In the United States almost 10% of the population will be diagnosed with symptomatic knee osteoarthritis by 60 years of age and knee osteoarthritis accounts for over 600,000 total knee arthroplasties per year. Yet, a treatment to modify osteoarthritis remain elusive and clinical trials are impeded by suboptimal structural outcome measures that are slow to change or limited to only one of many structural changes that occur during osteoarthritis progression. The instrument development component of this project is aimed at developing and validating a quantitative knee osteoarthritis severity outcome measure and software tool that is sensitive to change and can be applied to a knee magnetic resonance imaging in a rapid and efficient manner. Candidate features whose combination will be evaluated in this composite instrument are a whole-knee cartilage damage index, bone marrow lesion volume, and effusion volume. We will evaluate the reliability, construct and discriminative validity, sensitivity to change, and time to perform the measurements in datasets available from the Osteoarthritis Initiative and a clinical trial of intra-articular corticosteroids (IACS). The scientific questions that we will test to assess validity of this instrument are (1) whether knees subject to a new injury exhibit accelerated rate of progression (2, exploratory) OA knees treated with IACS exhibit reduced structural progression.

Public Health Relevance

In the United States ~10% of the population will be diagnosed with symptomatic knee osteoarthritis by 60 years of age but yet, a treatment to modify osteoarthritis remains elusive and clinical trials are impeded by suboptimal structural outcome measures that are slow to change or limited to only one of many structural changes that occur during osteoarthritis progression. The instrument development component of this project is aimed at developing and validating a quantitative knee osteoarthritis severity outcome measure and software tool that is sensitive to change and can be applied to a knee magnetic resonance imaging in a rapid and efficient manner. The scientific questions that we will test are (1) whether knees subject to an incident injury exhibit accelerated rate of progression and (2, exploratory) osteoarthritis knees treated with intra-articular corticosteroids exhibit reduced structural progression.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS)
Type
Research Project--Cooperative Agreements (U01)
Project #
5U01AR067168-02
Application #
8919244
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAR1)
Program Officer
Lester, Gayle E
Project Start
2014-09-01
Project End
2017-07-31
Budget Start
2015-08-01
Budget End
2016-07-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2015
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Tufts University
Department
Type
DUNS #
079532263
City
Boston
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code