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Clinical Trial Summary

To identify differences between patients with OA of the hip in an early stage and a healthy control group.

Hypothesis 1.1 There are significant differences between patients with OA of the hip in an early stage and a healthy control group in terms of functional capacity, biomechanical / kinematic variables, muscle strength and range of motion.

Osteoarthritis (OA) is by far the most prevalent joint disorder today. The knee and the hip are large joints to be targeted and is an important cause of pain and disability. In knee OA, it is shown that significant risk factors in developing the disease are quadriceps weakness, joint instability, and changes in joint loading. A few studies on hip OA have shown altered gait pattern, which affect joint loading, and one study has shown weakness in abductors, adductors and flexors around the hip. As joint loading and muscle weakness are important factors in the development in knee OA, it might as well be factors influencing OA in the hip. The purpose of this case-control studies was to compare hip OA patients to a healthy control group regarding biomechanical and clinical differences. Patients with hip pain, activity limitations (Harris Hip Score 60-95 p) and radiographically verified hip OA was included. The healthy control group will have a Harris Hip Score of 100 p. One hundred and ten patients and fifty controls will be asked to fill in questionnaires on pain, stiffness and physical function (WOMAC), quality-of-life (SF-36 v2), self-efficacy (Lorigue), and activity (PASE) in addition to perform 6-minute walk test, sub-maximal cardiovascular function, strength, and hip range of motion tests. Additionally, Qualisys Pro reflex 3D motion analysis system will be used during walking, one-leg standing, and raising from a chair on a sub-group of 40 patients and 20 controls.


Clinical Trial Description

Aim 1 To identify differences between patients with OA of the hip in an early stage and a healthy control group.

Hypothesis 1.1 There are significant differences between patients with OA of the hip in an early stage and a healthy control group in terms of functional capacity, biomechanical / kinematic variables, muscle strength and range of motion.

Material and methods.

Design. A case-control study

Inclusion / exclusion criteria. Twenty-five patients diagnosed with unilateral or bilateral OA of the hip will be recruited from the Norwegian Sport Medicine Centre, Diakonhjemmet and from the Orthopaedic Centre, Ullevål University Hospital, Oslo, Norway. PPatients will also be recruited through ads in newspaper and brief information in national tv. Radiographiccally verified OA of the hip will be in accordance with Danielsson's criteria for minimal joint space. Patients will be excluded if they have a history of resent trauma or functional impairment to the lower limbs or diseases which might interfere with participation.

Control subjects will have no health problems and no injuries or functional impairment to the lower limbs and will be matched to the patients with OA of the hip by age and gender.

Outcome measures.

Background descriptive data, including anthropometrical (age, gender, height, weight) and sociodemographic information (marital status, social support, leisure time, sick-leave, physical activity, occupational background, co-morbidity, hip pain history, former treatment for hip pain / OA), and consumption of analgetics will be collected by questionnaire at inclusion. Outcome measures will cover all functional levels defined by the World Health Organization's (WHO) International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health (2002) and will include:

Pain and activity limitation: Hip pain will be assessed by a horizontal visual analogue scale (VAS) (0-100 mm; 0 represents "no pain" and 100 represents "as much pain he/she can possibly imagine") (Revill et al. 1976). Both self-reported and observed functional capacity will be evaluated. Self-reported functional capacity will be registered by the disease-specific questionnaire Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) (Bellamy et al. 1988). Observed functional capacity will be assessed by the 6 minute walking test (Enright, 2003), where the patient is instructed to walk as quickly/fast as possible forth and back on a 20 m course, and by the subaximal bikecycle test (Astrand, 1986) where the heart-rate is registered on a constant load and speed.

Health related quality of life and pain management: Quality of life will be assessed by using the generic questionnaire SF-36 v.2 (Jenkinson, 1999). Self-efficacy beliefs for pain will be registered using the self-efficacy subscale for controlling pain developed by Lorig et al (Lorig et al. 1989). The scale is found to be valid and reproducible in patients with chronic arthritis (Lorig et al. 1989).

Gait analysis: Kinematic data will be collected using Qualisys pro-reflex motion analysis system with eight cameras at a sampling frequency of 240 Hz and synchronized with two force platforms sampling at a rate of 960Hz (AMTI Model LG6). All markers will be present during standing calibration. During the dynamic trials all the anatomical markers will be removed.

Subjects will be instructed to walk along a 17m walkway in which two force plates are embedded. The subjects will walk at their self-selected pace and practice trials will be performed until the subject could contact the force platforms with only one foot (not targeting) and with a constant velocity within 5% deviation. Speed will be measured by photoelectric beams located 3.06m apart, midway along the walkway. Experienced physical therapists will be responsible for patient information, instruction and data collection.

Muscle strength: Muscle strength of hip extensors, -flexors, knee flexors and -extensors, and ankle flexors and extensors, in addition to ankle plantar flexion will be tested isokinetically according to the manufacturer's manual (Cybex 6000). Isokinetic muscle testing is commonly used in the literature in various patient populations (Inkster et al. 2003; Holm et al. 2000b; Brox et al. 1995; Lephart et al. 1993; Newton et al. 1993). The test protocol will consist of five repetitions at an angular velocity of 60 deg/sec at maximal performance. In order to prepare patients for the test, eliminate learning effects and to obtain stable performance, patients will be given four test-repetitions at the same speed before the main test. An experienced physical therapist will perform the test.

Range of motion: Range of motion will be measured by goniometer according to standard procedures (Holm et al. 2000a).

Follow up: Data will be collected at inclusion (patients and control subjects) and after the intervention period (patients).

Blinding: Personnel responsible for the intervention will not be involved in data collection.

Registration of complications, drop-outs and adherence: Complications and drop-outs will be registered by persons responsible for data collection. Adherence to the exercise protocol will be registered by the physical therapists responsible for the treatment.

Power calculations: Lack of information from studies of comparable OA populations in the literature makes it difficult to make precise power calculations. Assumption of sample size (110 patients and 50 control subjects) is therefore based on results from former studies in patients with OA of the knee or mixed populations of knee- and hip patients.

Statistical analysis: Both non-parametric and parametric statistics will be used for data analysis.

Ethics: All patients and control subjects will receive written and oral information about the study and sign an informed consent before inclusion (enclosed). The project will be performed according to recommendations of the Helsinki Declaration and application will be sent to the Regional Committee of Medical Research Ethics in Oslo in November 2003. ;


Study Design

Observational Model: Case Control, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00319124
Study type Observational
Source Oslo University Hospital
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date April 2005
Completion date October 2010

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