Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Alfred Hospital, Monash University, Melbourne Vic 3004, Australia.
Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Alfred Hospital, Monash University, Melbourne Vic 3004, Australia.
Semin Arthritis Rheum. 2018 Oct;48(2):176-189. doi: 10.1016/j.semarthrit.2018.02.008. Epub 2018 Feb 21.
Diabetes (DM) and osteoarthritis (OA) are two common co-existing chronic conditions. However, whether this is due to shared risk factors or may differ between joints is unclear. We performed a systematic review to determine whether abnormal glucose metabolism is a risk factor for knee, hip and hand OA, separately, independent of age and obesity.
A systematic search of Ovid Medline and EMBASE was performed from inception until October 2016 to identify studies relating glucose metabolism to osteoarthritis-related outcomes. Studies were included if they related DM and OA and the knee, hip, or hand were examined separately. In the structured synthesis, objective measures of DM and adjustment for age and obesity were also required.
Of the 40 included studies, 28 examined the knee, nine the hip and 14 the hand. Five studies with a longitudinal component used objective measures of DM (blood glucose) and knee OA (radiography or joint replacement) and adjusted for age and obesity (21,299 participants). Of these, three found no association, one found a reduction in risk and one, which adjusted for the presence but not magnitude of obesity, found an increase in risk. Of the longitudinal studies examining the relationship between DM and OA that accounted for obesity, none provided evidence of an independent relationship between DM and hip (2 studies) or hand OA (1 study).
There is little evidence to suggest that impaired glucose metabolism is a risk factor, independent of obesity, for knee OA and no evidence that impaired glucose metabolism is an independent risk factor for hip or hand OA.
糖尿病(DM)和骨关节炎(OA)是两种常见的并存的慢性疾病。然而,这种情况是由于共同的危险因素还是关节之间存在差异尚不清楚。我们进行了一项系统评价,以确定葡萄糖代谢是否是膝关节、髋关节和手部 OA 的危险因素,分别独立于年龄和肥胖。
从 Ovid Medline 和 EMBASE 进行了系统搜索,从开始到 2016 年 10 月,以确定与葡萄糖代谢与骨关节炎相关结局相关的研究。如果研究涉及 DM 和 OA,并且分别检查了膝关节、髋关节或手部,则将其纳入研究。在结构综合中,还需要 DM 的客观测量和对年龄和肥胖的调整。
在 40 项纳入的研究中,28 项研究了膝关节,9 项研究了髋关节,14 项研究了手部。有 5 项具有纵向成分的研究使用了 DM(血糖)的客观测量和膝关节 OA(放射学或关节置换)以及年龄和肥胖的调整(21299 名参与者)。其中,有 3 项研究未发现相关性,1 项研究发现风险降低,1 项研究在调整肥胖存在但不调整肥胖程度的情况下,发现风险增加。在考虑肥胖因素的纵向研究中,没有一项研究提供了 DM 与髋关节 OA(2 项研究)或手部 OA(1 项研究)之间存在独立关系的证据。
几乎没有证据表明葡萄糖代谢受损是膝关节 OA 的独立危险因素,肥胖除外,也没有证据表明葡萄糖代谢受损是髋关节或手部 OA 的独立危险因素。