Title: Validation%20of%20the%20OMERACT-OARSI%20Responder%20Index:%20Responders%20Have%20Better%20Overall%20Health%20Status%20than%20Non-responders
1Validation of the OMERACT-OARSI Responder
IndexResponders Have Better Overall Health
Status than Non-responders
- Marc C. Hochberg, Barker Bausell, Kevin Frick,
Donald Steinwachs and Brian Berman - University of Maryland School of Medicine and The
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health,
Baltimore, Maryland, USA
2Objective
- To validate the OMERACT-OARSI Responder Index
- Test the hypothesis that patients with knee OA
participating in a clinical trial who fulfil the
OMERACT-OARSI Responder Index will have better
overall health status as measured by both
arthritis-specific and general measures.
3Patient Cohort
- 570 patients with symptomatic knee OA enrolled in
a randomized, 3-arm, 6-month, parallel group
trial - Traditional Chinese acupuncture
- Sham acupuncture
- Education/attention control
4Outcome Measures
- WOMAC Osteoarthritis Index
- Likert format
- Patient Global Assessment
- Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ)
- Medical Outcomes Study (MOS) SF-36
- European Quality of Life (EuroQoL)
5Data Analysis
- Data from all 3 treatment groups pooled for this
analysis - Responders identified using OMERACT-OARSI
Responder Index - Pham T et al J Rheumatol 2003301648-54
- Outcomes in responders compared to those in
non-responders using Students t-test - Analysis conducted on ITT population
- Sensitivity analysis on completers only
6Baseline Characteristics (N570)
- Age
- Mean (SD) 65.5 (8.6) years
- Sex
- Men (36), Women (64)
- Race
- White (69), Black (29), Other (2)
- Marital status Married (60)
- Education High-school graduates (91)
7Baseline Data (N570)
- WOMAC OA Index
- Pain 43.5 (17.0)
- Function 45.3 (17.6)
- Total 45.6 (16.6)
- HAQ
- Pain 1.4 (0.7)
- Disability 0.62 (0.41)
- EuroQoL
- EQ-5D 0.63 (0.22)
- EQ-VAS 75.9 (16.7)
- MOS SF-36
- Phys Funct 40.3 (22.3)
- Role Phys 44.3 (40.1)
- Bodily Pain 45.2 (19.9)
- Gen Health 70.6 (17.9)
- Role Emot 73.3 (37.5)
- Vitality 54.2 (20.8)
- Ment Heal 79.4 (14.2)
- Social Act 79.3 (23.0)
8Comparison of Outcomes by OMERACT-OARSI Response
- 236 (41.4) of 570 patients randomized achieved
an OMERACT-OARSI Response at the end of study - 61 of 386 completers
9WOMAC Scores by OMERACT-OARSI Response
10HAQ Scores by OMERACT-OARSI Response
11EuroQoL Scores by OMERACT-OARSI Response
12SF-36 Scores by OMERACT-OARSI Response
13Comparison of Outcomes by OMERACT-OARSI Response
- 234 (43) patients randomized achieved an
OMERACT-OARSI Response at the end of study - 61 of patients completing the study
- Responders had significantly better
arthritis-specific and general health status than
non-responders based on the WOMAC, HAQ, SF-36 and
EuroQoL instruments (P lt 0.001 for all
comparisons)
14Conclusion
- These data validate the OMERACT-OARSI Responder
Index. - Results unchanged when analysis performed only
with completers (N 386) - OMERACT-OARSI Responder Index should be
considered as primary outcome for clinical trials
of symptomatic therapies in patients with OA.
15State Measures - 2
- Minimal Clinically Important Improvement (MCII)
- Smallest change in measurement that signifies an
important improvement in a patients symptom - 75ile of distribution of change score among
those who had good or excellent improvement with
therapy - Tubach F et al Ann Rheum Dis 20056429-33
16State Measures - 2
- Patient Acceptable Symptom State (PASS)
- Value in a measurement of a patients symptom
beyond which the patient considers herself well - 75ile of distribution of absolute score among
those who are satisfied with their current state
after therapy - Tubach F et al Ann Rheum Dis 20056434-7
17State Measures in OA Patients
- MCII
- Pain 177 (33)
- Function 220 (41)
- Global 136 (25)
- PASS
- Pain 241 (44)
- Function 221 (41)
- Global 177 (33)
Highly significant association between achieving
an OMERACT-OARSI Response and having either an
MCII or a PASS for each of the 3 domains,
especially pain and function.
18Measurement of clinical outcomes
- WOMAC Osteoarthritis Index
- Lequesne Algofunctional Index
- Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score
(KOOS) - Roos EM, Lohmander LS HQLO 2003I64
- http//www.hqlo.com/content/1/1/64
19Knee Rating Scales for Athletic Patients
- Modified Lysholm Scale
- Cincinnati Knee Rating System
- AAOS Sports Knee Rating Scale
- ADL Scale of the Knee Outcome Survey
- Single Assessment Numeric Evaluation
- Knee Injury and OA Outcome Score
- QoL Outcome Measure for Chronic ACL Def
- International Knee Documentation Committee
- Marx RG Arthroscopy 2003191103-8
20KOOS
- Evaluates both short- and long-term consequences
of knee injury - 42 items in 5 separately scored domains
- Pain
- Other symptoms
- Function in daily living
- Function in sport and recreation
- Knee-related quality of life
21KOOS
- Validated in several populations
- Surgical reconstruction of ACL
- Knee arthroscopy
- Meniscectomy 16 years previously
- Total knee arthroplasty
- Autologous cartilage transplantation
22KOOS
- Reliable
- Responsive
- Effect sizes gt 1.0 for all 5 subscales in
patients undergoing arthroplasty and tibial
osteotomy - Effect sizes gt 0.5 for all 5 subscales in
patients undergoing ACL reconstruction and
meniscectomy
23KOOS vs. WOMAC
- KOOS contains WOMAC pain, function and stiffness
subscales (Likert v3.0) - KOOS adds 18 questions covering sport and
recreational function, knee-related quality of
life and other symptoms - Larger effect sizes with KOOS
- Younger subjects with knee injury
- Older subjects with total knee arthroplasty
24Summary
- There are numerous options for assessing
clinically relevant outcomes in trials of
products used for cartilage repair - KOOS is the recommended self-report measure of
pain, function and QoL - http//www.koos.nu
25Other Potential Clinical Outcomes
- Time to joint replacement surgery
- Time to indication for joint replacement surgery
- Time to fulfil criteria for joint replacement
surgery - Time to failure of therapy
- Proportion of patients with success on Rx
26Clinically relevant outcomes
- Time to TJR
- TJR is a cost-effective procedure
- Recommended after failure of medical Rx
- Limitations
- Variability in decision to perform TJR
- Length of surgical waiting lists (queue)
- Patient related factors, including willingness
- Racial/ethnic and gender disparities
27Clinically relevant outcomes
- Time to decision to perform TJR
- Same limitations re surgeons variability
- Time to fulfil criteria to perform TJR
- Objective scoring based on pain, loss of function
and health-related QoL - Appropriateness criteria
- Subject of a SIG during OMERACT 7
- Maillefert JF et al J Rheumatol in press.
- Follow-up meeting was held in Paris 17/12/04
28Clinically relevant outcomes
- Time to treatment failure
- Prespecified amount of joint space loss
- Significant worsening of pain and/or function
- Proportion of patients with success
- Lack of loss of joint space by a prespecified
amount - Clinically relevant improvement in pain and/or
function
29Prevention of the Occurrence of Incident OA
- Definition of incident OA
- Structural
- Arthroscopy
- Radiography
- MRI
- Symptomatic
30ACI Compared with Microfracture in the Knee
- RCT 80 patients followed for 2 years
- Similar clinical outcomes
- Lysholm and VAS pain score
- Significant difference in SF-36 PCS favoring
microfracture group - Similar structural outcomes
- Arthroscopy
- Histology of cartilage biopsies
- Knutsen et al J Bone Jt Surg 200486-A455-64
31Thank you for your time and attention.