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ASSOCIATIONS OF INFLAMMATORY AND METABOLIC BIOMARKERS WITH INCIDENT EROSIVE HAND OSTEOARTHRITIS IN THE OSTEOARTHRITIS INITIATIVE COHORT.

OBJECTIVE: Erosive hand osteoarthritis (eHOA) is a subtype of hand OA that develops in finger joints with pre-existing osteoarthritis and is differentiated by clinical characteristics (hand pain/disability, inflammation, and erosions) that suggest inflammatory or metabolic processes.

METHOD: This was a longitudinal nested case-cohort design among Osteoarthritis Initiative participants who had hand radiographs at baseline and 48-months, and biospecimens collected at baseline. We classified incident radiographic eHOA in individuals with ≥1 joint with Kellgren-Lawrence ≥2 and a central erosion present at 48-months but not at baseline. We used a random representative sample (n=1,282) for comparison. We measured serum biomarkers of inflammation, insulin resistance and dysglycemia, and adipokines using immunoassays and enzymatic colorimetric procedures, blinded to case status.

RESULTS: Eighty-six participants developed incident radiographic eHOA. In the multivariate analyses adjusted for age, gender, race, smoking, and BMI, and after adjustment for multiple analyses, incident radiographic eHOA was associated with elevated levels of interleukin-7 (RR per SD = 1.30 [95% CI 1.09, 1.55] p trend 0.01).

CONCLUSION: This exploratory study suggests an association of elevated interleukin-7, an inflammatory cytokine, with incident eHOA, while other cytokines or biomarkers of metabolic inflammation were not associated. Interleukin-7 may mediate inflammation and tissue damage in susceptible osteoarthritic finger joints and participate in erosive progression.

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