Does the use of hyaluronic acid viscosupplementation prolong the viability of a patient's knee with oseteoarthritis, delaying the need for surgical management? A systematic review of the literature

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2016
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Andres, Kristian
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Introduction: Osteoarthritis of the knee is a very common complaint in the aging population and a significant burden on not only the patient, causing pain, decreased mobility and a lowered quality of life, but also the healthcare system with frequent primary care visit associated with its symptoms. We investigated the use of viscosupplementation with hyaluronic acid and how long improvement was sustained, preventing the need for costly total knee arthroplasty. Methods: Using Medline (OVID) search strategy from 1946 until February 2016 was developed with they guidance of library personnel trained in research. We searched for studies that looked specifically at the amount of time that a patient would be able to continue using their knee with appropriate level of function and pain before the gold-standard of treatment via total knee arthroplasty would need to be performed. Titles and abstracts of articles were read to determine if appropriate and four articles met the inclusion criteria which meant the articles must look specifically at how long the use of viscosupplementation prevented the need for total knee arthroplasty. Results: In all four articles the time to total knee arthroplasty was increase over no treatment. In all the studies they calculated average time to total knee arthroplasty based on the point in which half the knees treated by viscosupplementation required surgical intervention. The range in these studies saw a prolongation between 370 to 919 days over the control groups which were patients whom did not receive viscosupplementation. It was also found that in patients who were considered positive responders, the more courses of viscosupplementation received, the longer the delay of surgical intervention. Conclusion: Based on the research reviewed it can be said that the use of viscosupplementation vs. no treatment or failed conservative treatment delays the need for total knee arthroplasty in patient with knee osteoarthritis. Further research must be done with more high quality studies using controls to improve the accuracy of this information. Also, further research should be done to determine if these positive results would in turn lead to savings for the Canadian healthcare system and how best to implement them.
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