Department of Rheumatology, Sint Maartenskliniek, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Department of Radiation Oncology, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Osteoarthritis Cartilage. 2018 Oct;26(10):1283-1290. doi: 10.1016/j.joca.2018.06.010. Epub 2018 Jul 7.
Low-dose radiation therapy (LDRT) is widely used as treatment for osteoarthritis (OA) in some countries, while relatively unknown in others. Systematic literature review displayed a lack of high-level evidence for beneficial effects in clinical practice. The aim was to assess the efficacy of LDRT on symptoms and inflammation in hand OA patients in a randomised, blinded, sham-controlled trial, using validated outcome measures.
Hand OA patients, ≥50 years, with pain ≥5 (scale 0-10) and non-responding to conservative therapy were included and randomised 1:1 to receive LDRT (6 × 1 Gy in 2 weeks) or sham (6 × 0 Gy in 2 weeks). Primary outcome was the proportion of OMERACT-OARSI responders, 3 months post-intervention. Secondary outcomes were pain and functioning (Australian/Canadian Hand Osteoarthritis Index; AUSCAN), quality of life (Short Form Health Survey; SF36) and inflammatory outcomes: erythrocyte sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein serum levels, effusion, synovial thickening and power Doppler signal on ultrasound (range 0-3).
Fifty-six patients were included. After 3 months, no significant difference in responders was observed between groups (LDRT: 8 (29%); sham: 10 (36%); difference -7% (95%CI -31-17%)). Also, differences in clinical and inflammatory outcomes between groups were small and not significant.
We were unable to demonstrate a substantial beneficial effect of LDRT on symptoms and inflammation in patients with hand OA, compared to sham treatment. Although a small effect can not be excluded, a treatment effect exceeding 20% is very unlikely, given the confidence interval. Therefore, in the absence of other high-level evidence, we advise against the use LDRT as treatment for patients with hand OA.
NTR4574 (Dutch Trial Register).
低剂量辐射治疗(LDRT)在一些国家被广泛用于治疗骨关节炎(OA),而在其他国家则相对未知。系统文献综述显示,临床实践中缺乏有益效果的高级别证据。本研究旨在通过使用经过验证的结局测量方法,在一项随机、盲法、假对照试验中评估 LDRT 对手 OA 患者症状和炎症的疗效。
≥50 岁、疼痛≥5(0-10 分)且对保守治疗无反应的手 OA 患者被纳入并按 1:1 随机分为 LDRT 组(2 周内 6×1 Gy)或假照组(2 周内 6×0 Gy)。主要结局为干预后 3 个月时 OMERACT-OARSI 应答者的比例。次要结局为疼痛和功能(澳大利亚/加拿大手部骨关节炎指数;AUSCAN)、生活质量(健康调查简表;SF36)和炎症结局:红细胞沉降率和 C 反应蛋白血清水平、渗出液、滑膜增厚和超声下的功率多普勒信号(范围 0-3)。
共纳入 56 例患者。3 个月后,两组应答者比例无显著差异(LDRT:8(29%);假照:10(36%);差异-7%(95%CI -31-17%))。此外,两组间临床和炎症结局的差异较小且无统计学意义。
与假照治疗相比,我们未能证明 LDRT 对手 OA 患者症状和炎症有实质性的益处。虽然不能排除小的效应,但鉴于置信区间,治疗效应超过 20%的可能性非常小。因此,在缺乏其他高级别证据的情况下,我们不建议将 LDRT 用于治疗手 OA 患者。
NTR4574(荷兰试验注册)。