Press Release
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Amy Molnar
(201) 748-8844/8852 (fax)
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Embargo Date:
March 3, 2005 at 12:01AM, EST
Arthritis & Rheumatism News Alert
A Shallow Hip Socket Predicts Osteoarthritis of the Hip
Long-Term Study Suggests Moderate Acetabular Dysplasia, a Developmental Condition
of Hip Instability, as an Independent Risk Factor for the Disease
Osteoarthritis (OA) of the hip is one of the leading causes of disability
among elderly men and women. This progressive joint disease involves multiple
factors, including genes, age, gender, hormones, as well as body mass index,
mechanical stress. In addition, a developmental condition known as acetabular
dysplasia can contribute to disease risk. Often present at birth, acetabular
dysplasia is marked by a shallow hip socket, making the hip unstable and, in
extreme cases, prone to dislocation. Severe acetabular dysplasia has been linked
to premature hip OA. The influence of moderate acetabular dysplasia on the
development of hip OA is less clear.
To assess the role of moderate acetabular dysplasia in the onset of hip OA,
a research team in the Netherlands conducted a long-term study on 835 women
and men ages 55 years and older. Their results, published in the March 2005
issue of Arthritis & Rheumatism ( http://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/arthritis),
indicate acetabular dysplasia, even when assessed at a mild degree, as a strong
independent risk factor for OA of the hip, even in an elderly population.
Led by Dr. M Reijman and supported by the Dutch Arthritis Association, the
research team drew its subjects from The Rotterdam Study, a comprehensive investigation
of the incidence of, and risk factors for, chronic disabling diseases. At baseline,
the participants had no signs of radiographic OA of the hip. Women comprised
57 percent of the sample, whose mean age was 65 years. At baseline, all participants
underwent radiographs in order to detect the presence and assess the depth
and degree, using the center-edge angle, of acetabular dysplasia. Participants
were also evaluated for current BMI and history of heavy, physically demanding
work.
Over a follow-up period averaging six years, participants were examined, through
radiographs, for definite signs – osteophytes and joint space narrowing – of
hip OA. Calculating odds ratios, subjects with acetabular dysplasia, from moderate
to mild, had a 4.3 times increased risk for radiographic OA of the hip. Among
subjects with acetabular dysplasia, the incidence and severity of hip OA was
greater among women, as well as associated with a high-stress mechanical workload
and a low BMI.
Based on this study's findings, Dr. Reijman concludes that acetabular dysplasia,
at any measurable depth or degree, is a strong, independent indicator for the
development of OA of the hip. “Furthermore,” he notes, “the associations between
acetabular dysplasia and incident radiographic OA of the hip may even be underestimated
because of the relatively high mean age of the study population. In other words,
we assume that in a younger population the association between acetabular dysplasia
and OA may be even higher.”
Article : “Acetabular Dysplasia Predicts Incident Osteoarthritis of the Hip:
The Rotterdam Study,” M. Reijman, J.M.W. Hazes, H.A.P. Pols, B.W. Koes, and S.M.A.
Bierma-Zeinstra,
Arthritis & Rheumatism, March 2005; 52:3; pp.
787-793.