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Abstract Number: 2217

Combined Impacts of Lifestyle Factors on Knee Osteoarthritis in the Osteoarthritis Initiative

Zhaoli (Joy) Dai1, Carrie Brown2, Yuqing Zhang3 and David T. Felson4, 1Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, 2Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, MA, 3School Division of Rheumatology, Allergy, and Immunology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, 4Clinical Epidemiology Research and Training Unit, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA

Meeting: 2017 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting

Date of first publication: September 18, 2017

Keywords: Knee, modifiable risk and osteoarthritis

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Session Information

Date: Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Title: ARHP Osteoarthritis – Clinical Aspects Poster

Session Type: ACR Poster Session C

Session Time: 9:00AM-11:00AM

Background/Purpose: Body mass index (BMI), healthy diet or components, physical activity, and tobacco smoking have been examined independently with risk of knee osteoarthritis (OA). Sleep quality has been shown to be related to chronic pain but its relation to knee OA is unclear. In this study, we evaluated the combined effects of lifestyle factors with or without BMI on risk of knee OA.

Methods: We used data from the Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI), a prospective, multicenter study of 4,796 U.S. men (41.5%) and women [mean (SD) age: 61.2 (9.2) y and BMI: 28.6 (4.8) kg/m2] with or at risk of knee OA. Lifestyle factors assessed at baseline of the study including overall diet (assessed by Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension, DASH), physical activity (Physical Activity Scale for the Elderly, PASE), tobacco smoking (never, former and current smokers), and sleep quality (frequency of restless sleep in the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale, CESD), and BMI (kg/m2) were examined separately for their relationship with risk of incident symptomatic (SxOA) and radiographic (ROA) knee OA. Because physical activity did not show a consistent relationship with knee OA, each participant was scored on all factors except PASE from least healthy (0 point) to healthiest (1 point) for each factor with a total score of 0 (least healthy) to 3 (healthiest) excluding BMI in the composite or a total score of 0 (least healthy) to 4 (healthiest) including BMI (see Table 1). Incident ROA was defined as a new onset of Kellgren and Lawrence grade ≥2 and incident SxOA was defined as new cases of both ROA and a painful knee on most days in past month. We applied Generalized Estimating Equations to account for correlations of both knees in each person in multivariable regression models to assess the association between the lifestyle composite and risk of knee OA using 0 (least healthy) as the referent group.

Results: Up to 96 months in OAI, we identified 1340 knees with incident SxOA among 7662 knees and 625 knees with incident ROA among 5861 knees after excluding knees with missing values of OA status or knees with prevalent OA. When BMI was excluded in the composite, a higher score was associated with a lower risk of SxOA (p-trend<0.0001), but no association was found with ROA. When BMI was included in the composite, there was a significant inverse relationship with risks of SxOA and ROA (p-trend<0.0001) (see Table 2).

Conclusion: Data from the OAI suggested that persons who lived a healthy lifestyle independent of BMI and physical activity had a lower risk of symptomatic knee OA, but the combined impacts of diet, sleep and tobacco smoking was not related to risk of radiographic knee OA.

Table 1. Lifestyle factors at baseline and their score criteria in the Osteoarthritis Initiative

Lifestyle factor

Score

Interpretation of score

Percentage (%)

Sleep

0

Restless sleep at least 1 day/week in CESD

58.7

1

Restless sleep <1 day/week in CESD

Smoking tobacco

0

Former or current smokers

21.0

1

Never smokers

Diet quality-DASH

0

Lower 75%

75.0

1

Upper 25%

BMI

0

≥25 (kg/m2)

76.2

1

<25 and ≥18.5(kg/m2)

Table 2. Combined impacts of lifestyle factors in relation to incident knee OA

Without BMI (range: 0-3)

Odds Ratio (95% CI)2

With BMI (range: 0-4)

Odds Ratio (95% CI)

Incident SxOA

n/N #knee1

n/N #knee

0

151/712

1.0

0

135/608

1.0

1

664/3386

0.83 (0.61, 1.13)

1

593/2671

0.91 (0.70, 1.17)

2

429/2824

0.63 (0.45, 0.88)

2

146/1286

0.59 (0.45, 0.77)

3

96/740

0.52 (0.34, 0.78)

3

231/1724

0.39 (0.29, 0.53)

4

18/261

0.23 (0.13, 0.38)

P-trend

<0.0001

<0.0001

Incident ROA

0

60/515

1.0

0

51/433

1.0

1

287/2588

1.00 (0.65, 1.54)

1

248/1978

0.98 (0.68, 1.41)

2

225/2177

0.96 (0.61, 1.53)

2

238/2182

0.81 (0.56, 1.19)

3

53/581

0.83 (0.48, 1.44)

3

80/1040

0.55 (0.36, 0.85)

4

8/228

0.22 (0.10, 0.48)

P-trend

0.38

<0.0001

1Number of knees of incident OA/total number of knees

2Model adjusted for age (years), sex (men vs. women), race (white vs. non-white), BMI (kg/m2) (for composite excluding BMI only), total energy intake (kcal/day), education level (college and above vs. below college), physical activity (PASE), and CESD without restless sleep.


Disclosure: Z. Dai, None; C. Brown, None; Y. Zhang, None; D. T. Felson, None.

To cite this abstract in AMA style:

Dai Z, Brown C, Zhang Y, Felson DT. Combined Impacts of Lifestyle Factors on Knee Osteoarthritis in the Osteoarthritis Initiative [abstract]. Arthritis Rheumatol. 2017; 69 (suppl 10). https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/combined-impacts-of-lifestyle-factors-on-knee-osteoarthritis-in-the-osteoarthritis-initiative/. Accessed .
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