Extended report
Controlled study of the prevalence of radiological osteoarthritis
in clinically unrecognised juxta-articular Paget's disease
P S Helliwella, G Porterb
a Rheumatology and
Rehabilitation Research Unit, University of Leeds, b Airedale General Hospital, Keighley, West
Yorkshire
Correspondence to: Dr P S Helliwell, Rheumatology and Rehabilitation Research Unit, 36 Clarendon Road, Leeds, LS2 9NZ
Accepted for publication 19 August 1999
BACKGROUND
Paget's
disease of bone is common and often undiagnosed in the population. The
association of Paget's disease and osteoarthritis is well described
but only in cases ascertained in secondary and tertiary care centres to
which they have been referred largely because of pain. This study
represents an attempt to confirm the association between Paget's
disease and osteoarthritis in a population previously unknown to have
Paget's disease.
METHODS
Radiographs of
people over 55 years that included the entire pelvis, sacrum, femoral
heads and lumbar spine (mostly plain abdominal radiographs) were
obtained from hospital records for the period 1993-95. Films were
screened by a trained observer and the positive films were reviewed by
a consultant radiologist who also examined a 1 in 10 sample of the
negative films. A sub-sample of 153 confirmed positive cases were
matched for age and sex using cases without Paget's disease and these
pairs were assessed by two observers working in tandem. The hip joints
were scored 0-5 using a modification of the original descriptive
classification of Kellgren and Lawrence and minimum joint space of the
hip was also measured.
RESULTS
Not all cases
were available for assessment. A total of 248 films were included (137 without Paget's, 89 with unilateral and 22 with bilateral disease).
The mean age of the cases and controls was 78.4 years and 77.4 years
respectively with 66/45 male/female cases and 78/59 male/female
controls. One hundred and twenty nine affected hips were available for
comparison with 352 unaffected hips. Median joint space narrowing for
the affected hip was 3 mm (range, 0-5 mm) and for the unaffected hip 4 mm (range, 0-6 mm, Mann-Whitney U test, p=0.00001). Median Kellgren
and Lawrence grade for both groups was 0, with no statistical
difference between the groups (Mann-Whitney U test, p=0.74). In terms
of severity of osteoarthritis, there were 19 instances of grades 2+ in
the unaffected hips, and only five in the affected hips.
CONCLUSIONS
Pagetic
coxopathy is characterised by loss of joint space, which may represent
a secondary chondropathy. Although joint failure may result from this
secondary chondropathy progression may be dependent on non-Pagetic
factors. It is also possible that the usual radiological features of
osteoarthritis may be modified or obscured by the Paget's disease.
© 1999 by Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Whyte, M. P.
(2006). Paget's Disease of Bone. NEJM
355: 593-600
[Full Text]
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