Are bisphosphonates a more effective treatment than intra-articular steroids in horses with distal hock osteoarthritis?
a Knowledge Summary by
Hannah Greene MA 1*
1Washington State University College of Veterinary Medicine, Bustad Hall, Pullman, WA 99163
*Corresponding Author (hannah.greene@wsu.edu)
Vol 5, Issue 1 (2020)
Published: 11 Mar 2020
Reviewed by: Janny de Grauw (DVM, PhD Dip., ECVAA) and Alastair Kay (BVSc, MS, DipACVS, MRCVS)
Next review date: 21 May 2020
DOI: 10.18849/VE.V5I1.235
In horses that are lame due to osteoarthritis of the distal tarsal joints (bone spavin), is intra-articular medication with corticosteroids compared to systemic bisphosphonate treatment more effective in long-term lameness reduction?
Clinical bottom line
Category of research question
Treatment
The number and type of study designs reviewed
Three papers were critically reviewed. Two were randomised controlled trials, and one was a retrospective study.
Strength of evidence
Weak
Outcomes reported
There is insufficient evidence to support the use of systemic bisphosphonates over intra-articular corticosteroids to treat distal hock osteoarthritis in horses.
Conclusion
Horses with distal hock osteoarthritis should not be treated with systemic bisphosphonates until further blinded randomised controlled trials are completed. Additionally, supportive evidence for the use of intra-articular corticosteroids as a treatment for degenerative hock osteoarthritis is limited to a retrospective study where modest, short-term improvements are reported: 58% of horses improved after an average of 56 days (Labens et al., 2007). Evidence does not support significant improvement in long-term outcomes: 50% of horses improved after 4 months (Watts et al., 2016) and only 38% of horses improved after a mean follow-up period of 787 days (Labens et al., 2007).
How to apply this evidence in practice
The application of evidence into practice should take into account multiple factors, not limited to: individual clinical expertise, patient’s circumstances and owners’ values, country, location or clinic where you work, the individual case in front of you, the availability of therapies and resources.
Knowledge Summaries are a resource to help reinforce or inform decision making. They do not override the responsibility or judgement of the practitioner to do what is best for the animal in their care.
The evidence
Labens et al. (2007) is a retrospective study that followed the outcomes of 51 horses treated with intra-articular (IA) corticosteroids for distal hock osteoarthritis (OA). The authors used lameness scores, radiographs and scintigraphy to assess the outcomes of treatment with IA corticosteroids in either the tarsometatarsal (TMT) or distal intertarsal (DIT) joints. The authors concluded that after a single treatment with an IA corticosteroid, lameness improved in 34/59 (58%) of treated limbs at a median of 56 days post-treatment. At telephone follow-up a mean of 787 days after treatment, 38% of horses had a positive outcome: they were used as intended, had no detectable lameness according to the owner and were not receiving nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). This study provides the strongest experimental design in absence of a randomised controlled trial among studies that examine IA corticosteroids as the sole treatment in chronic, degenerative OA. While the treatments were not uniform between cases, they do reflect the day-to-day clinical treatment of distal hock OA.
This study reports a positive correlation between treatment with IA corticosteroids for distal hock OA and a modest, improved outcome.
Gough et al. (2010) is a randomised controlled trial that compared two treatment groups of horses with distal hock OA. The first group was treated with a 1 mg/kg tiludronate IV infusion and the second group was given an IV placebo infusion. The study used lameness scores, level of exercise and radiographs to assess outcomes at day 60. The authors concluded that the lameness scores for the tiludronate group were significantly lower than the placebo group at day 60 (P=0.0318). Furthermore, they concluded that 60% of horses in the tiludronate group improved by 2 or more lameness scores at day 60. Despite the type of experimental design (randomised controlled trial), there were significant limitations to the quality of the evidence such that a wholescale change to clinical practice is not recommended based on this trial alone. These limitations are further addressed in the appraisal section below.
Watts et al. (2016) is a randomised controlled trial of resveratrol supplementation and IA triamcinolone to treat distal hock OA. Resveratrol is a compound with anti-inflammatory properties that is naturally found in grape skins. In this study the placebo group was treated with IA triamcinolone and a placebo powder (fermentation solubles, S. cerevisiae 1026, diatomaceous earth) 2 scoops fed every 12 hours. Additionally both groups were treated with 2 g phenylbutazone IV immediately after IA injection and 2 g phenylbutazone PO every 24 hours for the next 3-7 days. There was no control group (i.e. IA saline) to assess the efficacy of triamcinolone as a sole intervention, as the authors did not wish to withhold standard IA triamcinolone treatment from lame horses. To eliminate the majority of effects from IA triamcinolone, the authors chose to assess outcomes at 2 and 4 months post-treatment. At 2 months post-treatment, lameness was expected to recur in 90% of horses (Labens et al., 2007) and at 3 months post-treatment 50% of horses were expected to be lame (de Grauw et al., 2016). In effect, the authors assumed that treatment with IA triamcinolone alone will fail by either 2 or 4 months post-treatment and the outcome of resveratrol supplementation can be interpreted without IA triamcinolone treatment effects. The authors conclude that horses injected with IA triamcinolone and supplemented with resveratrol had better performance than horses injected with triamcinolone alone at 2 and 4 months post-treatment. While the efficacy of the resveratrol intervention is not the subject of this PICO question, Watts et al. (2016) found that 4 months after IA corticosteroid (triamcinolone) injection, only 35% of horses had returned to full work, confirming that long-term outcome of IA triamcinolone treatment is not favourable for distal tarsal OA. Further study limitations are outlined in the appraisal section below.
Summary of the evidence
Population: | Horses treated at the University of Glasgow Veterinary School for OA of the TMT and/or DIT joint between 1998 and 2005
|
Sample size: | n=51 |
Intervention details: | Case Selection Horses were identified by a database search of horses treated at Weipers Centre Equine Hospital, University of Glasgow Veterinary School. The study included horses treated for distal tarsal joint OA between 1998 and 2005. Horses accepted into the study met each of the following conditions:
Horses with bilateral hindlimb lameness (25/51 at first examination) were also included in the study if they met the following criteria:
Horses were split into two groups:
Intervention Dose:
First Treatment:
Second Treatment:
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Study design: | Retrospective study |
Outcome Studied: | Subjective Assessment: Lameness Scores
Lameness variables assessed at initial and follow-up exam
Objective Assessment: Radiographic Examination
Objective Assessment: Scintigraphy
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Main Findings (relevant to PICO question): |
After a single treatment with MPA or triamcinolone (+/-HA) lameness improved in 34/59 (58%) of treated limbs.
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Limitations: | As a retrospective study, this study lacks a control group and cannot prove causation; i.e., differences between treatments cannot be causally linked to treatment alone, as disease status may have influenced treatment allocation to MPA or triamcinolone. Further limitations include:
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Population: | Horses in the UK and Ireland with a clinical diagnosis of distal hock OA
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Sample size: | n=108 initially included; only 87 met the final inclusion criteria |
Intervention details: | Case Selection Horses with a clinical diagnosis of distal hock OA that met each of the following conditions:
Initially included horses were excluded for any of the following reasons (n=108 at initial inclusion, 21 horses excluded, n=87 at final inclusion):
Horses were split into two groups (n=87):
Intervention Dose:
First Treatment, Day 0:
Second Treatment, Day 60:
During the trial horses could receive the following treatments:
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Study design: | Randomised controlled trial |
Outcome Studied: | Subjective Assessment: Lameness Scores
Subjective Assessment: Level of Exercise
Objective Assessment: Radiographs
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Main Findings (relevant to PICO question): |
|
Limitations: |
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Population: | Horses in the Southern US with hindlimb lameness or poor performance
|
Sample size: | n=45 |
Intervention details: | Case Selection Horses with a hindlimb lameness or poor performance that met each of the following conditions:
Horses were excluded for any of the following reasons:
Horses were split into two groups (n=45):
Intervention
|
Study design: | Randomised controlled trial |
Outcome Studied: | Subjective Assessment: Lameness Scores
Subjective Assessment: Level of Exercise
Objective Assessment: Inertial Sensor System
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Main Findings (relevant to PICO question): |
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Limitations: |
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Appraisal, application and reflection
Labens et al. (2007) provides the strongest experimental design in support of IA corticosteroids as the sole treatment in chronic, degenerative OA. There is no randomised controlled trial to support the use of IA corticosteroids as a treatment for degenerative hock OA. This study reports a positive correlation between treatment with IA corticosteroids for distal hock OA and a modest, improved outcome.
The limitations of the study include non-uniform treatments (doses, site of injection and choice of corticosteroid varied), non-uniform time to follow-up, and non-uniform time between subsequent exams and treatments. Another weakness was that the cases studied did not conclusively rule out other disease processes that would not respond to IA corticosteroid treatment (e.g. proximal suspensory desmitis and intertarsal ligament enthesopathy). One strength of this study is that it uses a moderately large sample size (n=51). More importantly, it provides the strongest experimental design in absence of a randomised controlled trial among studies that examine IA corticosteroids as the sole treatment in chronic, degenerative OA. While the treatments were not uniform between cases, they do reflect the day-to-day clinical treatment of distal hock OA. The modest therapeutic success in this study indicates that clinicians can expect about half of horses to have a positive outcome 2 months after treatment, but only 34/59 (58%) of horses to have a long-term positive outcome. These outcomes are restricted to IA corticosteroid treatment as a sole intervention and do not consider other treatments for distal hock OA.
Gough et al. (2010) is a randomised controlled trial that evaluated efficacy of tiludronate as a treatment for distal hock OA. The authors concluded that the lameness scores for the tiludronate group were significantly lower than the placebo group at day 60 (P=0.0318). Furthermore, they concluded that 60% of horses in the tiludronate group improved by 2 or more lameness scores at day 60. Finally, the authors report that for the subset of horses with periarticular osteophytes in both groups, lameness scores were lower in the tiludronate group as compared to the placebo group (P=0.006).
There are a number of limitations associated with this study, the main ones are highlighted here. First, the distribution of lameness scores for both the placebo group and the treatment group was not reported. Second, the study became unblinded at/after day 60. The study was also funded by the makers of TildrenÒ (tiludronate disodium). While this funding source was clearly disclosed, it may have introduced bias. Third, lameness grading varied significantly between investigators (covariate investigator effect P=0.0395), which may have impacted outcome assessment. There was also a significant effect of investigator (P=0.0083) and an interaction between investigator and treatment (P=0.0223) in the exercise results. This suggests that differences in at home exercise protocols were significant between investigators and centres. As a result, improvement in exercise scores could not be utilised as a treatment outcome as this was more likely to be associated with investigator rather than treatment. A final limitation is that this study does not address potential side effects of tiludronate. Despite the type of experimental design (randomised controlled trial), there were significant limitations to the quality of the evidence such that a wholescale change to clinical practice is not recommended based on this trial alone.
Watts et al. (2016) is a randomised controlled trial of resveratrol supplementation and IA triamcinolone to treat distal hock OA. The authors conclude that horses injected with IA triamcinolone and supplemented with resveratrol had better performance than horses injected with triamcinolone alone at 2 and 4 months post-treatment. Better performance was indicated subjectively by owner reported performance improvement and objectively by vertical pelvic movement measured by inertial sensor system (The A1:A2 ratio is calculated for each hindlimb and compares the horse’s actual vertical pelvic movement with an expected vertical pelvic movement). Yet certain key performance indicators did not vary between the treatment and placebo groups: subjective lameness scores by a clinician, pelvic asymmetry from inertial sensor, and the owner/rider’s perception that the horse had returned to full work. While the efficacy of the resveratrol intervention is not the subject of this PICO question, Watts et al. (2016) found that 4 months after IA corticosteroid (triamcinolone) injection, only 35% of horses had returned to full work, confirming that long-term outcome of IA triamcinolone treatment is not favourable for distal tarsal OA.
Evaluating the comparative efficacy of treatments for distal hock OA comes with many challenges. One challenge is that to date, there is no published randomised controlled trial to directly compare the efficacy of IA corticosteroids with systemic bisphosphonates. The strongest evidence for either treatment comes from randomised controlled trials where each intervention is examined separately. Watts et al. (2016) is a randomised controlled trial of resveratrol supplementation and IA triamcinolone to treat distal hock OA. While the efficacy of the resveratrol intervention is not the subject of this PICO question, Watts et al. (2016) does provide evidence that long-term outcome of IA triamcinolone treatment for distal tarsal OA is suboptimal: at 2 months post IA triamcinolone treatment, 70% (14/20) horses' performance improved while at 4 months post IA triamcinolone treatment, only 50% (10/20) of horses’ performance improved.
De Grauw et al. (2016) conducted another randomised controlled trial that compared efficacy of IA triamcinolone with IA triamcinolone + hyaluronate acid (HA). It was excluded from this knowledge summary because OA was not confirmed radiographically and no tarsal joints were included in the study; therefore, conclusions about the intervention relative to tarsal OA cannot be drawn. But this study does shed light on IA triamcinolone efficacy at various intervals post-treatment. At 3 weeks post-treatment, 88% of patients treated with IA triamcinolone had improved by 2 lameness grades. At 3 months post-treatment, owners reported only 50% of horses were back in full work, which is very similar to the proportion found by Watts et al. (2016). Again, there was no placebo control group due to ethical implications of withholding treatments from lame horses. De Grauw et al. (2016) also note that the 3 week improvement in lameness may in part have been due to the resting protocol they implemented.
Another prospective case series, although investigating the outcomes of a different treatment (IA ethanol injection) in cases of distal tarsal joint OA (Lamas et al., 2012), is also relevant to the PICO question at hand, given the study’s population and inclusion criteria: of the 24 horses included, all horses had lameness recur within 4 months of receiving IA corticosteroids (triamcinolone or MPA) in the TMT joint (Lamas et al., 2012). This suggests that failure of IA corticosteroids for long-term management of distal tarsal OA is certainly not uncommon.
While IA corticosteroids are commonly used in everyday practice, prospective, randomised controlled trials with adequate power are necessary to assess their efficacy in treating distal hock OA. While it may not be ethically feasible to include a control group treated with IA saline in these studies, a non-treated group with controlled exercise should be included at a minimum. Additionally, placement of IA treatments should be confirmed radiographically as injection into distal tarsal joints — especially the DIT joint — is not always accurate (Seabaugh et al., 2017 and Hoaglund et al., 2019). Additional blinded randomised controlled trials are needed to assess efficacy of bisphosphonate treatment for distal hock OA, as various shortcomings for Gough et al. (2010) were noted above. Regardless of the intervention studied, a combination of subjective and objective outcomes should be assessed. These may include (blinded) lameness scores, rider reported performance improvement, and ideally some form of quantitative motion analysis (e.g. vertical pelvic movement from inertial motion unit sensor systems).
Methodology Section
Search Strategy | |
Databases searched and dates covered: | CAB Abstracts on the OVID Platform 1973 to 2018 Week 19
PubMed accessed via the NCBI website 1910 to May 2018 |
Search strategy: | CAB Abstracts (equine* or horse* or equus or equid* or mare or mares or broodmare* or 'brood mare*' or pony or ponies or filly or fillies or colt or colts or yearling* or stallion* or thoroughbred* or standardbred* or racehorse* or 'race horse*').mp. or (exp horses/ or exp equus/ or exp equidae/ or exp mares/ or exp colts/ or exp foals/ or exp stallions/ or exp thoroughbred/ or exp racehorses/) AND (arthropat* or arthrit* or osteoarthrit* or osteo-arthrit* or synovitis or tenosynovitis or 'joint disease*' or OA or DJD or osteoarthrosis or lame or lameness or spavin or gait).mp. or (exp osteoarthritis/ or exp arthritis/ or exp joint diseases/) AND (tarsal* or tarsus* or carpus* or carpal*).mp. or exp tarsus/ or exp carpus/ AND ((corticosteroid* or glucocorticoid* or corticoid* or dexamethason* or methylprednisolon* or triamcinolon* or TMC or betamethason* or prednisolon* or prednison* or prednicare* or steroid*).mp. or (exp prednisolone/ or exp prednisone/ or exp glucocorticoids/ or exp steroids/) OR (bisphosphonat* or biphosphonat* or bisphosponat* or biphosponat* or disphosponat* or diphosphonat* or diphosponat* or disphosphonat* or tiludron* or clodron*))
PubMed (horse OR equine OR equus OR equidae OR equid OR mare OR broodmare OR “brood mare” OR pony OR filly OR colt OR yearling OR stallion OR thoroughbred OR standardbred OR racehorse OR “race horse”) AND (arthropathy OR arthritis OR osteoarthritis OR osteo-arthritis OR synovitis OR tenosynovitis OR “joint disease” OR OA OR DJD OR osteoarthrosis OR lame OR lameness OR spavin OR gait) AND (tarsal OR tarsus OR carpal OR carpus) AND ((corticosteroid OR glucocorticoid OR corticoid OR dexamethasone OR methylprednisolone OR triamcinolone OR TMC OR betamethasone OR prednisolone OR prednisone OR prednicare OR steroid) OR (bisphosphonate OR biphosphonate OR bisphosphonate OR biphosponate OR disphosponate OR diphosphonate OR diphosponate OR disphosphonate OR tiludronate OR tiludronic OR clodronate OR clodronic)) |
Dates searches performed: | 21 May 2018 |
Exclusion / Inclusion Criteria | |
Exclusion: | Papers that did not answer the PICO question were excluded for the following reasons:
Also excluded were non-English language, non-systematic review articles, case reports, conference proceedings or duplicates |
Inclusion: | Either IA corticosteroids or systemic bisphosphonates were studied in horses with distal tarsal joint lameness due to OA |
Search Outcome | ||||||
Database |
Number of results |
Excluded – did not answer PICO question |
Excluded – conference proceedings, case report or non-systematic review articles |
Total relevant papers |
||
CAB abstracts |
81 | 55 | 23 | 3 | ||
PubMed |
36 | 32 | 1 | 3 | ||
Total relevant papers when duplicates removed |
3 |
The author declares no conflicts of interest.
The author would like to thank Dr. Suzanne Fricke for introducing Evidence Based Veterinary Medicine into the curriculum at Washington State University College of Veterinary medicine and encouraging students to utilise this methodology.
RCVS Knowledge was supported in producing this Knowledge Summary by an educational grant from Petplan Charitable Trust.
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