Abstract

Objective As crystals may contribute to inflammation in osteoarthritis (OA), it is hypothesized that colchicine may have symptom/disease modifying effects in OA. The objective of this study was to evaluate the symptomatic benefit of addition of colchicine to a regimen of intraarticular steroids and piroxicam in patients with knee OA with inflammation.Design 39 patients with OA of the knee with persisting inflammation, despite at least 2 weeks of piroxicam, were subjected to intraarticular steroid injection and randomly assigned to receive colchicine 0.5mg twice daily or placebo in a randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled trial over 5 months.Results VAS for index knee pain (VAS-pain) and total KGMC score (a modified WOMAC index) at 16 and 20 weeks were significantly better in the colchicine group than the corresponding scores in controls. The benefit persisted on multivariate analysis at 16 weeks (Hotellings T2=18.6, F5,33=3.3154,P =0.015). The proportion of patients who had 30% or greater response at 16 weeks was significantly higher in the colchicine group in VAS-pain (69% vs 15%) and total KGMC scores (74% vs 45%) and the significance persisted on combined analysis using Mantel-Haenszel test (M-H Risk=5.9, 95% C.I.: 2.08 to 16.73). At 20 weeks, benefit of colchicine therapy was seen on pooled analysis only (M-H risk=3.71, 95% C.I.: 1.07=8.02).Conclusion The addition of colchicine produced significantly greater symptomatic benefit at 16 and 20 weeks than intraarticular steroid and piroxicam alone in patients with knee OA with inflammation.

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