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Prevalence, incidence, and progression of hip osteoarthritis in a young military population: The ADVANCE cohort study.

Watson, F. C. E., O'Sullivan, O., Bennett, A., Agricola, R., Schofield, S., Hanff, D., Boos, C., Cullinan, P., Fear, N., Kemp, H. and Bull, A. M. J., 2025. Prevalence, incidence, and progression of hip osteoarthritis in a young military population: The ADVANCE cohort study. Osteoarthritis and Cartilage Open, 7 (4), 100675.

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DOI: 10.1016/j.ocarto.2025.100675

Abstract

Objective: Prevalence of hip osteoarthritis (OA) is rarely reported in young populations (e.g., military). We will report the prevalence of hip OA in a young military cohort and investigate the relationship between injury and progression/incidence. Design: ADVANCE is a prospective cohort study comparing physical and psychosocial outcomes in 1145 men who served in Afghanistan including 579 men with combat injury (Exposed) who were frequency-matched to 566 controls (Unexposed). The Exposed group was sub-divided into hip injured (Exp-H), lower limb amputation (Exp-A) and other (Exp-NA). Kellgren-Lawrence (KL) scores of pelvic radiographs and Non-Arthritic Hip Score (NAHS) questionnaires were collected across two waves (Baseline and Follow-up). Prevalence at Baseline (KL ​≥ ​2), progression (KL ​≥ ​1 ​at Baseline, KL ​≥ ​2 ​at Follow-up) and incidence (KL0 at Baseline, KL ​≥ ​2 ​at Follow-up) at Follow-up were reported and compared between groups for KL and NAHS. Results: Baseline prevalence of radiographic hip OA was 8.5 ​% and 4.4 ​% in the Exposed and Unexposed groups, respectively. Exp-A and Exp-H groups had 3.88 (95%CI:2.27–6.63) and 7.18 (95%CI:3.44–14.98 times increased risk for radiographic hip OA than Unexposed. Exp-A and Exp-H had a 2.15 (95%CI:1.22–3.80) and 3.28 (95%CI:1.42–7.59) times increased radiographic progression risk, compared to Unexposed. Risk of NAHS Progression and Incidence were not significantly different between groups. Conclusion: Radiographic hip OA prevalence is higher in a young military population than in a similarly aged general population. Combat injury alone may not increase hip OA prevalence; but hip and lower limb loss injuries do. Progression risk is highest in those with hip or limb loss injuries.

Item Type:Article
ISSN:2665-9131
Uncontrolled Keywords:Hip; Osteoarthritis; Combat injury; Limb loss
Group:Faculty of Health & Social Sciences
ID Code:41369
Deposited By: Symplectic RT2
Deposited On:19 Sep 2025 08:33
Last Modified:19 Sep 2025 08:33

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