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Improving the Effectiveness of Exercise Therapy for Adults With Knee Osteoarthritis: A Pragmatic Randomized Controlled Trial (BEEP Trial)

Nadine E. Foster, Elaine Nicholls, Melanie Holden, Emma L. Healey, Elaine M. Hay

2023Archives of Rehabilitation Research and Clinical Translation12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Objective: To investigate whether knee osteoarthritis (OA) related pain and function can be improved by offering enhanced physical therapist-led exercise interventions. Design: Three-arm prospectively designed pragmatic randomized controlled trial. Setting: General practices and National Health Service physical therapy services in England. Participants: 514 adults (252 men, 262 women) aged ≥45 years with a clinical diagnosis of knee osteoarthritis (N=514). Mean Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) scores at baseline were 8.4 for pain and 28.1 for function. Interventions: Participants were individually randomized (1:1:1 allocation) to usual physical therapy care (UC control: up to 4 sessions of advice and exercise over 12 weeks), individually tailored exercise (ITE: individualized, supervised, and progressed lower limb exercises, 6-8 sessions over 12 weeks), or targeted exercise adherence (TEA: transitioning from lower limb exercise to general physical activity, 8-10 contacts over 6 months). Main Outcome Measures: Primary outcomes were pain and physical function measured by the WOMAC at 6 months. Secondary outcomes were measured at 3, 6, 9, 18, and 36 months. Results: Participants receiving UC, ITE, and TEA all experienced moderate improvement in pain and function. There were no significant differences between groups at 6 months (adjusted mean differences (95% confidence intervals): pain UC vs ITE, -0.3 (-1.0 to 0.4), UC vs TEA, -0.3 (-1.0 to 0.4); function UC vs ITE, 0.5 (-1.9 to 2.9), UC vs TEA, -0.9 (-3.3 to 1.5)), or any other time-point. Conclusions: Patients receiving UC experienced moderate improvement in pain and function; however, ITE and TEA did not lead to superior outcomes. Other strategies for patients with knee osteoarthritis to enhance the benefits of exercise-based physical therapy are needed.

Topics & Concepts

WOMACMedicineOsteoarthritisPhysical therapyRandomized controlled trialConfidence intervalPsychological interventionKnee painRehabilitationClinical trialPhysical medicine and rehabilitationAlternative medicineInternal medicinePsychiatryPathologyOsteoarthritis Treatment and MechanismsTotal Knee Arthroplasty OutcomesLower Extremity Biomechanics and Pathologies
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