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Knee osteoarthritis and time-to all-cause mortality in six community-based cohorts: an international meta-analysis of individual participant-level data
- Leyland, Kirsten M;
- Gates, Lucy S;
- Sanchez-Santos, Maria T;
- Nevitt, Michael C;
- Felson, David;
- Jones, Graeme;
- Jordan, Joanne M;
- Judge, Andrew;
- Prieto-Alhambra, Dani;
- Yoshimura, Noriko;
- Newton, Julia L;
- Callahan, Leigh F;
- Cooper, Cyrus;
- Batt, Mark E;
- Lin, Jianhao;
- Liu, Qiang;
- Cleveland, Rebecca J;
- Collins, Gary S;
- Arden, Nigel K
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40520-020-01762-2Abstract
Background
Osteoarthritis (OA) is a chronic joint disease, with increasing global burden of disability and healthcare utilisation. Recent meta-analyses have shown a range of effects of OA on mortality, reflecting different OA definitions and study methods. We seek to overcome limitations introduced when using aggregate results by gathering individual participant-level data (IPD) from international observational studies and standardising methods to determine the association of knee OA with mortality in the general population.Methods
Seven community-based cohorts were identified containing knee OA-related pain, radiographs, and time-to-mortality, six of which were available for analysis. A two-stage IPD meta-analysis framework was applied: (1) Cox proportional hazard models assessed time-to-mortality of participants with radiographic OA (ROA), OA-related pain (POA), and a combination of pain and ROA (PROA) against pain and ROA-free participants; (2) hazard ratios (HR) were then pooled using the Hartung-Knapp modification for random-effects meta-analysis.Findings
10,723 participants in six cohorts from four countries were included in the analyses. Multivariable models (adjusting for age, sex, race, BMI, smoking, alcohol consumption, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes) showed a pooled HR, compared to pain and ROA-free participants, of 1.03 (0.83, 1.28) for ROA, 1.35 (1.12, 1.63) for POA, and 1.37 (1.22, 1.54) for PROA.Discussion
Participants with POA or PROA had a 35-37% increased association with reduced time-to-mortality, independent of confounders. ROA showed no association with mortality, suggesting that OA-related knee pain may be driving the association with time-to-mortality.Funding
Versus Arthritis Centre for Sport, Exercise and Osteoarthritis and Osteoarthritis Research Society International.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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