Abstract

BackgroundMuscle strengthening exercises consistently demonstrate improvements in the pain and function of adults with knee osteoarthritis, but individual response rates can vary greatly. Identifying individuals who are more likely to respond is important in developing more efficient rehabilitation programs for knee osteoarthritis. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to determine if pre-intervention multi-sensor accelerometer data (e.g., back, thigh, shank, foot accelerometers) and patient reported outcome measures (e.g., pain, symptoms, function, quality of life) can retrospectively predict post-intervention response to a 6-week hip strengthening exercise intervention in a knee OA cohort.MethodsThirty-nine adults with knee osteoarthritis completed a 6-week hip strengthening exercise intervention and were sub-grouped as Non-Responders, Low-Responders, or High-Responders following the intervention based on their change in patient reported outcome measures. Pre-intervention multi-sensor accelerometer data recorded at the back, thigh, shank, and foot and Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score subscale data were used as potential predictors of response in a discriminant analysis of principal components.ResultsThe thigh was the single best placement for classifying responder sub-groups (74.4%). Overall, the best combination of sensors was the back, thigh, and shank (81.7%), but a simplified two sensor solution using the back and thigh was not significantly different (80.0%; p = 0.27).ConclusionsWhile three sensors were best able to identify responders, a simplified two sensor array at the back and thigh may be the most ideal configuration to provide clinicians with an efficient and relatively unobtrusive way to use to optimize treatment.

Highlights

  • Muscle strengthening exercises consistently demonstrate improvements in the pain and function of adults with knee osteoarthritis, but individual response rates can vary greatly

  • Individuals with knee OA whose baseline, pre-treatment data included low self-reported function, in combination with atypical hip frontal plane kinematics, responded best to the hip strengthening 6-week intervention. These findings demonstrated that baseline patient reported outcome (PRO) measures and objective biomechanical gait data can effectively predict an individual’s treatment response to an exercise intervention

  • The primary objective of this study was to determine if pre-intervention multi-sensor accelerometer data and PRO measures can retrospectively predict postintervention response to a 6-week hip strengthening exercise intervention in a knee OA cohort

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Summary

Introduction

Muscle strengthening exercises consistently demonstrate improvements in the pain and function of adults with knee osteoarthritis, but individual response rates can vary greatly. Identifying individuals who are more likely to respond is important in developing more efficient rehabilitation programs for knee osteoarthritis. The purpose of this study was to determine if pre-intervention multi-sensor accelerometer data (e.g., back, thigh, shank, foot accelerometers) and patient reported outcome measures (e.g., pain, symptoms, function, quality of life) can retrospectively predict post-intervention response to a 6-week hip strengthening exercise intervention in a knee OA cohort. There is growing evidence supporting the need to predict outcomes to exercise interventions in knee OA and identify responders using baseline data. Previous research has demonstrated various clinical measures, including pain and function, can be predictive of response to exercise in OA [5, 6]. The association between subjective clinical measures and an individual’s

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