A Prospective Study Evaluating Intra-Articular Hyaluronic Acid (1 ml) for Ankle Osteoarthritis

Category: Ankle Arthritis Introduction/Purpose: Early ankle arthritis can result in disabling symptoms and loss of function. However the degree of arthritis may not be severe enough or the symptoms severe enough to merit a fusion or replacement. For other patients they may wish to delay surgery to a...

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Main Authors: Alastair Younger MB ChB, ChM, FRCSC, Kevin Wing MD, FRCS(C), Andrea Veljkovic MD, FRCS(C), Murray Penner MD, FRCS(C)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-09-01
Series:Foot & Ankle Orthopaedics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2473011417S000421
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spelling doaj-0c4618ca0a6b4d9dbca88180f9bf5bf02020-11-25T03:19:58ZengSAGE PublishingFoot & Ankle Orthopaedics2473-01142017-09-01210.1177/2473011417S000421A Prospective Study Evaluating Intra-Articular Hyaluronic Acid (1 ml) for Ankle OsteoarthritisAlastair Younger MB ChB, ChM, FRCSCKevin Wing MD, FRCS(C)Andrea Veljkovic MD, FRCS(C)Murray Penner MD, FRCS(C)Category: Ankle Arthritis Introduction/Purpose: Early ankle arthritis can result in disabling symptoms and loss of function. However the degree of arthritis may not be severe enough or the symptoms severe enough to merit a fusion or replacement. For other patients they may wish to delay surgery to avoid financial issues with recovery time. Many of these patients have also been treated with NSAIDs, physiotherapy and bracing with variable effect. Stabilized long chain Hyaluronic acid (NASHA) has been used successfully in the knee, and has given a longer duration of effect compared to steroid injection. The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of hyaluronic acid in the ankle for sustainable symptom relief. Methods: A power analysis determined that a minimum of 29 patients would be required to appropriately power the study. A total of 37 adult patients with KL grade II and III ankle arthritis were enrolled in the study at a single institution. Patients recruited via a newspaper advertisement and from the surgical clinics and and screened for standard inclusion and exclusion criteria. The VAS pain preoperatively had to be greater than 30 / 100 mm. Outcomes were recorded at baseline, weeks 6, 12 and 26. The injection was performed after the baseline assessment using 1 ml of Hyaluronic acid NASHA (Q-Med AB, Uppsala, Sweden; DUROLANE 10 mg / mL) with or without local anesthetic to the skin. Outcomes included a VAS from the AOS scale for pain and disability, review of adverse events, physical exam, and use of rescue medication. Results: 35 of 37 patients completed the study. At baseline the VAS pain was 7.2 (SD +/-1.8). At 6 weeks the pain score was 5.4 (+/-2.5) improving by 1.8 points with a 26% improvement. At 12 weeks the pain score was 5.3 (+/-2.7) for a 29% improvement. At week 26 the pain score was 5 (+/- 2.7) for a 32% improvement. 4 adverse events were recorded – one patient reported increased pain after injection. One reported pain and swelling, one reported inflammation, and one pain after injection. Conclusion: This prospective cohort study shows promise for the use of Hyaluronic acid for the treatment of ankle arthritis with relief of symptoms up to 26 weeks after injection. The injection was safe for all 37 patients, although one patient reported pain and dropped out of the study. We would support the use of Hyaluronic acid for the treatment for moderate ankle arthritis. An RCT would be merited based on this study to compare results with placebo or cortisone injection.https://doi.org/10.1177/2473011417S000421
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alastair Younger MB ChB, ChM, FRCSC
Kevin Wing MD, FRCS(C)
Andrea Veljkovic MD, FRCS(C)
Murray Penner MD, FRCS(C)
spellingShingle Alastair Younger MB ChB, ChM, FRCSC
Kevin Wing MD, FRCS(C)
Andrea Veljkovic MD, FRCS(C)
Murray Penner MD, FRCS(C)
A Prospective Study Evaluating Intra-Articular Hyaluronic Acid (1 ml) for Ankle Osteoarthritis
Foot & Ankle Orthopaedics
author_facet Alastair Younger MB ChB, ChM, FRCSC
Kevin Wing MD, FRCS(C)
Andrea Veljkovic MD, FRCS(C)
Murray Penner MD, FRCS(C)
author_sort Alastair Younger MB ChB, ChM, FRCSC
title A Prospective Study Evaluating Intra-Articular Hyaluronic Acid (1 ml) for Ankle Osteoarthritis
title_short A Prospective Study Evaluating Intra-Articular Hyaluronic Acid (1 ml) for Ankle Osteoarthritis
title_full A Prospective Study Evaluating Intra-Articular Hyaluronic Acid (1 ml) for Ankle Osteoarthritis
title_fullStr A Prospective Study Evaluating Intra-Articular Hyaluronic Acid (1 ml) for Ankle Osteoarthritis
title_full_unstemmed A Prospective Study Evaluating Intra-Articular Hyaluronic Acid (1 ml) for Ankle Osteoarthritis
title_sort prospective study evaluating intra-articular hyaluronic acid (1 ml) for ankle osteoarthritis
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Foot & Ankle Orthopaedics
issn 2473-0114
publishDate 2017-09-01
description Category: Ankle Arthritis Introduction/Purpose: Early ankle arthritis can result in disabling symptoms and loss of function. However the degree of arthritis may not be severe enough or the symptoms severe enough to merit a fusion or replacement. For other patients they may wish to delay surgery to avoid financial issues with recovery time. Many of these patients have also been treated with NSAIDs, physiotherapy and bracing with variable effect. Stabilized long chain Hyaluronic acid (NASHA) has been used successfully in the knee, and has given a longer duration of effect compared to steroid injection. The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of hyaluronic acid in the ankle for sustainable symptom relief. Methods: A power analysis determined that a minimum of 29 patients would be required to appropriately power the study. A total of 37 adult patients with KL grade II and III ankle arthritis were enrolled in the study at a single institution. Patients recruited via a newspaper advertisement and from the surgical clinics and and screened for standard inclusion and exclusion criteria. The VAS pain preoperatively had to be greater than 30 / 100 mm. Outcomes were recorded at baseline, weeks 6, 12 and 26. The injection was performed after the baseline assessment using 1 ml of Hyaluronic acid NASHA (Q-Med AB, Uppsala, Sweden; DUROLANE 10 mg / mL) with or without local anesthetic to the skin. Outcomes included a VAS from the AOS scale for pain and disability, review of adverse events, physical exam, and use of rescue medication. Results: 35 of 37 patients completed the study. At baseline the VAS pain was 7.2 (SD +/-1.8). At 6 weeks the pain score was 5.4 (+/-2.5) improving by 1.8 points with a 26% improvement. At 12 weeks the pain score was 5.3 (+/-2.7) for a 29% improvement. At week 26 the pain score was 5 (+/- 2.7) for a 32% improvement. 4 adverse events were recorded – one patient reported increased pain after injection. One reported pain and swelling, one reported inflammation, and one pain after injection. Conclusion: This prospective cohort study shows promise for the use of Hyaluronic acid for the treatment of ankle arthritis with relief of symptoms up to 26 weeks after injection. The injection was safe for all 37 patients, although one patient reported pain and dropped out of the study. We would support the use of Hyaluronic acid for the treatment for moderate ankle arthritis. An RCT would be merited based on this study to compare results with placebo or cortisone injection.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2473011417S000421
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