Efficacy of Intra-Articular Hypertonic Dextrose (Prolotherapy) for Knee Osteoarthritis: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Author/s: 
Sit, R.W.S., Wu, R.W., Reeves, K.D., Chan, D.C.C., Yip, B.H.K., Chung, V.C.H., Wong, S.
Date Added: 
May 13, 2020
Journal/Publication: 
Annals of Family Medicine
Publication Date: 
May 1, 2020
Issue: 
3
Volume: 
18
Pages: 
235-242
Type: 
Clinical Research Results
Format: 
Article
DOI (1): 
10.1370/afm.2520

RPR Commentary

In this relatively small RCT, prolotherapy was more effective than saline injections for relieving pain and improving function in patients with OA of the knee at 4, 6, and 12 months.  James W. Mold, MD, MPH

Abstract

 

Purpose: To test the efficacy of intra-articular hypertonic dextrose prolotherapy (DPT) vs normal saline (NS) injection for knee osteoarthritis (KOA).

Methods: A single-center, parallel-group, blinded, randomized controlled trial was conducted at a university primary care clinic in Hong Kong. Patients with KOA (n = 76) were randomly allocated (1:1) to DPT or NS groups for injections at weeks 0, 4, 8, and 16. The primary outcome was the Western Ontario McMaster University Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC; 0-100 points) pain score. The secondary outcomes were the WOMAC composite, function and stiffness scores; objectively assessed physical function test results; visual analogue scale (VAS) for knee pain; and EuroQol-5D score. All outcomes were evaluated at baseline and at 16, 26, and 52 weeks using linear mixed model.

Results: Randomization produced similar groups. The WOMAC pain score at 52 weeks showed a difference-in-difference estimate of -10.34 (95% CI, -19.20 to -1.49, P = 0.022) points. A similar favorable effect was shown on the difference-in-difference estimate on WOMAC function score of -9.55 (95% CI, -17.72 to -1.39, P = 0.022), WOMAC composite score of -9.65 (95% CI, -17.77 to -1.53, P = 0.020), VAS pain intensity score of -10.98 (95% CI, -21.36 to -0.61, P = 0.038), and EuroQol-5D VAS score of 8.64 (95% CI, 1.36 to 5.92, P = 0.020). No adverse events were reported.

Conclusion: Intra-articular dextrose prolotherapy injections reduced pain, improved function and quality of life in patients with KOA compared with blinded saline injections. The procedure is straightforward and safe; the adherence and satisfaction were high.

Keywords: intra-articular hypertonic dextrose; knee osteoarthritis; normal saline; prolotherapy; randomized clinical trial.

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