Objective:
To compare the efficacy of Hyruan ONE, hylan G-F 20, and saline in reducing pain and improving function in patients with symptomatic knee osteoarthritis.
Approach:
- Study Design: A single-center, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial involving 276 patients with symptomatic knee osteoarthritis.
- Intervention: Patients received a single intra-articular injection of either Hyruan ONE, hylan G-F 20, or saline.
- Outcome Measures: Primary outcomes included pain at rest and during motion measured on a 100-mm visual analog scale, with secondary outcomes including various functional and quality of life assessments.
- Statistical Analysis: Linear mixed-effects models were used to analyze repeated measurements, accounting for treatment group, time, and demographic covariates.
Key Findings:
- No statistically significant differences in pain or functional outcomes between Hyruan ONE, hylan G-F 20, and saline.
- Pain scores decreased from baseline in all groups, but without significant between-group differences.
- Most patient-reported outcomes improved from baseline, but Timed Up and Go performance did not show significant improvement.
- Rescue corticosteroid use was similar across groups, with no significant differences.
Interpretation:
The improvement in the saline group aligns with previous evidence of responses to intra-articular saline injections.
Limitations:
- 24-week follow-up period with completion rates of approximately 73% to 80%.
- Approximately 90% of participants had Kellgren-Lawrence grade II or III disease, excluding those with significant mechanical-axis deviation.
- Adverse events were not systematically assessed.
Conclusion:
Intra-articular injections of ultra-high MW and HMW cross-linked HAs did not demonstrate superior efficacy in pain reduction or functional improvement compared with saline in patients with symptomatic knee OA.
Sources:
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