Osteoarthritis and Cartilage Open (Sep 2020)

The use of technology in the subcategorisation of osteoarthritis: a Delphi study approach

  • Claire Mennan,
  • Timothy Hopkins,
  • Alastair Channon,
  • Mark Elliott,
  • Brian Johnstone,
  • Timor Kadir,
  • John Loughlin,
  • Mandy Peffers,
  • Andrew Pitsillides,
  • Nidhi Sofat,
  • Caroline Stewart,
  • Fiona E. Watt,
  • Eleftheria Zeggini,
  • Cathy Holt,
  • Sally Roberts

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
p. 100081

Abstract

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Objective: This UK-wide OATech Network + consensus study utilised a Delphi approach to discern levels of awareness across an expert panel regarding the role of existing and novel technologies in osteoarthritis research. To direct future cross-disciplinary research it aimed to identify which could be adopted to subcategorise patients with osteoarthritis (OA). Design: An online questionnaire was formulated based on technologies which might aid OA research and subcategorisation. During a two-day face-to-face meeting concordance of expert opinion was established with surveys (23 questions) before, during and at the end of the meeting (Rounds 1, 2 and 3, respectively). Experts spoke on current evidence for imaging, genomics, epigenomics, proteomics, metabolomics, biomarkers, activity monitoring, clinical engineering and machine learning relating to subcategorisation. For each round of voting, ≥80% votes led to consensus and ≤20% to exclusion of a statement. Results: Panel members were unanimous that a combination of novel technological advances have potential to improve OA diagnostics and treatment through subcategorisation, agreeing in Rounds 1 and 2 that epigenetics, genetics, MRI, proteomics, wet biomarkers and machine learning could aid subcategorisation. Expert presentations changed participants’ opinions on the value of metabolomics, activity monitoring and clinical engineering, all reaching consensus in Round 2. X-rays lost consensus between Rounds 1 and 2; clinical X-rays reached consensus in Round 3. Conclusion: Consensus identified that 9 of the 11 technologies should be targeted towards OA subcategorisation to address existing OA research technology and knowledge gaps. These novel, rapidly evolving technologies are recommended as a focus for emergent, cross-disciplinary osteoarthritis research programmes.

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