BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine (Apr 2024)

Recruitment and baseline characteristics of young adults at risk of early-onset knee osteoarthritis after ACL reconstruction in the SUPER-Knee trial

  • Ewa M Roos,
  • ,
  • Edwin H G Oei,
  • Matthew Alexander,
  • Adam G Culvenor,
  • Matthew Evans,
  • Peter Choong,
  • Richard Page,
  • Steven M McPhail,
  • Mark J Scholes,
  • Susan Liew,
  • Peter Schoch,
  • Emily Cross,
  • Ashley Carr,
  • Richard B Souza,
  • Libby Spiers,
  • Phong Tran,
  • Raphael Hau,
  • Nathan White,
  • Michael A Girdwood,
  • Justin Wong,
  • Melissa Haberfield,
  • Thomas J West,
  • Jusuk Lee,
  • Jamon L Couch,
  • Andrew Hardidge,
  • Laura To,
  • Lara Kimmel,
  • Chris Cimoli,
  • Leanne Roddy,
  • Katelyn Bailey,
  • Leonie Lewis,
  • Hayden Morris,
  • Dirk van Bavel,
  • Simon Talbot,
  • Richard Kjar,
  • Luke Spencer,
  • Sebastian Evans

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjsem-2024-001909
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2

Abstract

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Objectives The study aims to (1) report the process of recruiting young adults into a secondary knee osteoarthritis prevention randomised controlled trial (RCT) after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR); (2) determine the number of individuals needed to be screened to include one participant (NNS) and (3) report baseline characteristics of randomised participants.Methods The SUpervised exercise-therapy and Patient Education Rehabilitation (SUPER)-Knee RCT compares SUPER and minimal intervention for young adults (aged 18–40 years) with ongoing symptoms (ie, mean score of <80/100 from four Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score subscales (KOOS4)) 9–36 months post-ACLR. The NNS was calculated as the number of prospective participants screened to enrol one person. At baseline, participants provided medical history, completed questionnaires (demographic, injury/surgery, rehabilitation characteristics) and underwent physical examination.Results 1044 individuals were screened to identify 567 eligible people, from which 184 participants (63% male) enrolled. The sample of enrolled participants was multicultural (29% born outside Australia; 2% Indigenous Australians). The NNS was 5.7. For randomised participants, mean±SD age was 30±6 years. The mean body mass index was 27.3±5.2 kg/m2, with overweight (43%) and obesity (21%) common. Participants were, on average, 2.3 years post-ACLR. Over half completed <8 months of postoperative rehabilitation, with 56% having concurrent injury/surgery to meniscus and/or cartilage. The most affected KOOS (0=worst, 100=best) subscale was quality of life (mean 43.7±19.1).Conclusion Young adults post-ACLR were willing to participate in a secondary osteoarthritis prevention trial. Sample size calculations should be multiplied by at least 5.7 to provide an estimate of the NNS. The SUPER-Knee cohort is ideally positioned to monitor and intervene in the early development and trajectory of osteoarthritis.Trial registration number ACTRN12620001164987.