid injection.
膝关节骨关节炎是慢性疼痛、残疾和生活质量下降的主要原因。尽管关节内注射皮质类固醇已长期使用,但关于其益处和安全性仍存在争议。这是对2005年首次发表的Cochrane综述的更新。
比较关节内注射皮质类固醇与假注射或不干预对膝关节骨关节炎患者在疼痛、身体功能、生活质量和安全性方面的利弊。
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE和EMBASE(从创刊至2015年2月3日),检查了试验注册库、会议论文集、参考文献列表,并联系了作者。
我们纳入了将关节内注射皮质类固醇与假注射或不治疗用于膝关节骨关节炎患者的随机或半随机对照试验。我们没有设置语言限制。
我们计算了疼痛、功能、生活质量、关节间隙变窄的标准化均数差(SMD)和95%置信区间(CI),以及安全性结局的风险比(RR)。我们采用逆方差随机效应荟萃分析对试验进行合并。
在本次更新中,我们识别出27项试验(13项新研究),共1767名参与者。我们将所有结局的证据质量评为“低”,因为治疗效果估计不一致,试验间差异很大,汇总估计不精确,且未排除相关或不相关的临床效应,并且大多数试验存在高偏倚风险或偏倚风险不明确。关节内注射皮质类固醇在减轻疼痛方面似乎比对照干预更有益(SMD -0.40,95%CI -0.58至 -0.22),这相当于在10厘米视觉模拟量表上皮质类固醇与假注射之间疼痛评分相差1.0厘米,转化为获得额外有益结局所需治疗人数(NNTB)为8(95%CI 6至13)。I²统计量为68%表明试验间存在相当大的异质性。漏斗图的直观检查显示存在一些不对称性(不对称系数 -1.21,95%CI -3.58至1.17)。根据随访时间分层结果时,治疗结束后1至2周益处为中度(SMD -0.48,95%CI -0.70至 -0.27),4至6周为小至中度(SMD -0.41,95%CI -0.61至 -0.21),13周为小(SMD -0.22,95%CI -0.44至0.00),26周无效应证据(SMD -0.07,95%CI -0.25至0.11)。I²统计量≥63%表明治疗结束后至13周试验间存在中度至高度异质性(异质性P≤0.001),26周时I²为0%表明异质性低(P = 0.43)。有证据表明,在每组平均随机分配至少50名参与者的试验中(P = 0.05)或每组至少100名参与者的试验中(P = 0.013)、使用了联合玻璃酸钠注射的试验中(P = 0.08)以及使用了联合关节灌洗的试验中(P≤[0.001]),治疗效果较低。皮质类固醇在改善功能方面似乎比对照干预更有效(SMD -0.33,95%CI -0.56至 -0.09),这相当于在标准化的西安大略和麦克马斯特大学关节炎指数(WOMAC)残疾量表(范围为0至10)上功能评分相差 -0.7个单位,转化为NNTB为10(95%CI 7至33)。I²统计量为69%表明试验间存在中度至高度异质性。漏斗图的直观检查显示不对称(不对称系数 -4.07,95%CI -8.08至 -0.05)。根据随访时间分层结果时,治疗结束后1至2周益处为小至中度(SMD -0.43,95%CI -0.72至 -0.14),4至6周为小至中度(SMD -0.36,95%CI -0.63至 -0.09),13周无效应证据(SMD -0.13,95%CI -0.37至0.10)或26周无效应证据(SMD 0.06,95%CI -0.16至0.28)。I²统计量≥62%表明治疗结束后至13周试验间存在中度至高度异质性(异质性P≤0.004),26周时I²为0%表明异质性低(P = 0.52)。我们发现,在每组平均随机分配至少50名参与者的试验中(P = 0.023)、未发表的试验中(P = 0.023)、使用非干预对照的试验中(P = 0.031)以及使用联合玻璃酸钠注射的试验中(P = 0.06),治疗效果较低。接受皮质类固醇治疗的参与者发生不良事件的可能性低11%,但置信区间包括无效效应(RR 0.89,95%CI 0.64至1.2 [3],I² = 0%)。接受皮质类固醇治疗的参与者因不良事件退出试验的可能性低67%,但置信区间较宽且包括无效效应(RR 0.33,95%CI 0.05至2.07,I² = 0%)。接受皮质类固醇治疗的参与者发生任何严重不良事件的可能性低27%,但置信区间较宽且包括无效效应(RR 0.63,95%CI 0.15至2.67,I² = 0%)。我们未发现与对照相比皮质类固醇对生活质量有影响的证据(SMD -0.01,95%CI -0.30至0.28,I² = 0%)。也没有证据表明与对照干预相比皮质类固醇对关节间隙变窄有影响(SMD -0.02,95%CI -0.49至0.46)。
鉴于证据的总体质量、试验间存在的相当大异质性以及小研究效应的证据,关节内注射皮质类固醇在1至6周后是否具有临床重要益处仍不明确。本综述中纳入的一项试验描述了充分的措施以尽量减少偏倚,未发现关节内注射皮质类固醇有任何益处。在本次系统综述和荟萃分析的更新中,我们发现大多数比较关节内注射皮质类固醇与假注射或非干预对照的已识别试验规模较小且方法学质量较低。对多个时间点的分析表明,效果随时间降低,且我们的分析未提供证据表明皮质类固醇注射6个月后仍有效果。