From the Journals

Early meniscal surgery on par with active rehab in under 40s


 

FROM OARSI 2022

Views on results

The results of the trial, published in NEJM Evidence, garnered attention on Twitter with several physiotherapists noting the data were positive for the nonsurgical management of meniscal tears in younger adults.

During discussion at the meeting, Nadine Foster, PhD, NIHR Professor of Musculoskeletal Health in Primary Care at Keele (England) University, asked if a larger cohort might not swing the results in favor of surgery.

She said: “Congratulations on this trial. The challenge: Your 95% CIs suggest a larger trial would have concluded superiority of surgery?”

Dr. Skou responded: “Most likely the true difference is outside the clinically relevant difference, but obviously, we cannot exclude that there is actually a clinically relevant difference between groups.”

Martin Englund, MD, Phd, of Lund (Sweden) University Hospital in Sweden, pointed out that 16 patients in the exercise and education group had “crossed over” and undergone surgery. “Were there any differences for those patients?” he asked.

“We looked at whether there was a difference between those – obviously only having 16 participants, we’re not able to do any statistical comparisons – but looking just visually at the data, they seem to improve to the same extent as those undergoing nonsurgical only,” Dr. Skou said.

The 2-year MRI data are currently being examined and will “obviously also be very interesting,” he added.

The DREAM trial was funded by the Danish Council for Independent Research, IMK Almene Fond, Lundbeck Foundation, Spar Nord Foundation, Danish Rheumatism Association, Association of Danish Physiotherapists Research Fund, Research Council at Næstved-Slagelse-Ringsted Hospitals, and Region Zealand. Dr. Skou had no financial or other conflicts of interest to disclose.

Pages

Recommended Reading

PCPs play a small part in low-value care spending
MDedge Surgery
OA risk-reduction program targets injured knees
MDedge Surgery
High tibial osteotomy achieves sustained improvements in knee OA
MDedge Surgery
AAOS updates guidelines for nonoperative knee OA treatment
MDedge Surgery
PRP injections don’t top placebo for ankle osteoarthritis
MDedge Surgery
PT may lower risk of long-term opioid use after knee replacement
MDedge Surgery
Platelet-rich plasma injections show no benefit in knee OA in placebo-controlled trial
MDedge Surgery
TKA outcomes for age 80+ similar to younger patients
MDedge Surgery
Shoulder arthritis surgery: Depression complicates care
MDedge Surgery
Medical cannabis may cut opioid use for back pain, OA
MDedge Surgery