Abstract

Objective To evaluate the prognostic utility of serum COMP level measured with a new sandwich ELISA, by correlating COMP level with outcome measures of osteoarthritis (OA) progression.Design Patients (N=48) had symptomatic primary knee OA of Kellgren–Lawrence (K–L) grade I–III and met ACR criteria. These patients were evaluated prospectively as part of a double-blind drug trial of 3 years' duration and represented the placebo arm of the study. Serum COMP levels were measured by sandwich ELISA with monoclonal antibodies 16-F12 and 17-C10 at baseline and at study end and levels were correlated with changes in (1) joint space width (JSW), (2) K–L grade, (3) Lequesne, and (4) WOMAC indices, over 3 years.Results The change in JSW over 3 years, summed for both knees, correlated positively with serum COMP level at baseline as well as at study end. Patients were sorted by level of progression based upon a change in K–L grade summed for both knees over 3 years; patients who progressed by two K–L grades were shown to have had significantly higher COMP levels at baseline as well as at study end. Baseline and study end COMP levels did not correlate with the change of Lequesne or WOMAC indices. Baseline COMP levels correlated strongly with end serum COMP levels.Conclusion Serum COMP has the potential to be a prognostic marker of disease progression. High COMP levels, persisting over the 3-year study period in the patients with radiographic progression, indicated differences in disease activity detectable throughout the entire follow-up interval. Copyright 2002 OsteoArthritis Research Society International. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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