Search the Journal

Home

Current Issue

Archives

Guidelines for Authors

Classified Ads

Links

Search PubMed

Subscriptions

Subscriber Registration

Guidelines for Website Users

JRheum Update Service

Contact Info

What WOMAC Pain Score Should Make a Patient Eligible for a Trial in Knee Osteoarthritis?

JOYCE GOGGINS, KRISTIN BAKER, and DAVID FELSON

ABSTRACT.

Objective. To evaluate different Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) pain thresholds as eligibility criteria for a knee osteoarthritis (OA) trial and their effect on number of subjects recruited.

Methods. We screened subjects with knee pain using the Likert version of the WOMAC and scored all subjects based on the severity of pain with each of the 5 WOMAC activities. For each of 4 alternative definitions of eligibility, we tested how many subjects would be eligible for a trial.

Results. Two hundred thirty-four subjects with chronic knee pain completed the WOMAC pain survey. If we required a score of ≥ 4 and at least 2 activities with at least moderate pain, we found 128 of these subjects were eligible. If we required only one activity with moderate pain, the number increased to 139 (by 9%), and further to 161 (by 26%) if we required the same overall WOMAC score but no activity with at least moderate pain. The most common activity causing moderate or greater pain was going up or down stairs.

Conclusion. The number of subjects recruitable for an OA trial depends on the WOMAC pain threshold required. Raising the threshold will lower the number of subjects modestly, but include more persons with moderate to severe pain. Lowering it may include many with only mild pain with activity. (J Rheumatol 2005;32:540-2)

Key Indexing Terms:

KNEE OSTEOARTHRITIS
CLINICAL TRIALS
TRIAL METHODS
WESTERN ONTARIO AND MCMASTER UNIVERSITIES OSTEOARTHRITIS INDEX


From the Boston University Clinical Epidemiology Research and Training Unit and the Arthritis Center, Boston University Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.

Supported by US National Institutes of Health grant AR47785.

J. Goggins, MPH; K.R. Baker, PhD; D.T. Felson, MD, MPH.

Address reprint requests Dr. D.T. Felson, Boston University School of Medicine, A203, 715 Albany Street, Boston, MA 02118, USA. E-mail: dfelson@bu.edu

Submitted July 26, 2004; revision accepted October 13, 2004.




Return to March 2005 Table of Contents



© 2005. The Journal of Rheumatology Publishing Company Limited.
All rights reserved.