Department of Rehabilitation Sciences and Physiotherapy, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Department of Rehabilitation Sciences and Physiotherapy, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Ghent University Hospital Campus, Building 3B3, Room 007, De Pintelaan 185, BE-9000, Ghent, Belgium; FWO (Pegasus)(2) EU Marie-Sklodowska Curie Fellow, EU Horizon 2020 Program, Brussels, Belgium.
Semin Arthritis Rheum. 2018 Jun;47(6):805-813. doi: 10.1016/j.semarthrit.2017.10.016. Epub 2017 Oct 31.
(i) To determine the association between the presence of comorbidities and severity of pain and physical dysfunction in people with knee and/or hip osteoarthritis; (ii) to explore associations between specific comorbidities (cardiac disease and/or hypertension, diabetes, depression, and back pain) and symptom severity.
Studies were identified through systematic searches in four electronic databases and grey literature, and, subsequently, methodologically appraised. Eligible citations entailed cross-sectional or longitudinal studies as well as randomised controlled trials providing data of a direct association between comorbidity presence and the severity of self-reported and/or performance-based symptoms of pain and/or physical functioning, in people with knee and/or hip osteoarthritis. We performed random-effects meta-analysis if at least two citations of low-to-moderate risk of bias were available. The quality of the body of evidence was determined using Cochrane-recommended methods.
Of all eligible citations (n = 26), 17 studies were entered in meta-analysis. Moderate quality evidence revealed an association between having ≥1 general comorbidity and worsening of pain (regression coefficient (95% confidence interval (CI)): 0.18 (95% CI: 0.14,0.22)) and/or performance-based physical functioning (0.20 (95% CI: 0.10,0.29)). The presence of cardiac disease and/or hypertension (self-reported: 0.08 (95% CI: 0.01,0.16); performance-based: 0.11 (95% CI: 0.02,0.20)), or back pain (self-reported: 0.12 (95% CI: 0.04,0.20)) predicted deteriorated physical functioning. Co-existing diabetes was associated with worse pain (0.10 (95% CI: 0.02,0.17)). Other findings were non-significant and/or the evidence of poor quality.
Greater comorbidity burden contributes to worse pain and performance-based physical function in people with knee and/or hip osteoarthritis. Suffering comorbid cardiac disease including hypertension, back pain or diabetes may have differential effects on symptom severity.
(i) 确定膝关节和/或髋关节骨关节炎患者共存疾病与疼痛严重程度和身体功能障碍之间的关系;(ii) 探讨特定共存疾病(心脏病和/或高血压、糖尿病、抑郁症和背痛)与症状严重程度之间的关系。
通过在四个电子数据库和灰色文献中进行系统搜索,确定了研究,并对其进行了方法学评估。合格的引文包括横断面或纵向研究以及随机对照试验,这些研究提供了共存疾病的存在与膝关节和/或髋关节骨关节炎患者自我报告和/或基于表现的疼痛和/或身体功能症状严重程度之间直接关联的数据。如果有至少两项低至中度偏倚风险的引文,我们将进行随机效应荟萃分析。使用 Cochrane 推荐的方法确定证据体的质量。
在所有合格的引文(n = 26)中,有 17 项研究纳入荟萃分析。中等质量证据表明,存在≥1 种一般共存疾病与疼痛恶化(回归系数(95%置信区间(CI)):0.18(95% CI:0.14,0.22))和/或基于表现的身体功能下降有关(0.20(95% CI:0.10,0.29))。心脏病和/或高血压(自我报告:0.08(95% CI:0.01,0.16);基于表现的:0.11(95% CI:0.02,0.20))或背痛(自我报告:0.12(95% CI:0.04,0.20))存在预测身体功能下降。共存糖尿病与更严重的疼痛相关(0.10(95% CI:0.02,0.17))。其他发现无统计学意义且/或证据质量较差。
共存疾病负担的增加与膝关节和/或髋关节骨关节炎患者的疼痛和基于表现的身体功能下降有关。患有包括高血压在内的心脏病、背痛或糖尿病等共存疾病可能对症状严重程度产生不同的影响。