Extended report
Users of oestrogen replacement therapy have more knee cartilage
than non-users
A E Wlukaa, S R Davisb, M Baileya, S L Stuckeyc, F M Cicuttinia
a Department of
Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Monash University Medical School,
Alfred Hospital, Prahran, Victoria, Australia, b Jean
Hailes Foundation, Clayton, Victoria, Australia, c MRI Unit, Department of Radiology, Alfred
Hospital
Correspondence to: Associate Professor Cicuttini, Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Alfred Hospital, Prahran, Victoria, 3181, Australia flavia.cicuttini{at}med.monash.edu.au
Accepted for publication 8 August 2000
BACKGROUND
Osteoarthritis
(OA) is increasingly prevalent in the years after menopause.
Epidemiological data suggest that the use of oestrogen replacement
therapy (ERT) may protect against knee OA.
AIM
To test the
hypothesis that long term ERT (longer than five years) is associated
with increased knee cartilage in postmenopausal women.
METHODS
The study
involved 81 women (42 current users (
five years) of ERT and 39 who
had never used it). Articular cartilage volumes were determined by
processing images acquired in the sagittal plane using a T1 weighted
fat suppressed magnetic resonance sequence on an independent work station.
RESULTS
After bone
size had been accounted for, ERT users had higher tibial cartilage
volume than non-users. Total tibial cartilage volume was 7.7% (0.23 ml) greater in the group of ERT users (2.98 (0.47) ml; mean (SD)) than
in the untreated group (2.75 (0.50) ml). The difference, after
adjustment for the significant explanatory factors (years since
menopause, body mass index, age at menopause, and smoking), between the
ERT users and non-users increased from 0.23 ml to 0.30 ml (95%
confidence interval 0.08 to 0.52, p=0.008). These differences persisted
after exclusion of women with OA.
CONCLUSIONS
After
adjustment for multiple confounders, women using long term ERT have
more knee cartilage than controls. This may indicate that ERT prevents
loss of knee articular cartilage.
© 2001 by Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
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