Extracellular-to-intracellular water ratios are associated with functional disability levels in patients with knee osteoarthritis: results from the Nagahama Study

Abstract
Introduction/objectives To test the hypothesis that greater extracellular-to-intracellular water (ECW/ICW) ratios in lower-limb muscles are associated with worsened functional abilities in patients with knee osteoarthritis (OA). Methods We analyzed data from 787 participants (82.2% female; mean age, 69.6 ± 5.3 years) from the Nagahama Prospective Cohort who were ≥60 years old and had radiographically confirmed bilateral knee OA. The Knee Scoring System (KSS) was used to assess functional abilities. Lower-limb ECW/ICW ratios and skeletal mass index values were determined with multi-frequency bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA). Multiple linear regression analysis was used to test for associations between ECW/ICW ratios and functional abilities. Subgroup analyses based on OA severities and symptomaticity were also conducted. Results Increased ECW/ICW ratios were associated with a 4.38-point decrease in the KSS function scores (95% confidence interval [CI], 3.15–5.62 points) after adjusting for covariates. This association varied according to the degree of knee symptoms, especially in individuals with radiologically mild OA. ECW/ICW ratios in individuals with asymptomatic mild OA were associated with a 2.14-point decrease in the KSS function score (95% CI, 0.32–3.96 points), whereas those in individuals with severe symptomatic mild OA were associated with a 6.16-point decrease (95% CI, 2.13–10.19 points). Conclusions Our findings indicate that higher ECW/ICW ratios are associated with greater functional disability in patients with knee OA. Therefore, ECW/ICW ratio measurements with multi-frequency BIA can serve as valuable indicators for functional disability in patients with knee OA. Key Points • Higher extracellular-to-intracellular water (ECW/ICW) ratios are associated with greater functional disability levels in patients with knee osteoarthritis (OA).ECW/ICW ratios are useful clinical signs as a biomarker for poor functional abilities in patients with knee OA.
Funding Information
  • Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (ek0109070, ek0109196, ek0109348, dk0207006, dk0207027, kk0205008, 17ek0210066, 18ek0210096, 19ek0210116, le0110005, and le0110013, H26-Choju-Ippan-001, 15dk0107007h0003, 16dk0110007h0003)
  • Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan (25293141, 26670313, 26293198, 17H04182, 17H04126, 17H04123, 18K18450, and 19K17634)
  • Takeda Medical Research Foundation
  • Mitsubishi Foundation
  • Daiwa Securities Health Foundation
  • Sumitomo Foundation

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