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PHYS THER
Vol. 87, No. 12, December 2007, pp. 1716-1727
DOI: 10.2522/ptj.20070042

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CARE IV Conference Series

Effectiveness of Nonpharmacological and Nonsurgical Interventions for Hip Osteoarthritis: An Umbrella Review of High-Quality Systematic Reviews

Rikke H Moe, Espen A Haavardsholm, Anne Christie, Gro Jamtvedt, Kristin Thuve Dahm and Kåre Birger Hagen

RH Moe, PT, is Research Fellow, National Resource Centre for Rehabilitation in Rheumatology, Diakonhjemmet Hospital, PO Box 23 Vindern, 0319 Oslo, Norway
EA Haavardsholm, MD, is Research Fellow, Department of Rheumatology, Diakonhjemmet Hospital
A Christie, PT, MSc, is Research Fellow, National Resource Centre for Rehabilitation in Rheumatology, Diakonhjemmet Hospital
G Jamtvedt, PT, MPH, is Researcher, Norwegian Knowledge Centre for the Health Services, St Olavs Plass, 0103 Oslo, Norway
KT Dahm, PT, MSc, is Research Assistant, Norwegian Knowledge Centre for the Health Services
KB Hagen, PT, PhD, is Researcher, National Resource Centre for Rehabilitation in Rheumatology, Diakonhjemmet Hospital

Address all correspondence to Dr Moe at: rikke.moe{at}nrrk.no


Submitted February 1, 2006; Accepted July 5, 2007


    Abstract
 
An increasing number of systematic reviews are available regarding nonpharmacological and nonsurgical interventions for hip osteoarthritis (OA). The objectives of this article are to identify high-quality systematic reviews on the effect of nonpharmacological and nonsurgical interventions for hip OA and to summarize available high-quality evidence for these treatment approaches. The authors identified and screened 204 reviews. Two independent reviewers using a previously pilot-tested quality assessment form assessed the full text of 58 reviews. Six reviews were of sufficient high quality and could be included for further analyses. There was moderate-quality evidence that acupuncture and diacerein have no effect on pain and function. There was low-quality evidence that strengthening exercises and avocado/soybean unsaponifiables reduce pain and that diacerein decreases radiographic OA progression. There was insufficient high-quality evidence regarding nonpharmacological and nonsurgical interventions for hip OA, and further primary studies and reviews are needed.


    Introduction
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Method
 Results
 Discussion
 Conclusion
 Appendix 1.
 Appendix 2.
 References
 
Osteoarthritis (OA) is a chronic joint condition, characterized by pain, disability, and impairment. The prevalence of hip OA in Western populations over 35 years of age ranges from 3% to 11%.1 The hip is considered one of the most common weight-bearing joints affected by OA.24 Main treatment goals are improved function, symptomatic relief, slowing disease progression, and improving quality of life.5 Treatment for OA may vary depending on various factors,1 and guidelines on the management of OA recommend both pharmacological and nonpharmacological approaches.1 There is limited availability of disease-modifying drugs, and many patients use complementary and alternative medicines and therapies. An increasing number of systematic reviews are available regarding nonpharmacological and nonsurgical interventions, and in this umbrella review we summarize and grade the quality of the available evidence for these treatment approaches.

Decisions on the provision of health care are increasingly based on the available evidence. Patients, health care professionals, and researchers need information about the effectiveness of interventions in order to improve self-management strategies, to improve clinical practice, and to set priorities for research, respectively. Decisions on the reimbursement of health care are increasingly evidence-based. Thus, purchasing organizations and policymakers in health care are in need of reliable information on the effectiveness of interventions.

Summarizing systematic reviews can facilitate decision making about appropriate health care, promote evidence-based treatment, and identify areas for future research in health care. Conclusions based on a systematic review of randomized controlled trials are considered to provide the highest level of evidence about the effectiveness of an intervention.

Based on a review of literature before 2001, Chard and Dieppe concluded, "Nonpharmaceutical therapies for OA have not been researched enough for us to understand their potential benefit."6(p256) There is, to our knowledge, no updated overview available on the effectiveness of nonpharmacological and nonsurgical interventions for hip OA. The aim of this overview is to summarize the available evidence from systematic reviews on the effectiveness of nonpharmacological and nonsurgical interventions for patients with hip OA.


    Method
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Method
 Results
 Discussion
 Conclusion
 Appendix 1.
 Appendix 2.
 References
 
Criteria for Including Reviews

We included systematic reviews with the primary aim of investigating the effects of nonpharmacological and nonsurgical interventions for hip OA published in the English, Dutch, or Scandinavian language. More specifically, the following inclusion criteria were used:

Search Strategy

We searched the Cochrane Library (Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews and DARE), MEDLINE, EMBASE, PEDro, PsychINFO, and CINAHL from 2000 to January 2007 for "hip osteoarthritis/-arthrosis or OA." A broad computerized search strategy was developed (Appendix 1). Reference lists from retrieved reviews were examined.

Retrieved hits were assessed by 2 of the authors (EAH, RHM), who screened the titles and abstracts to identify relevant studies. If doubt occurred, one of the other authors (KBH) was consulted. Potential relevant full-text articles were read by 2 authors (EAH, RHM).

Assessment of Methodological Quality

Two authors (EAH, RHM) independently assessed the methodological quality of the reviews. Disagreement was resolved by discussion. Nine criteria were rated as "met," "unclear/partly met," or "not met" according to a criteria list modified from the Effective Practice and Organisation of Care (EPOC) group within the Cochrane Collaboration (Appendix 2).10 Based on a summary of these 9 criteria, an overall scientific quality was applied to each review, as follows: "minor limitations" (at least 7 of the criteria were met), "moderate limitations" (4–6 of the criteria were met), and "major limitations" (fewer than 4 of the criteria were met). Reviews with major limitations were excluded. The quality assessments of primary studies included in the original reviews are reported in Table 1.


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Table 1. Findings From Included Reviewsa

 
Principles from Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) were used for an overall assessment of the quality of evidence for each intervention.1012 The GRADE concept is based on an assessment of the following criteria: quality of primary studies, design of primary studies, consistency, and directness. An overall assessment of the quality of evidence was based on a summary of these 4 criteria, as presented in Table 2.


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Table 2. Grading Quality of Evidence

 
Data Extraction and Synthesis

Data on effectiveness were extracted from the identified high-quality reviews by 2 of the authors (EAH, RHM); if doubt occurred, one of the other authors (KBH) was consulted. The following criteria were applied when data on effects were extracted:


    Results
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Method
 Results
 Discussion
 Conclusion
 Appendix 1.
 Appendix 2.
 References
 
Study Selection

The literature search identified 204 reviews on hip OA. One hundred sixty-four articles were clearly not relevant based on information from the abstract. For 58 reviews, the full text was retrieved (Tab. 3) and assessed, and 52 reviews were excluded for various reasons (Figure). In the end, we included 6 high-quality systematic reviews, which formed the basis of this umbrella review (Tab. 1). Generally, the methodological quality of the primary studies was low to moderate, often presenting conflicting results (Tab. 4).


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Table 3. Overview of Full-Text Reviews Assessed (Status Included/Excluded)

 

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Figure. Flow chart.

 

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Table 4. Summary of Findings From Included Reviewsa

 
Quality of Findings

Acupuncture.
One high-quality systematic review13 assessed the effect of acupuncture on peripheral joint OA. The conclusions were based on 3 primary studies. On the basis of the meta-analysis, there were no statistically significant results, and thus there was no evidence that acupuncture is beneficial for reducing OA pain. Mean pain reduction was 14.43 (on a 0–100 visual analog scale [VAS]) for the intervention group and 15.31 for the sham treatment group (mean difference of –0.03, 95% confidence interval [CI]=–0.52–0.45).

Avocado/soybean unsaponifiables (ASU).
Avocado/soybean unsaponifiables may reduce pain in people with chronic hip OA. The authors' conclusion is that the evidence for the beneficial effects of ASU on OA is convincing.14 Evidence extracted from the review was based on one primary study that compared ASU with a placebo on VAS pain scores. The mean difference was –13.80 (95% CI=–25.2 to –2.38, P=.02) (on a 0–100 scale) in favor of ASU. In our opinion, current available data on ASU suggest that it may provide possible beneficial effects on OA of the hip, but there is still insufficient evidence to draw firm conclusions. These data suggest that there is low-quality evidence that ASU reduces pain (based on VAS scores) in hip OA.

Diacerein.
Diacerein is a symptomatic, slow-acting herbal therapy for OA. It is a registered medication in the United States, but it is considered a herbal therapy in most other countries; therefore, it was included in this umbrella review. We included 2 reviews on the effect of diacerein.15,16 The conclusions from these reviews on the effect of diacerein on hip OA were based on 7 primary studies; however, evidence on radiographic OA progression was based on the results of one primary study. There was a statistically significant slowing of radiographic OA progression on diacerein versus a placebo (>0.50 mm during 3 years, relative risk=0.84 [95% CI=0.71–0.99], number needed to treat=11 [95% CI=6–167]). However, the adverse effect of diarrhea (42%) was quite common15 and, in our opinion, should not be ignored in clinical practice and further research. There is low-quality evidence that treatment with diacerein reduces radiographic OA progression and moderate-quality evidence that it has no effect on pain, impairment, or incidence of total hip replacement.15

Exercises.
Two high-quality reviews reported on the effects of exercise on hip OA.17,18 Fransen et al17 concluded that no optimal exercise type or dosage could be extrapolated from the review due to little available scientific evidence. Roddy et al18 concluded that there is some evidence that strengthening exercise may be beneficial in reducing pain in people with hip OA, but that there is not enough evidence to make conclusions on the effect on disability. There also is not enough evidence to make conclusions about the effect of aerobic exercise on pain, disability, or health status.18

Other interventions.
It was not possible to extract data on hip OA for chondroitin, glucosamine, or herbal therapies such as Reumalex,* capsaicin, and tipi tea. No relevant high-quality reviews were located on weight loss, thermotherapy, patient education, lifestyle changes, electrotherapy, manual therapy, or joint traction or distraction.


    Discussion
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Method
 Results
 Discussion
 Conclusion
 Appendix 1.
 Appendix 2.
 References
 
This overview (umbrella review) of systematic reviews examining the effectiveness of nonpharmacological and nonsurgical interventions for hip OA is based on an extensive literature search, combined with assessment of study quality and synthesis of findings. We identified 204 potentially relevant manuscripts, but in the end were able to include only 6 high-quality reviews. We found that there is moderate-quality evidence that acupuncture and diacerein have no effect on pain and function. There is low-quality evidence that strengthening exercises and ASU reduce pain and that diacerein decreases radiographic OA progression. Several primary studies might have been published after the reviews included in this overview, and thus their results were not captured. Further updating of reviews and more primary research might confirm our findings and upgrade the evidence. For other interventions and outcomes, the quality of evidence was assessed as low or very low, and new primary studies are needed. For several interventions for hip OA (ie, aquatic exercise; electrotherapy; glucosamine; herbal therapies such as Reumalex, capsaicin, and tipi tea; joint traction and distraction; lifestyle changes; manual therapy; patient education; thermotherapy; and weight loss), no systematic review was identified. Our conclusions were made on basis of statistically significant changes and not clinically relevant differences. Clinical evidence-based advice perhaps instead should be founded on clinically relevant change (eg, pain reduction).

To our knowledge, no such overview has been published on hip OA until now. Umbrella reviews present a synthesis of the highest-quality research evidence available in a condensed format, simply accessible for clinicians and policymakers. There are important limitations in summarizing evidence from systematic reviews only. For every review, primary studies will be missed. Even though reviews should be updated regularly, new studies are published all the time, and most reviews are seldom or never updated. Another issue is that all types of interventions may not be covered by a review, and thus important high-quality primary studies might be overlooked. As the number of published systematic reviews increases, a common finding is that more than one systematic review addresses the same interventions, and conflicts among reviews are emerging.19 Such discordance might cause difficulties for decision makers (including clinicians, policymakers, researchers, and patients) who rely on reviews to help them make choices among different health care interventions.

Grading quality on nonpharmacological treatment approaches for OA is challenging. Nonpharmacological evidence is systematically graded significantly lower methodologically than pharmacological evidence.20 This suggests that it is even more difficult to include nonpharmacological studies and reviews when applying high standards for quality assessments. The type of methodological quality assessment applied determines which studies are included in the review. The number of good primary studies available at the time of the review influences the methodological quality rating, and high-quality primary studies not included in the reviews are not a part of our results.

Depending on the total quality score, we included or excluded reviews for this umbrella review. Total quality scores are presented as a result of summing all 9 quality score items.12 The cutoff point of 4 out of a total of 9 satisfactory items9 might be considered strict and is debatable. High-quality primary studies are warranted in order to draw substantive conclusions regarding the effectiveness of interventions. The studies should be randomized, double-blind (or at least assessor blinded), and placebo controlled. The duration of the intervention should be of adequate length, and examinations should be frequent enough to detect a difference in outcome measures. The follow-up period should be of sufficient length to assess long-term effects. Outcome measures also should be standardized, feasible, valid, reliable, and sensitive to change.

The major finding of this umbrella review is that there is insufficient high-quality evidence regarding nonpharmacological and nonsurgical interventions for hip OA. For knee OA, this seems to be a completely different issue, as there is substantially more available evidence for different treatment approaches for this joint. Many reviews include both knee and hip OA and merge the results. It is beyond the scope of this article to address interventions that have some evidence of effectiveness for knee OA but that have not been tested to date for hip OA. We found it difficult to extract data for hip OA only in most reviews. One may not directly apply findings and evidence from studies of knee OA and extrapolate them to hip OA, as the effectiveness of different therapies may be different for these joints. Thus, our lack of findings for hip OA warrants further primary studies and reviews regarding nonpharmacological and nonsurgical interventions in this area.


    Conclusion
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Method
 Results
 Discussion
 Conclusion
 Appendix 1.
 Appendix 2.
 References
 
There is insufficient high-quality evidence regarding nonpharmacological and nonsurgical interventions for hip OA, and further primary studies and reviews are needed.


    Appendix 1.
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Method
 Results
 Discussion
 Conclusion
 Appendix 1.
 Appendix 2.
 References
 


Figure 1
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Appendix 1. Search Strategy

 

    Appendix 2.
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Method
 Results
 Discussion
 Conclusion
 Appendix 1.
 Appendix 2.
 References
 


Figure 2
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Appendix 2. Criteria for the Assessment of the Quality of the Systematic Reviews10

 


    Footnotes
 
Ms Moe and Dr Hagen provided concept/idea/project design. All authors provided writing. Ms Moe, Dr Haavardsholm, Ms Christie, and Ms Dahm provided data collection. Ms Moe, Dr Haavardsholm, Ms Christie, Ms Jamtvedt, and Ms Dahm provided data analysis. Ms Moe and Dr Haavardsholm provided project management. Ms Jamtvedt and Dr Hagen provided consultation (including review of manuscript before submission).

This work was inspired and facilitated by the CARE III and CARE IV International Conferences.

* Gerard House Ltd, 375 Capability Green, Luton, United Kingdom. Back


    References
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Method
 Results
 Discussion
 Conclusion
 Appendix 1.
 Appendix 2.
 References
 

  1. Zhang W, Doherty M, Arden N, et al. Eular recommendations for hip osteoarthritis: report of a task force of the EULAR Standing Committee for International Clinical Studies Including Therapeutics (ESCISIT). Ann Rheum Dis. 2005;64:669–681.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  2. Ingvarsson T, Hagglund G, Jonsson H Jr, Lohmander LS. Incidence of total hip replacement for primary osteoarthrosis in Iceland 1982–1996. Acta Orthop Scand. 1999;70:229–233.[Web of Science][Medline]
  3. Lanyon P, Muir K, Doherty S, Doherty M. Assessment of a genetic contribution to osteoarthritis of the hip: sibling study. BMJ. 2000;321(7270):1179–1183.
  4. Tepper S, Hochberg MG. Factors associated with hip osteoarthritis: data from the First National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES-I). Am J Epidemol. 1993;137:1081–1088.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  5. Hinton R, Moody RL, Davis AW, Thomas SF. Osteoarthritis: diagnosis and therapeutic considerations. Am J Physician. 2002;65:841–848.
  6. Chard J, Dieppe P. The case for nonpharmacologic therapy of osteoarthritis. Curr Rheumatol Rep. 2001;3:251–257.[Medline]
  7. Altman R, Alarcon G, Appelrouth D, et al. The American College of Rheumatology criteria for the classification and reporting of osteoarthritis of the hip. Arthritis Rheum. 1991;34:505–514.[Web of Science][Medline]
  8. Dequeker J, Dieppe PA. Disorders of bone cartilage and connective tissue. In: Klippel JH, Dieppe PA, eds. Rheumatology. 2nd ed. London, United Kingdom: Mosby; 1998.
  9. International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health: ICF. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization; 2001.
  10. Oxman AD, Guyatt GH. Validation of an index of the quality of review articles. J Clin Epidemiol. 1991;44:1271–1278.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
  11. Atkins D, Best D, Briss PA, et al. Grading quality of evidence and strength of recommendations. BMJ. 2004;328(7454):1490.
  12. Taylor NF, Dodd KJ, Damiano DL. Progressive resistance exercise in physical therapy: a summary of systematic reviews. Phys Ther. 2005;85:1208–1223.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  13. Kwon YD, Pittler MH, Ernst E. Acupuncture for peripheral joint osteoarthritis. Rheumatology (Oxford). 2006;27:1–7.
  14. Little CV, Parsons TJ, Logan S. Herbal therapy for treating osteoarthritis. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2000;(4):CD002947.
  15. Fidelix TS, Soares BG, Trevisani VF. Diacerein for osteoarthritis. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2006;(1):CD005117.[Medline]
  16. Rintelen B, Neumann K, Leeb BF. A meta-analysis of controlled clinical studies with diacerein in the treatment of osteoarthritis. Arch Intern Med, 2006;166:1899–1906.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  17. Fransen M, McConnell S, Bell M. Exercise for osteoarthritis of the hip or knee. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2003;(3):CD004286.[Medline]
  18. Roddy E, Zhang W, Doherty M, et al. Evidence-based recommendations for the role of exercise in the management of osteoarthritis of the hip or knee: the MOVE consensus. Rheumatology (Oxford). 2005;44:67–73.[CrossRef][Medline]
  19. Jadad AR, Cook DJ, Browman GP. A guide to interpreting discordant systematic reviews. Can Med Assoc J. 1997;156:1411–1416.[Abstract]
  20. Boutron I, Tubach F, Giraudeau B, Ravaud P. Methodological differences in clinical trials evaluating nonpharmacological treatments of hip and knee osteoarthritis. JAMA. 2003;290:1062–1070.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

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HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
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