Abstract

IntroductionKnee osteoarthritis is a common disease with pain as the most prevalent symptom. Previous cohort studies have shown genicular artery embolization to reduce pain symptoms in patients with mild to moderate knee osteoarthritis. Patients resistant to conservative therapy but not eligible yet for surgical treatment due to young age or comorbidities may profit from an effective and sustained pain reduction treatment. This study is a randomized sham-controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of genicular artery embolization in patients with knee osteoarthritis.Methods and analysisFifty-eight patients with mild-to-moderate knee osteoarthritis will be recruited and randomly allocated to the treatment or control group in a 1:1 ratio. Participants in the treatment group will undergo genicular artery embolization. Patients in the control group will undergo sham treatment. Outcome measurements will be assessed at baseline and after 1, 4, 8, and 12 months with questionnaires, pressure pain threshold testing, and MR imaging. The MR imaging protocol is designed to (semi)quantitatively assess osteoarthritis in the knee joint. The primary outcome is the change from baseline of the Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) pain subscale after 4 months. Secondary outcomes include change in osteoarthritis-related questionnaires, pressure pain threshold, and OA-related MRI features, particularly synovitis and bone marrow lesions.Ethics and disseminationThis trial will determine the efficacy of genicular artery embolization compared to a sham treatment. This is of importance to assess before proceeding to larger-scale efficiency studies and, ultimately, implementing this treatment into day to day clinical practice.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT03884049. Registered on 21 March 2019

Highlights

  • Knee osteoarthritis is a common disease with pain as the most prevalent symptom

  • In a study of 20 patients, Bagla et al found a significant reduction of the mean pain visual analog score (VAS) of 76 to 29 on a 0–100 scale [8]. These results show promise of genicular artery embolization treatment (GAE) to bridge the treatment gap for a significant proportion of knee OA patients, these previous studies were both prospective non-randomized cohort studies

  • GAE is a novel intervention for patients with symptomatic, mild-to-moderate knee OA [6, 7]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Previous cohort studies have shown genicular artery embolization to reduce pain symptoms in patients with mild to moderate knee osteoarthritis. This study is a randomized sham-controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of genicular artery embolization in patients with knee osteoarthritis. Recent clinical studies have shown an effective pain reduction following genicular artery embolization treatment (GAE), during which periarticular angiogenesis is embolized [6,7,8,9]. Targeting angiogenesis, which is increased in among others the synovium and the osteochondral junction, potentially reduces pain symptoms [10]. This angiogenesis is thought to be associated with synovitis, osteochondral damage and osteophyte formation. Decreasing angiogenesis through GAE may potentially have a positive effect on symptomatic knee OA

Objectives
Methods
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call