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Abstract Number: 1904

“Why Does My Knee Hurt After I Got My Knee Replaced?”: Evaluation of Neuropathic-like Symptoms and Objective Signs of Neuropathy Post-Knee Replacement in Patients with Knee Osteoarthritis

Devin Driscoll1, Priyanka Ballal1, Na Wang2, Laura Frey-Law3, Cora Lewis4, Michael Nevitt5 and Tuhina Neogi1, 1Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, 2Boston University, Boston, MA, 3University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, 4University of Alabama Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, 5University of California San Francisco, Orinda, CA

Meeting: ACR Convergence 2021

Keywords: neuropathy, Osteoarthritis, pain, Total joint replacement

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Session Information

Date: Tuesday, November 9, 2021

Title: Abstracts: Orthopedics, Low Back Pain, & Rehabilitation (1901–1904)

Session Type: Abstract Session

Session Time: 11:15AM-11:30AM

Background/Purpose: Some people with knee osteoarthritis (OA) have persistent pain post-knee replacement, but why this occurs is not fully understood. One possibility is post-surgical neuropathy. We aimed to examine presence of neuropathy with objective clinical assessments and neuropathic-like pain evaluated with the self-reported PainDETECT questionnaire (PDQ) as potential contributors to persistent pain post-knee replacement. We also evaluated the association between objective neuropathy assessments and PDQ.

Methods: We used data from the Multicenter Osteoarthritis (MOST) Study, a NIH-funded longitudinal cohort of individuals with or at risk of knee OA. Participants in the study who had a knee replacement were invited for a study visit ~1 year post-surgery. We obtained clinical assessments for neuropathy (von Frey 2g and 26g monofilaments (allodynia and hypoesthesia) and pin prick (hyperalgesia and hypoesthesia)) at the replaced knee. Each test was assessed 4 times, and considered abnormal if there was no response on ≥3 of the 4 trials (hypoesthesia) or if there was pain on ≥3 of the 4 trials (allodynia for the monofilaments, hyperalgesia for the pin prick). We also obtained the PDQ (0-38) and WOMAC pain (0-20). We defined the patient acceptable symptom state (PASS) based upon published thresholds for WOMAC as ≤5/20 for knee replacement samples. A PDQ score of ≥12 was considered neuropathic-like pain. We evaluated the relation of the clinical neuropathy assessments and the PDQ to achievement of the PASS post-knee replacement, using logistic regression, adjusting for potential confounders (age, sex, BMI, diabetes, depressive symptoms).

Results: We evaluated 171 participants ~1 year post-knee replacement (mean age 69, 62% female, mean BMI 32.6). Overall, 57% had an abnormality on the clinical neuropathy assessment at the replaced knee, with 51% exhibiting hypoesthesia, and 10% exhibiting allodynia or hyperalgesia. The mean post-knee replacement PDQ score was 4.4 (SD 4.7) and 9% had PDQ ≥12, reflecting neuropathic-like pain. The presence of any abnormality on any of the clinical assessments was not associated with achieving the PASS (Table). Similar results were obtained when we analyzed each individual clinical assessment. In contrast, higher PDQ scores and PDQ score ≥12 were significantly associated with higher likelihood of not achieving the PASS (Table). There was no association between having any abnormality on the clinical assessments of neuropathy and PDQ score (OR 1.13, 95% CI 0.75-1.72) or PDQ score ≥12 (OR 0.68 (95% CI 0.17-2.72).

Conclusion: Objective clinical assessments of neuropathy were not associated with worse pain status post-knee replacement, defined as not achieving the PASS for WOMAC. However, higher PDQ scores and having a PDQ score in the ‘neuropathic-like pain’ range were associated with worse pain post-knee replacement. Thus, clinically evident neuropathy does not appear to explain persistent pain post-knee replacement. The PDQ, including in the ‘neuropathic-like pain’ range, does not appear to correlate with clinical assessments of neuropathy. It is possible that the PDQ is reflective of pain severity in general, and potentially nociplastic, rather than neuropathic-like, pain.

Table


Disclosures: D. Driscoll, None; P. Ballal, None; N. Wang, None; L. Frey-Law, None; C. Lewis, None; M. Nevitt, None; T. Neogi, Pfizer/Lilly, 2, Regeneron, 2, Novartis, 2.

To cite this abstract in AMA style:

Driscoll D, Ballal P, Wang N, Frey-Law L, Lewis C, Nevitt M, Neogi T. “Why Does My Knee Hurt After I Got My Knee Replaced?”: Evaluation of Neuropathic-like Symptoms and Objective Signs of Neuropathy Post-Knee Replacement in Patients with Knee Osteoarthritis [abstract]. Arthritis Rheumatol. 2021; 73 (suppl 9). https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/why-does-my-knee-hurt-after-i-got-my-knee-replaced-evaluation-of-neuropathic-like-symptoms-and-objective-signs-of-neuropathy-post-knee-replacement-in-patients-with-knee-osteoarthri/. Accessed .
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