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A novel approach to studying early knee osteoarthritis illustrates that bilateral medial tibiofemoral osteoarthritis is a heritable phenotype: an offspring study

Lo, Grace H
Richard, Michael J
Cauley, Jane A
Driban, Jeffrey B
Strayhorn, Michael
MacKay, James
Harkey, Matthew S
McAlindon, Timothy E
Jansen, Mary
Green, Stephanie
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Authors
Lo, Grace H
Richard, Michael J
Cauley, Jane A
Driban, Jeffrey B
Strayhorn, Michael
MacKay, James
Harkey, Matthew S
McAlindon, Timothy E
Jansen, Mary
Green, Stephanie
White, Donna L
Kwoh, C Kent
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Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
2022-04-23
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Abstract

To assess the potential of studying offspring of people with and without knee osteoarthritis to understand the risk factors and heritability for knee osteoarthritis. We selected two groups of Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI) participants from one clinical site: (1) participants with bilateral radiographic medial tibiofemoral osteoarthritis and (2) those without tibiofemoral osteoarthritis. We then invited biological offspring ≥ 18 years old to complete an online survey that inquired about osteoarthritis risk factors and symptoms. Among the survey respondents, we recruited ten offspring of members from each group for a clinic visit with bilateral knee posterior-anterior radiographs and magnetic resonance imaging of the right knee. We established contact with 269/413 (65%) eligible OAI participants. Most (227/269, 84%) had ≥ 1 eligible biological offspring, and 213 (94%) were willing to share information about the new family study with their offspring. Our survey was completed by 188 offspring from 110 OAI participants: mean age of 43.0 (10.4) years, mean body mass index of 23.7 (5.9) kg/m2, 65% female. Offspring obesity (OR = 2.7, 95% CI 1.0-7.3), hypertension (OR = 3.7, 95% CI 1.2-11.3), and Heberden's nodes (OR = 3.6, 95% CI 1.0-13.2) were associated with parental osteoarthritis status; however, adjusted models were not statistically significant. Radiographic tibiofemoral osteoarthritis (16/18 knees vs. 2/20 knees) and meniscal abnormalities (7/9 vs. 2/10 index knees) were more common among offspring with parental osteoarthritis status than not. We established the potential of a novel offspring study design within the OAI, and our results are consistent with bilateral radiographic medial tibiofemoral osteoarthritis being a heritable phenotype of osteoarthritis.

Source

Lo GH, Richard MJ, Cauley JA, Driban JB, Strayhorn M, MacKay J, Harkey MS, McAlindon TE, Jansen M, Green S, White DL, Kwoh CK. A novel approach to studying early knee osteoarthritis illustrates that bilateral medial tibiofemoral osteoarthritis is a heritable phenotype: an offspring study. Rheumatol Int. 2022 Jun;42(6):1063-1072. doi: 10.1007/s00296-022-05116-1. Epub 2022 Apr 23. PMID: 35460352; PMCID: PMC9224215.

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DOI
10.1007/s00296-022-05116-1
PubMed ID
35460352
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Funding and Acknowledgements
MSH was supported by the National Institutes of Health (grant no. 5 TL1 TR 1454-3).
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© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
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