Association between metabolic conditions, physical activity and self-efficacy before and after a first-line exercise and education intervention for osteoarthritis : a longitudinal register study using the SOAD cohort
(2025) In RMD Open 11(3).- Abstract
Objectives To investigate the association of diabetes, hypertension and overweight/obesity with physical activity (PA), self-efficacy for pain and self-efficacy for other symptoms before and after a 6- week exercise and education intervention for knee and hip osteoarthritis (OA), and to assess outcome disparities based on metabolic health. Methods Register-based cohort study using the Swedish Osteoarthritis and Diabetes cohort. We used Body Mass Index, medical records and medication dispensation to define overweight/obesity, hypertension and diabetes at baseline (exposures). PA was self-reported (weekly minutes), and self-efficacy was measured using the ‘Arthritis Self-Efficacy Scale’ (ASES) (score 10–100) (outcomes). We used linear... (More)
Objectives To investigate the association of diabetes, hypertension and overweight/obesity with physical activity (PA), self-efficacy for pain and self-efficacy for other symptoms before and after a 6- week exercise and education intervention for knee and hip osteoarthritis (OA), and to assess outcome disparities based on metabolic health. Methods Register-based cohort study using the Swedish Osteoarthritis and Diabetes cohort. We used Body Mass Index, medical records and medication dispensation to define overweight/obesity, hypertension and diabetes at baseline (exposures). PA was self-reported (weekly minutes), and self-efficacy was measured using the ‘Arthritis Self-Efficacy Scale’ (ASES) (score 10–100) (outcomes). We used linear mixed-effect models to estimate associations between exposures and outcomes, adjusted for confounders. Results We included 80 893 individuals with knee or hip OA. Those with metabolic conditions consistently showed lower PA and self-efficacy, with baseline disparities persisting after the intervention, particularly when all three conditions coexisted (PA difference: baseline 107 min [95% CI: 97; 118], 3-month 97 [86; 108], 12-month 109 [95; 123]; ASES-pain difference: baseline 5.6 [3.9; 7.3], 3-month 5.9 [4.1; 7.7], 12-month 8.2 [6.1; 10.4]; ASES-other symptoms difference: baseline 6.1 [4.6; 7.7], 3-month 6.4 [4.8; 8.0], 12-month 8.2 [6.3; 10.1]). Conclusions Metabolic conditions were associated with lower PA and self-efficacy, with differences increasing with the number of co-existing conditions. The baseline disparities associated with metabolic conditions persisted after the intervention, with both groups showing improvement at 3 months but reverting to baseline by 12 months. This suggests that current guideline-based interventions for OA may not reduce long-term disparities related to metabolic conditions.
(Less)
- author
- Recenti, Filippo
LU
; Battista, Simone
LU
; Lohmander, Stefan
LU
; Vinblad, Johanna
; Kiadaliri, Ali
LU
; Abbott, Allan
; Rolfson, Ola
; Englund, Martin
LU
; Testa, Marco
and Dell’Isola, Andrea
LU
- organization
-
- Orthopaedics (Lund)
- Lund OsteoArthritis Division - Clinical Epidemiology Unit (research group)
- Lund OsteoArthritis Division - Molecular marker research group (research group)
- EpiHealth: Epidemiology for Health
- Centre for Economic Demography
- LU Profile Area: Proactive Ageing
- Lund OsteoArthritis Division - From molecule to clinical implementation (research group)
- publishing date
- 2025-09
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Hypertension, Osteoarthritis, Rehabilitation
- in
- RMD Open
- volume
- 11
- issue
- 3
- article number
- e005804
- publisher
- BMJ Publishing Group
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:41022523
- scopus:105017581202
- ISSN
- 2056-5933
- DOI
- 10.1136/rmdopen-2025-005804
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 7773bf3a-882b-4ed8-a861-5f05c5bf4300
- date added to LUP
- 2025-11-26 13:52:48
- date last changed
- 2026-01-08 02:08:35
@article{7773bf3a-882b-4ed8-a861-5f05c5bf4300,
abstract = {{<p>Objectives To investigate the association of diabetes, hypertension and overweight/obesity with physical activity (PA), self-efficacy for pain and self-efficacy for other symptoms before and after a 6- week exercise and education intervention for knee and hip osteoarthritis (OA), and to assess outcome disparities based on metabolic health. Methods Register-based cohort study using the Swedish Osteoarthritis and Diabetes cohort. We used Body Mass Index, medical records and medication dispensation to define overweight/obesity, hypertension and diabetes at baseline (exposures). PA was self-reported (weekly minutes), and self-efficacy was measured using the ‘Arthritis Self-Efficacy Scale’ (ASES) (score 10–100) (outcomes). We used linear mixed-effect models to estimate associations between exposures and outcomes, adjusted for confounders. Results We included 80 893 individuals with knee or hip OA. Those with metabolic conditions consistently showed lower PA and self-efficacy, with baseline disparities persisting after the intervention, particularly when all three conditions coexisted (PA difference: baseline 107 min [95% CI: 97; 118], 3-month 97 [86; 108], 12-month 109 [95; 123]; ASES-pain difference: baseline 5.6 [3.9; 7.3], 3-month 5.9 [4.1; 7.7], 12-month 8.2 [6.1; 10.4]; ASES-other symptoms difference: baseline 6.1 [4.6; 7.7], 3-month 6.4 [4.8; 8.0], 12-month 8.2 [6.3; 10.1]). Conclusions Metabolic conditions were associated with lower PA and self-efficacy, with differences increasing with the number of co-existing conditions. The baseline disparities associated with metabolic conditions persisted after the intervention, with both groups showing improvement at 3 months but reverting to baseline by 12 months. This suggests that current guideline-based interventions for OA may not reduce long-term disparities related to metabolic conditions.</p>}},
author = {{Recenti, Filippo and Battista, Simone and Lohmander, Stefan and Vinblad, Johanna and Kiadaliri, Ali and Abbott, Allan and Rolfson, Ola and Englund, Martin and Testa, Marco and Dell’Isola, Andrea}},
issn = {{2056-5933}},
keywords = {{Hypertension; Osteoarthritis; Rehabilitation}},
language = {{eng}},
number = {{3}},
publisher = {{BMJ Publishing Group}},
series = {{RMD Open}},
title = {{Association between metabolic conditions, physical activity and self-efficacy before and after a first-line exercise and education intervention for osteoarthritis : a longitudinal register study using the SOAD cohort}},
url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/rmdopen-2025-005804}},
doi = {{10.1136/rmdopen-2025-005804}},
volume = {{11}},
year = {{2025}},
}