Dr. David Hunter and colleagues reviewed how standard clinical practice diverges from evidence-based recommendations in the management of osteoarthritis. “We present a potential roadmap for optimizing the quality of osteoarthritis healthcare for those developing and enforcing policy decisions, and for clinicians on the frontlines of osteoarthritis management to enact practice change,” commented Dr. Hunter.
Current clinical practice does not reflect recommendations based upon medical evidence. The authors report that therapeutic interventions are primarily aimed at reducing pain and improving joint function by using therapies that target symptoms, but do not facilitate improvement in joint structure or long-term betterment of the disease. Frequently, physicians do not recommend conservative non-pharmacologic management therapies which leads to unnecessary diagnostic imaging and inappropriate referrals to orthopedic surgeons.
Many individuals with osteoarthritis are overweight or obese. The authors support medical evidence which recommend a conservative non-pharmacologic management for osteoarthritis patients. “Weight management and exercise programs tend to be overlooked by clinicians,” said Dr. Hunter. “These conservative approaches are beneficial to patients who adhere to weight-loss and exercise programs.”
Researchers further suggest that surgery be resisted when symptoms can be well managed by other treatment methods. The typical indications for a surgical approach in treating osteoarthritis are debilitating pain and major limitation of functions such as walking, working, or sleeping. However, prior studies have shown that up to 30% of some surgical procedures are inappropriate and recent recommendations suggest routine arthroscopy for knee osteoarthritis management should be avoided—something not reflected in clinical practice.
The study team also noted an overuse of inappropriate diagnostic imaging instead of clinical diagnosis based on history and physical examination. Based on current guidelines imaging should be reserved for instances where a diagnosis is unclear and radiography could rule out other diseases that may produce similar symptoms. Research studies estimate there are 95 million high-tech scans (CT, MRI, PET) done annually in the U.S—representing a $100 billion industry, of which $14 billion has been shouldered by Medicare—and 20% to 50% of these scans were unnecessary as the results failed to help treat or diagnose the patient’s symptoms.
“Eliminating unproven procedures and reducing needless costs is necessary to improve the quality and lower the cost of healthcare in the U.S.,” concluded Dr. Hunter. “The management of osteoarthritis should focus on a patient-centered and provider integrated approach that improves quality and reduces cost by following evidence-based recommendations.”
1. David J. Hunter, et al. Quality of Osteoarthritis Management and the Need for Reform in the US. Arthritis Care and Research; DOI: 10.1002/acr.20278
