Thurston Arthritis Research Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA; Department of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA.
Thurston Arthritis Research Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA.
Osteoarthritis Cartilage. 2020 Apr;28(4):446-452. doi: 10.1016/j.joca.2020.02.028. Epub 2020 Feb 19.
To describe the incidence and progression of radiographic and symptomatic hand osteoarthritis (rHOA and sxHOA) in a large community-based cohort.
Data were from the Johnston County OA Project (1999-2015, 12 ± 1.2 years follow-up, age 45+). Participants had bilateral hand radiographs each visit, read for Kellgren-Lawrence grade (KLG) at 30 joints. We defined rHOA as KLG ≥2 in ≥1 joint. SxHOA was defined in a hand/joint with rHOA and self-reported symptoms or tenderness on exam. Incidence was assessed in those without, while progression was assessed in those with, baseline rHOA. Proportions or medians are reported; differences by sex and race were assessed using models appropriate for dichotomous or continuous definitions, additionally adjusted for age, education, body mass index (BMI), and weight change.
Of 800 participants (68% women, 32% African American, mean age 60 years), 327 had baseline rHOA and were older, more often white and female, than those without rHOA (n = 473). The incidence of HOA was high, for rHOA (60%) and for sxHOA (13%). Women were more likely than men to have incident HOA, particularly for distal interphalangeal joint radiographic osteoarthritis (DIP rOA) (adjusted odds ratios (aOR) 1.60 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) [1.03, 2.49]) and sxHOA (aOR 2.98 [1.50, 5.91]). Progressive HOA was more similar by sex, although thumb base rOA progressed more frequently in women than in men (aOR 2.56 [1.44, 4.55]). Particularly HOA incidence, but also progression, was more frequent among whites compared with African Americans.
This study provides much needed information about the natural history of HOA, a common and frequently debilitating condition, in the general population.
描述大规模社区队列中影像学和症状性手部骨关节炎(rHOA 和 sxHOA)的发生率和进展情况。
数据来自约翰斯顿县骨关节炎项目(1999-2015 年,12±1.2 年随访,年龄 45 岁以上)。参与者每次就诊时均进行双侧手部 X 线检查,对 30 个关节的 Kellgren-Lawrence 分级(KLG)进行读片。我们将 rHOA 定义为≥1 个关节的 KLG≥2。sxHOA 在手/关节存在 rHOA 且自我报告症状或体格检查压痛的情况下定义。在无 rHOA 的人群中评估发病率,在基线时存在 rHOA 的人群中评估进展情况。报告比例或中位数;通过适合二分类或连续定义的模型评估性别和种族差异,并进一步调整年龄、教育程度、体重指数(BMI)和体重变化。
在 800 名参与者中(68%为女性,32%为非裔美国人,平均年龄 60 岁),327 名参与者基线时存在 rHOA,且比无 rHOA 的参与者更年长、更常为白人且为女性(n=473)。HOA 的发病率较高,rHOA(60%)和 sxHOA(13%)。女性发生 HOA 的可能性高于男性,尤其是远端指间关节影像学骨关节炎(DIP rOA)(调整后的优势比(aOR)1.60 95%置信区间(95%CI)[1.03, 2.49])和 sxHOA(aOR 2.98 [1.50, 5.91])。HOA 的进展在性别上更为相似,但拇指基部 rOA 在女性中比男性更为常见(aOR 2.56 [1.44, 4.55])。与非裔美国人相比,白人的 HOA 发病率,尤其是进展率更高。
本研究为一般人群中常见且常导致残疾的手部骨关节炎的自然病史提供了急需的信息。