Development of osteoarthritis in patients with degenerative meniscal tears treated with exercise therapy or surgery: a randomized controlled trial. Berg, B., Roos, E. M., Englund, M., Kise, N. J., Tiulpin, A., Saarakkala, S., Engebretsen, L., Eftang, C. N., Holm, I., & Risberg, M. A. Osteoarthritis and Cartilage, 28(7):897–906, 2020.
Development of osteoarthritis in patients with degenerative meniscal tears treated with exercise therapy or surgery: a randomized controlled trial [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate progression of individual radiographic features 5 years following exercise therapy or arthroscopic partial meniscectomy as treatment for degenerative meniscal tear. DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial including 140 adults, aged 35-60 years, with a magnetic resonance image verified degenerative meniscal tear, and 96% without definite radiographic knee osteoarthritis. Participants were randomized to either 12-weeks of supervised exercise therapy or arthroscopic partial meniscectomy. The primary outcome was between-group difference in progression of tibiofemoral joint space narrowing and marginal osteophytes at 5 years, assessed semi-quantitatively by the OARSI atlas. Secondary outcomes included incidence of radiographic knee osteoarthritis and symptomatic knee osteoarthritis, medial tibiofemoral fixed joint space width (quantitatively assessed), and patient-reported outcome measures. Statistical analyses were performed using a full analysis set. Per protocol and as treated analysis were also performed. RESULTS: The risk ratios (95% CI) for progression of semi-quantitatively assessed joint space narrowing and medial and lateral osteophytes for the surgery group were 0.89 (0.55-1.44), 1.15 (0.79-1.68) and 0.77 (0.42-1.42), respectively, compared to the exercise therapy group. In secondary outcomes (full-set analysis) no statistically significant between-group differences were found. CONCLUSION: The study was inconclusive with respect to potential differences in progression of individual radiographic features after surgical and non-surgical treatment for degenerative meniscal tear. Further, we found no strong evidence in support of differences in development of incident radiographic knee osteoarthritis or patient-reported outcomes between exercise therapy and arthroscopic partial meniscectomy. TRIAL REGISTRATION: www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT01002794).
@article{berg_development_2020,
	title = {Development of osteoarthritis in patients with degenerative meniscal tears treated with exercise therapy or surgery: a randomized controlled trial},
	volume = {28},
	issn = {1522-9653},
	shorttitle = {Development of osteoarthritis in patients with degenerative meniscal tears treated with exercise therapy or surgery},
	url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joca.2020.01.020},
	doi = {10.1016/j.joca.2020.01.020},
	abstract = {OBJECTIVE: To evaluate progression of individual radiographic features 5 years following exercise therapy or arthroscopic partial meniscectomy as treatment for degenerative meniscal tear.
DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial including 140 adults, aged 35-60 years, with a magnetic resonance image verified degenerative meniscal tear, and 96\% without definite radiographic knee osteoarthritis. Participants were randomized to either 12-weeks of supervised exercise therapy or arthroscopic partial meniscectomy. The primary outcome was between-group difference in progression of tibiofemoral joint space narrowing and marginal osteophytes at 5 years, assessed semi-quantitatively by the OARSI atlas. Secondary outcomes included incidence of radiographic knee osteoarthritis and symptomatic knee osteoarthritis, medial tibiofemoral fixed joint space width (quantitatively assessed), and patient-reported outcome measures. Statistical analyses were performed using a full analysis set. Per protocol and as treated analysis were also performed.
RESULTS: The risk ratios (95\% CI) for progression of semi-quantitatively assessed joint space narrowing and medial and lateral osteophytes for the surgery group were 0.89 (0.55-1.44), 1.15 (0.79-1.68) and 0.77 (0.42-1.42), respectively, compared to the exercise therapy group. In secondary outcomes (full-set analysis) no statistically significant between-group differences were found.
CONCLUSION: The study was inconclusive with respect to potential differences in progression of individual radiographic features after surgical and non-surgical treatment for degenerative meniscal tear. Further, we found no strong evidence in support of differences in development of incident radiographic knee osteoarthritis or patient-reported outcomes between exercise therapy and arthroscopic partial meniscectomy.
TRIAL REGISTRATION: www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT01002794).},
	language = {eng},
	number = {7},
	journal = {Osteoarthritis and Cartilage},
	author = {Berg, B. and Roos, E. M. and Englund, M. and Kise, N. J. and Tiulpin, A. and Saarakkala, S. and Engebretsen, L. and Eftang, C. N. and Holm, I. and Risberg, M. A.},
	year = {2020},
	pmid = {32184135},
	keywords = {Degenerative meniscal tears, Exercise therapy, Knee arthroscopy, Knee osteoarthritis, Partial meniscectomy, Rehabilitation},
	pages = {897--906},
}

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