Session Information
Session Type: Combined Abstract Sessions
Background/Purpose: Knee osteoarthritis (OA), foot pain, and falls are common in older adults and limit mobility. We previously showed that knee OA increases the risk of indoor falls for men and outdoor falls for women. Because foot pain often accompanies knee OA and women report more foot pain than men, understanding whether the increased risk of falls in subjects with knee OA is mediated through foot pain can help us better target interventions to reduce falls. We examined the associations of knee OA with foot pain and falls, and assessed the extent that foot pain may mediate the association between knee OA and the risk of falls, and whether this varies by sex.
Methods: This study included 764 participants from the MOBILIZE Boston Study, a population-based cohort of older adults. Knee OA was assessed at baseline using the ACR clinical criteria. Falls data were prospectively collected using monthly calendars, with phone follow-up to assess location of falls. The presence of foot pain was assessed at baseline. Using negative binomial regression, we examined the sex-specific association of knee OA with the risk of indoor falls and outdoor falls adjusting for confounders. We applied a counterfactual approach of mediation analysis using logistic regression and marginal structural modeling to estimate the direct (through mechanisms excluding foot pain) and indirect (through the foot pain mechanism) effects to determine the extent that foot pain mediates the associations between knee OA and falls.
Results: Among study participants (486 women and 278 men, mean age: 78 years, mean BMI: 27.3), 25% had clinical knee OA. The proportions with foot pain were 35.8% in men with and 14.4% in men without knee OA; foot pain was reported by 33.6% and 24.5% of women with and without OA. Over an average of 2.2 years, 43% in men with and 35% in men without foot pain had ≥ 1 indoor falls while 39% and 36% of the women with and without foot pain had ≥ 1 outdoor falls. The adjusted rate ratio (RR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) for the total effect of knee OA (i.e., including both direct and indirect effects) on risk of indoor falls in men was 1.58 (95% CI: 0.99, 2.52), and on risk of outdoor falls in women was 1.70 (95% CI: 1.21, 2.40). The effect of knee OA on risk of indoor falls in men mediated by foot pain was 0.93 (95% CI: 0.73, 1.32) and on risk of outdoor falls in women was 1.00 (95%CI: 0.81, 1.25).
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Table. The Association between Knee OA and Rate of Indoor and Outdoor Falls and Whether the Effect is Mediated through Foot Pain, by Men and Women
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Rate Ratio (95% CI)
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Falls |
Unadjusted
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Total Effect,1 Adjusted for Confounders |
Effect Mediated through Foot Pain Using Marginal Structural Modeling2 |
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Direct Effect |
Indirect Effect |
% mediated |
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Men |
Indoor |
1.39 (0.83, 2.32) |
1.58 (0.99, 2.52) |
1.58 (1.14, 2.18) |
0.98 (0.73, 1.32) |
0% |
Women |
Outdoor |
1.64 (1.15, 2.34) |
1.70 (1.21, 2.40) |
1.70 (1.33, 2.16) |
1.00 (0.81, 1.25) |
0% |
1Total Effect (TE) is the effect of OA that includes mechanisms with and without foot pain and is adjusted for age, BMI, use of medications (anti-depressants, anti-psychotics, anti-hypertensives, and sedatives), no. of co-morbidities (high blood pressure, stroke, heart disease, diabetes, ulcer/stomach disease, kidney disease, anemia, cancer/skin cancer, rheumatoid arthritis), and history of falls
2The effect of knee OA on risk of falls weighted by the probability of having foot pain conditioned on knee OA status and confounders as stated above: (a) Direct Effect (DE) is the effect of knee OA on risk of falls not through foot pain, adjusting for covariates; (b) Indirect Effect (IE) is the effect of OA mediated by foot pain on risk of falls, adjusting for covariates; (c) % mediated by foot pain , e.g., [RR(TE)-RR(DE)]/[RR(TE)-1]. |
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Disclosure:
U. S. D. T. Nguyen,
None;
Y. Zhang,
None;
J. Niu,
None;
R. H. Shmerling,
None;
D. P. Kiel,
Eli Lilly and Company, Amgen, Merk ,
2,
Elli Lilly and Company, Amgen, Merk, Novartis, Ammonett Pharma,
5;
S. G. Leveille,
None;
C. A. Oatis,
None;
M. T. Hannan,
None.
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ACR Meeting Abstracts - https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/does-foot-pain-mediate-the-effect-of-knee-osteoarthritis-and-risk-of-indoor-and-outdoor-falls-in-older-men-and-women/