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NICOLA VERONESE

Multimodal Multidisciplinary Management of Patients with Moderate to Severe Pain in Knee Osteoarthritis: A Need to Meet Patient Expectations

  • Autori: Veronese, Nicola; Cooper, Cyrus; Bruyère, Olivier; Al-Daghri, Nasser M; Branco, Jaime; Cavalier, Etienne; Cheleschi, Sara; da Silva Rosa, Mario Coelho; Conaghan, Philip G; Dennison, Elaine M; de Wit, Maarten; Fioravanti, Antonella; Fuggle, Nicholas R; Haugen, Ida K; Herrero-Beaumont, Gabriel; Honvo, Germain; Laslop, Andrea; Matijevic, Radmila; Migliore, Alberto; Mobasheri, Ali; Pelletier, Jean-Pierre; Prieto Yerro, María Concepción; Radermecker, Régis Pierre; Rannou, François; Rizzoli, René; Reginster, Jean-Yves
  • Anno di pubblicazione: 2022
  • Tipologia: Articolo in rivista
  • OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/582712

Abstract

Knee osteoarthritis (OA) is one of the most common and disabling medical conditions. In the case of moderate to severe pain, a single intervention may not be sufficient to allay symptoms and improve quality of life. Examples include first-line, background therapy with symptomatic slow-acting drugs for OA (SYSADOAs) or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). Therefore, the European Society for Clinical and Economic Aspects of Osteoporosis, Osteoarthritis and Musculoskeletal Diseases (ESCEO) performed a review of a multimodal/multicomponent approach for knee OA therapy. This strategy is a particularly appropriate solution for the management of patients affected by knee OA, including those with pain and dysfunction reaching various thresholds at the different joints. The multimodal/multicomponent approach should be based, firstly, on different combinations of non-pharmacological and pharmacological interventions. Potential pharmacological combinations include SYSADOAs and NSAIDs, NSAIDs and weak opioids, and intra-articular treatments with SYSADOAs/NSAIDs. Based on the available evidence, most combined treatments provide benefit beyond single agents for the improvement of pain and other symptoms typical of knee OA, although further high-quality studies are required. In this work, we have therefore provided new, patient-centered perspectives for the management of knee OA, based on the concept that a multimodal, multicomponent, multidisciplinary approach, applied not only to non-pharmacological treatments but also to a combination of the currently available pharmacological options, will better meet the needs and expectations of patients with knee OA, who may present with various phenotypes and trajectories.