Chang 1993.
Study characteristics | ||
Methods |
Study design: multicentre, parallel‐group, two‐arm randomised controlled trial Setting: the Rheumatology‐Orthopedic Knee Clinic of the Northwestern Medical Faculty Foundation and the Division of Rheumatology of the Lutheran General Medical Group, Illinois, USA Trial time period: not reported Interventions: arthroscopic surgery versus non‐arthroscopic joint lavage Sample size calculations: authors did not describe how the sample size was estimated Analysis: intention‐to‐treat analysis |
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Participants |
Number of participants
Inclusion criteria
In participants with bilateral disease, the more symptomatic knee was designated the study knee. Exclusion criteria
Baseline characteristics Arthroscopic surgery group (N = 18 included in analyses)
Joint lavage group (N = 14 included in analyses)
Pre‐treatment group differences: the baseline demographic, clinical and functional characteristics were similar between the two groups except for the initial AIMS Physical Activity Score (a statistically significant difference between groups (P < 0.05) was identified). |
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Interventions |
Arthroscopic surgery group Arthroscopic surgery plus physical therapy and analgesia. Arthroscopy was done under general anaesthesia. A diagnostic evaluation was performed, and the anatomic findings were recorded on a standardised form. Following this evaluation, any of the following interventions were performed under arthroscopic guidance: (1) debridement of torn meniscus and removal of meniscal and cruciate ligament fragments; (2) removal of proliferative synovium; and (3) excision of loose articular cartilage fragments. Osteochondral lesions were not drilled. All participants received continuous saline lavage during the procedure and were routinely instructed in partial weightbearing precautions to continue for 10 days following the procedure. If an osteochondral lesion was detected in a weight‐bearing area, this period of protection was increased to 3 weeks. Prior to and following surgery, participants assigned to this group received only non‐narcotic analgesia and physical therapy, consisting of strengthening and flexibility exercises and gait training. Non‐arthroscopic (closed‐needle joint) lavage group Closed‐needle joint lavage plus physical therapy and analgesia. Participants assigned to this group received non‐narcotic analgesia and physical therapy identical to the arthroscopy group. In addition, participants received a tidal knee lavage procedure which was chosen to offset the potentially strong placebo effect of a surgical procedure and to control for the effects on pain and disability of the lavage procedure that occur during the arthroscopic procedure. Tidal knee lavage was performed as described by Ike and colleagues (Ike 1992) under local anaesthesia. A total of 1 litre of saline was injected into and aspirated from the knee in aliquots of 40 cc to 120 cc, depending on the size of the knee capsule. Post‐intervention Participants in both groups received non‐narcotic analgesia and physical therapy. |
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Outcomes | Outcomes were measured at baseline and at 3 and 12 months of follow‐up Clinical parameters
Pain and functional status measures
Global measures
Economic measures
Outcomes included in this review at 3 and 12 months
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Notes |
Funding: supported by grant 9040 from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, by MAC grant AR‐30692 from the NIH (NIAMS), and by the Percy Surgical Research Trust of Lutheran General Hospital Trial registration: not reported Adverse events: unclear if measured; not reported Knee surgery (replacement or osteotomy): not reported Progression of knee OA: not reported Withdrawals: 2/34 (6%), 1 (5%) from arthroscopy group and 1 (7%) from lavage group, dropped out after randomisation but before treatment commenced and were excluded from analysis at 3 and 12 months. Missing data at 12 months imputed by trialists using 3‐month outcomes : 7/32 (22%), 5 (28%) from arthroscopy group, 2 (14%) from lavage group.
Treatment non‐adherence: 3/18 participants from arthroscopy group withdrew before surgery; one improved between enrolment and planned surgery so cancelled surgery, and two developed other medical illnesses that precluded surgery. Data analysis: missing standard deviations for outcomes used in this review: contacted authors but no response received. We imputed SDs. |
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Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Unclear risk | Used a modification of the pre‐randomisation design described by Zelen (Zelen 1981). Eligible participants were asked if they would accept an arthroscopic procedure if it was offered. Subjects who answered 'yes' were randomly assigned to arthroscopy or lavage and then asked to accept the assigned therapy. The randomisation plan was stratified by study site. No description of sequence generation process provided |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Unclear risk | Insufficient description of the method of concealment. Use of assignment 'envelopes' described but unclear if safeguards used (e.g. sealed, sequentially numbered, opaque) |
Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias) All outcomes | High risk | Blinding of participants and investigators was not done |
Blinding of outcome assessor Self‐reported outcomes | High risk | Blinding of participants was not done; hence, there was a risk of bias in the measurement of subjective outcomes of pain, physical function, physical activity, social activity, depression, and anxiety (AIMS subscales) and participants' global assessment |
Blinding of outcome assessor Assessor‐reported outcome (knee replacement) | Low risk | Blinding of outcome assessors was done. Participants were asked not to disclose their treatment assignment to assessors and to cover actual, or potential, arthroscopy scars |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | Low risk | Withdrawals (n = 2) were balanced in number across groups and for similar reasons. Missing data at 12 months were imputed using appropriate methods |
Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Unclear risk | Trial registration not done and study protocol not available. Insufficient information to judge high or low risk |
Other bias | Low risk | No other biases apparent |