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OPTIKNEE 2022: consensus recommendations to optimise knee health after traumatic knee injury to prevent osteoarthritis

Authors :
Jackie L Whittaker
Adam G Culvenor
Carsten Bogh Juhl
Bjørnar Berg
Alessio Bricca
Stephanie Rose Filbay
Pætur Holm
Erin Macri
Anouk P Urhausen
Clare L Ardern
Andrea M Bruder
Garrett S Bullock
Allison M Ezzat
Michael Girdwood
Melissa Haberfield
Mick Hughes
Lina Holm Ingelsrud
Karim M Khan
Christina Y Le
Justin M Losciale
Matilde Lundberg
Maxi Miciak
Britt Elin Øiestad
Brooke Patterson
Anu M Räisänen
Søren T Skou
Jonas Bloch Thorlund
Clodagh Toomey
Linda K Truong
Belle L. van Meer
Thomas James West
James Justin Young
L Stefan Lohmander
Carolyn Emery
May Arna Risberg
Marienke van Middelkoop
Ewa M Roos
Kay M Crossley
Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
General Practice
Surgery
Source :
British Journal of Sports Medicine, 56(24), 1393-1405. BMJ Publishing Group
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The goal of the OPTIKNEE consensus is to improve knee and overall health, to prevent osteoarthritis (OA) after a traumatic knee injury. The consensus followed a seven-step hybrid process. Expert groups conducted 7 systematic reviews to synthesise the current evidence and inform recommendations on the burden of knee injuries; risk factors for post-traumatic knee OA; rehabilitation to prevent post-traumatic knee OA; and patient-reported outcomes, muscle function and functional performance tests to monitor people at risk of post-traumatic knee OA. Draft consensus definitions, and clinical and research recommendations were generated, iteratively refined, and discussed at 6, tri-weekly, 2-hour videoconferencing meetings. After each meeting, items were finalised before the expert group (n=36) rated the level of appropriateness for each using a 9-point Likert scale, and recorded dissenting viewpoints through an anonymous online survey. Seven definitions, and 8 clinical recommendations (who to target, what to target and when, rehabilitation approach and interventions, what outcomes to monitor and how) and 6 research recommendations (research priorities, study design considerations, what outcomes to monitor and how) were voted on. All definitions and recommendations were rated appropriate (median appropriateness scores of 7–9) except for two subcomponents of one clinical recommendation, which were rated uncertain (median appropriateness score of 4.5–5.5). Varying levels of evidence supported each recommendation. Clinicians, patients, researchers and other stakeholders may use the definitions and recommendations to advocate for, guide, develop, test and implement person-centred evidence-based rehabilitation programmes following traumatic knee injury, and facilitate data synthesis to reduce the burden of knee post-traumatic knee OA.

Details

ISSN :
14730480 and 03063674
Volume :
56
Issue :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British journal of sports medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....709d761d83fc23ce4c8ec344bcff7c6b