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Association of hip pain with radiographic evidence of hip osteoarthritis: diagnostic test study

Study question Is there concordance between hip pain and radiographic hip osteoarthritis? Methods In this diagnostic test study, pelvic radiographs were assessed for hip osteoarthritis in two cohorts: the Framingham Osteoarthritis Study (community of Framingham, Massachusetts) and the Osteoarthritis...

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Autores principales: Kim, Chan, Nevitt, Michael C, Niu, Jingbo, Clancy, Mary M, Lane, Nancy E, Link, Thomas M, Vlad, Steven, Tolstykh, Irina, Jungmann, Pia M., Felson, David T, Guermazi, Ali
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4667842/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26631296
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.h5983
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author Kim, Chan
Nevitt, Michael C
Niu, Jingbo
Clancy, Mary M
Lane, Nancy E
Link, Thomas M
Vlad, Steven
Tolstykh, Irina
Jungmann, Pia M.
Felson, David T
Guermazi, Ali
author_facet Kim, Chan
Nevitt, Michael C
Niu, Jingbo
Clancy, Mary M
Lane, Nancy E
Link, Thomas M
Vlad, Steven
Tolstykh, Irina
Jungmann, Pia M.
Felson, David T
Guermazi, Ali
author_sort Kim, Chan
collection PubMed
description Study question Is there concordance between hip pain and radiographic hip osteoarthritis? Methods In this diagnostic test study, pelvic radiographs were assessed for hip osteoarthritis in two cohorts: the Framingham Osteoarthritis Study (community of Framingham, Massachusetts) and the Osteoarthritis Initiative (a multicenter longitudinal cohort study of osteoarthritis in the United States). Using visual representation of the hip joint, participants reported whether they had hip pain on most days and the location of the pain: anterior, groin, lateral, buttocks, or low back. In the Framingham study, participants with hip pain were also examined for hip pain with internal rotation. The authors analysed the agreement between radiographic hip osteoarthritis and hip pain, and for those with hip pain suggestive of hip osteoarthritis they calculated the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of radiographs as the diagnostic test. Study answer and limitations In the Framingham study (n=946), only 15.6% of hips in patients with frequent hip pain showed radiographic evidence of hip osteoarthritis, and 20.7% of hips with radiographic hip osteoarthritis were frequently painful. The sensitivity of radiographic hip osteoarthritis for hip pain localised to the groin was 36.7%, specificity 90.5%, positive predictive value 6.0%, and negative predictive value 98.9%. Results did not differ much for hip pain at other locations or for painful internal rotation. In the Osteoarthritis Initiative study (n=4366), only 9.1% of hips in patients with frequent pain showed radiographic hip osteoarthritis, and 23.8% of hips with radiographic hip osteoarthritis were frequently painful. The sensitivity of definite radiographic hip osteoarthritis for hip pain localised to the groin was 16.5%, specificity 94.0%, positive predictive value 7.1%, and negative predictive value 97.6%. Results also did not differ much for hip pain at other locations. What this study adds Hip pain was not present in many hips with radiographic osteoarthritis, and many hips with pain did not show radiographic hip osteoarthritis. Most older participants with a high suspicion for clinical hip osteoarthritis (groin or anterior pain and/or painful internal rotation) did not have radiographic hip osteoarthritis, suggesting that in many cases, hip osteoarthritis might be missed if diagnosticians relied solely on hip radiographs. Funding, competing interests, data sharing See the full paper on thebmj.com for funding. The authors have no competing interests. Additional data are available from bevochan@bu.edu.
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spelling pubmed-46678422015-12-07 Association of hip pain with radiographic evidence of hip osteoarthritis: diagnostic test study Kim, Chan Nevitt, Michael C Niu, Jingbo Clancy, Mary M Lane, Nancy E Link, Thomas M Vlad, Steven Tolstykh, Irina Jungmann, Pia M. Felson, David T Guermazi, Ali BMJ Research Study question Is there concordance between hip pain and radiographic hip osteoarthritis? Methods In this diagnostic test study, pelvic radiographs were assessed for hip osteoarthritis in two cohorts: the Framingham Osteoarthritis Study (community of Framingham, Massachusetts) and the Osteoarthritis Initiative (a multicenter longitudinal cohort study of osteoarthritis in the United States). Using visual representation of the hip joint, participants reported whether they had hip pain on most days and the location of the pain: anterior, groin, lateral, buttocks, or low back. In the Framingham study, participants with hip pain were also examined for hip pain with internal rotation. The authors analysed the agreement between radiographic hip osteoarthritis and hip pain, and for those with hip pain suggestive of hip osteoarthritis they calculated the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of radiographs as the diagnostic test. Study answer and limitations In the Framingham study (n=946), only 15.6% of hips in patients with frequent hip pain showed radiographic evidence of hip osteoarthritis, and 20.7% of hips with radiographic hip osteoarthritis were frequently painful. The sensitivity of radiographic hip osteoarthritis for hip pain localised to the groin was 36.7%, specificity 90.5%, positive predictive value 6.0%, and negative predictive value 98.9%. Results did not differ much for hip pain at other locations or for painful internal rotation. In the Osteoarthritis Initiative study (n=4366), only 9.1% of hips in patients with frequent pain showed radiographic hip osteoarthritis, and 23.8% of hips with radiographic hip osteoarthritis were frequently painful. The sensitivity of definite radiographic hip osteoarthritis for hip pain localised to the groin was 16.5%, specificity 94.0%, positive predictive value 7.1%, and negative predictive value 97.6%. Results also did not differ much for hip pain at other locations. What this study adds Hip pain was not present in many hips with radiographic osteoarthritis, and many hips with pain did not show radiographic hip osteoarthritis. Most older participants with a high suspicion for clinical hip osteoarthritis (groin or anterior pain and/or painful internal rotation) did not have radiographic hip osteoarthritis, suggesting that in many cases, hip osteoarthritis might be missed if diagnosticians relied solely on hip radiographs. Funding, competing interests, data sharing See the full paper on thebmj.com for funding. The authors have no competing interests. Additional data are available from bevochan@bu.edu. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2015-12-02 /pmc/articles/PMC4667842/ /pubmed/26631296 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.h5983 Text en © Kim et al 2015 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.
spellingShingle Research
Kim, Chan
Nevitt, Michael C
Niu, Jingbo
Clancy, Mary M
Lane, Nancy E
Link, Thomas M
Vlad, Steven
Tolstykh, Irina
Jungmann, Pia M.
Felson, David T
Guermazi, Ali
Association of hip pain with radiographic evidence of hip osteoarthritis: diagnostic test study
title Association of hip pain with radiographic evidence of hip osteoarthritis: diagnostic test study
title_full Association of hip pain with radiographic evidence of hip osteoarthritis: diagnostic test study
title_fullStr Association of hip pain with radiographic evidence of hip osteoarthritis: diagnostic test study
title_full_unstemmed Association of hip pain with radiographic evidence of hip osteoarthritis: diagnostic test study
title_short Association of hip pain with radiographic evidence of hip osteoarthritis: diagnostic test study
title_sort association of hip pain with radiographic evidence of hip osteoarthritis: diagnostic test study
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4667842/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26631296
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.h5983
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