A Malaysian Delphi consensus on managing knee osteoarthritis

The 2013 Malaysian Clinical Practice Guidelines on the Management of Osteoarthritis (OA) recommend a linear step-up approach to manage knee OA. However, patients with knee OA often require a multimodal approach to address OA-related pain symptoms and functional limitations. This consensus aimed to p...

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Main Authors: Yeap, Swan Sim, Abu Amin, Syamsul Rizal, Baharuddin, Hazlyna, Koh, Kar Chai, Lee, Joon Kiong, Lee, Verna Kar Mun, Yahaya, Nor Hamdan Mohamad, Tai, Cheh Chin, Tan, Maw Pin
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Published: BMC 2021
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/34296/
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spelling my.um.eprints.342962022-09-09T06:42:47Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/34296/ A Malaysian Delphi consensus on managing knee osteoarthritis Yeap, Swan Sim Abu Amin, Syamsul Rizal Baharuddin, Hazlyna Koh, Kar Chai Lee, Joon Kiong Lee, Verna Kar Mun Yahaya, Nor Hamdan Mohamad Tai, Cheh Chin Tan, Maw Pin R Medicine RA Public aspects of medicine The 2013 Malaysian Clinical Practice Guidelines on the Management of Osteoarthritis (OA) recommend a linear step-up approach to manage knee OA. However, patients with knee OA often require a multimodal approach to address OA-related pain symptoms and functional limitations. This consensus aimed to provide doctors with an updated set of evidence-based, clinical experience-guided recommendations to manage knee OA.MethodsA multi-speciality expert panel consisting of nine Malaysian physicians from different healthcare settings who manage a diverse OA patient population was convened. Using a combination of the ADAPTE process and modified Delphi method, the panel reviewed current evidence on the management of knee OA and synthesised a set of nine recommendations on the management of knee OA, supported by an algorithm that summarises the consensus' core messages.ResultsA multimodal intervention strategy is the mainstay of OA management and the choice of any single or multimodal intervention may vary over the course of the disease. Overall, a non-pharmacological core treatment set of patient education, weight loss and exercise is recommended for all patients. When pharmacotherapy is indicated, symptomatic slow-acting drugs for osteoarthritis are recommended at the early stage of disease, and they can be paired with physical therapy as background treatment. Concurrent advanced pharmacotherapy that includes non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, intraarticular injections and short-term weak opioids can be considered if patients do not respond sufficiently to background treatment. Patients with severe symptomatic knee OA should be considered for knee replacement surgery. Management should begin with specific treatments with the least systemic exposure or toxicity, and the choice of treatment should be determined as a shared decision between patients and their team of healthcare providers.ConclusionsThis consensus presents nine recommendations that advocate an algorithmic approach in the management of patients living with knee OA. They are applicable to patients receiving treatment from primary to tertiary care providers in Malaysia as well as other countries. BMC 2021-06-04 Article PeerReviewed Yeap, Swan Sim and Abu Amin, Syamsul Rizal and Baharuddin, Hazlyna and Koh, Kar Chai and Lee, Joon Kiong and Lee, Verna Kar Mun and Yahaya, Nor Hamdan Mohamad and Tai, Cheh Chin and Tan, Maw Pin (2021) A Malaysian Delphi consensus on managing knee osteoarthritis. BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders, 22 (1). ISSN 1471-2474, DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/s12891-021-04381-8 <https://doi.org/10.1186/s12891-021-04381-8>. 10.1186/s12891-021-04381-8
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic R Medicine
RA Public aspects of medicine
spellingShingle R Medicine
RA Public aspects of medicine
Yeap, Swan Sim
Abu Amin, Syamsul Rizal
Baharuddin, Hazlyna
Koh, Kar Chai
Lee, Joon Kiong
Lee, Verna Kar Mun
Yahaya, Nor Hamdan Mohamad
Tai, Cheh Chin
Tan, Maw Pin
A Malaysian Delphi consensus on managing knee osteoarthritis
description The 2013 Malaysian Clinical Practice Guidelines on the Management of Osteoarthritis (OA) recommend a linear step-up approach to manage knee OA. However, patients with knee OA often require a multimodal approach to address OA-related pain symptoms and functional limitations. This consensus aimed to provide doctors with an updated set of evidence-based, clinical experience-guided recommendations to manage knee OA.MethodsA multi-speciality expert panel consisting of nine Malaysian physicians from different healthcare settings who manage a diverse OA patient population was convened. Using a combination of the ADAPTE process and modified Delphi method, the panel reviewed current evidence on the management of knee OA and synthesised a set of nine recommendations on the management of knee OA, supported by an algorithm that summarises the consensus' core messages.ResultsA multimodal intervention strategy is the mainstay of OA management and the choice of any single or multimodal intervention may vary over the course of the disease. Overall, a non-pharmacological core treatment set of patient education, weight loss and exercise is recommended for all patients. When pharmacotherapy is indicated, symptomatic slow-acting drugs for osteoarthritis are recommended at the early stage of disease, and they can be paired with physical therapy as background treatment. Concurrent advanced pharmacotherapy that includes non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, intraarticular injections and short-term weak opioids can be considered if patients do not respond sufficiently to background treatment. Patients with severe symptomatic knee OA should be considered for knee replacement surgery. Management should begin with specific treatments with the least systemic exposure or toxicity, and the choice of treatment should be determined as a shared decision between patients and their team of healthcare providers.ConclusionsThis consensus presents nine recommendations that advocate an algorithmic approach in the management of patients living with knee OA. They are applicable to patients receiving treatment from primary to tertiary care providers in Malaysia as well as other countries.
format Article
author Yeap, Swan Sim
Abu Amin, Syamsul Rizal
Baharuddin, Hazlyna
Koh, Kar Chai
Lee, Joon Kiong
Lee, Verna Kar Mun
Yahaya, Nor Hamdan Mohamad
Tai, Cheh Chin
Tan, Maw Pin
author_facet Yeap, Swan Sim
Abu Amin, Syamsul Rizal
Baharuddin, Hazlyna
Koh, Kar Chai
Lee, Joon Kiong
Lee, Verna Kar Mun
Yahaya, Nor Hamdan Mohamad
Tai, Cheh Chin
Tan, Maw Pin
author_sort Yeap, Swan Sim
title A Malaysian Delphi consensus on managing knee osteoarthritis
title_short A Malaysian Delphi consensus on managing knee osteoarthritis
title_full A Malaysian Delphi consensus on managing knee osteoarthritis
title_fullStr A Malaysian Delphi consensus on managing knee osteoarthritis
title_full_unstemmed A Malaysian Delphi consensus on managing knee osteoarthritis
title_sort malaysian delphi consensus on managing knee osteoarthritis
publisher BMC
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/34296/
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