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July
2004
Older patients prefer low-risk OA treatment
Many older patients with knee
osteoarthritis prefer treatments with lower risks of adverse
side effects — including muscle-strengthening exercise
and joint protection techniques — even if those treatments
are not the most effective, according to an article in the
June 28 issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
Knee osteoarthritis (OA) is
a leading cause of disability in the elderly, according to
information in the article. Treatment for knee OA, which includes
surgery, weight loss, muscle-strengthening exercise, and joint
protection techniques, is aimed at improving or maintaining
knee function and targeting symptoms. Medication options provide
modest effectiveness for decreasing pain associated with knee
OA, and vary greatly with respect to their cost and risk of
toxicity.
Liana Fraenkel, M.D., M.P.H.,
from Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and colleagues interviewed
100 consecutive patients with symptomatic knee osteoarthritis
(79 percent female; 92 percent white; average age, 70 years)
about their OA medication preferences. The researchers surveyed
the importance of specific medication characteristics —
including type of drug (prescription or over-the-counter),
administration (dose and method), time to benefit, response
rate, common adverse effects, risk of ulcer, and monthly co-payments
— and then measured the impact of these characteristics
on the percentage of patients preferring the following treatments:
• Non-selective non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs),
• Cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitors
(cox-2 inhibitors),
• Glucosamine and/or
chondroitin sulfate,
• Opioid derivatives
and/or
• Capsaicin.
Despite being described as
less effective than the other drug treatments, capsaicin —
a topical agent that has been used in treating pain —
was preferred by 44 percent of participants, assuming the
patient was responsible for full cost of the medication. Of
the medication traits studied, risk of common adverse side
effects and gastrointestinal ulcer had the greatest impact
on patients’ choice, each accounting for approximately
19 percent of total relative importance.
Non-selective NSAIDs, the most
widely prescribed medication for arthritis patients, was found
to be the least-preferred option across almost all circumstances.
“We conclude that many
older patients with knee OA might be willing to accept less
effective treatments in exchange for a lower risk of adverse
effects,” the authors write.
Source: American Medical
Association, Archives of Internal Medicine, 2004; 164: 1299-1304.
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