Extended reports
Radiographic assessment of symptomatic knee osteoarthritis in the
community: definitions and normal joint space
Rheumatology Unit, City Hospital, Hucknall
Road, Nottingham NG5 1PB
Correspondence to: Dr P Lanyon.
Accepted for publication 6 August
1998
OBJECTIVE
To evaluate radiographic features of
osteoarthritis (OA) to determine which is more closely associated with
knee pain and hence might be used as a radiographic definition of OA in
the community. To evaluate joint space width in normal subjects.
METHODS
452 subjects from a case-control
community study of knee pain (294 women, 158 men, mean age 62 years,
range 40-80) underwent AP standing and mid-flexion skyline
radiographs. Joint space width, measured by metered calliper to 0.1 mm,
and graded individual features of OA (osteophyte 0-3, narrowing 0-3,
sclerosis 0-1, cysts 0-1) were assessed in all three compartments
independently by two observers who were blind to clinical status.
Subjects were categorised as having knee pain by a positive response to
both parts of the question "Have you ever had pain in or around the knee on most days for at least a month? If so, have you experienced any
pain during the last year?"
RESULTS
Intraobserver reproducibility for joint
space width measurements was to within ±0.4 mm (95% CI for limits of
agreement);
values for grading were >0.7. One hundred and twenty
five subjects were without knee pain or osteophyte. In these
radiographically normal knees, mean joint space width varied according
to sex but did not decrease with age. A definition based on the
presence of osteophyte
grade 1 in any compartment was more efficient
at predicting pain than definitions based on either measurement or grading of joint space; there was no clear threshold of joint space
loss at which the likelihood of pain substantially increased. The
presence of osteophyte at the patellofemoral joint (PFJ) was more
sensitive but less specific than at the tibiofemoral joint (TFJ); the
addition of PFJ assessment improved sensitivity from 38.1% to 62.3%
with a reduction in specificity from 82.7% to 58.7% for the presence
of knee pain.
CONCLUSION
Among men and women in the community,
osteophyte is the radiographic feature that associates best with knee
pain. Radiographic assessment of both TFJ and PFJ should be included in
all community studies. Joint space loss is not a feature of
asymptomatic aging, and there is not a biological cut off for joint
space width below which the likelihood of knee pain markedly increases.
© 1998 by Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
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