Next up, we have Professor Sam Addy. Professor Addy is a professor of orthopedic
Speaker:and trauma surgery at the University of New South Wales.
Speaker:He specializes in surgery of the hip and the knee.
Speaker:He's got a vast research background and has won numerous awards for his research
Speaker:and runs a series of clinical trials to improve outcomes after joint replacement and injury.
Speaker:Today, Professor Addy will be speaking about addressing hip pain in primary care. Thank you.
Speaker:Thanks so much, Mike. So I am just going to give you a really brief overview
Speaker:or even a recap of hip pain and how to assess hip pain.
Speaker:And I think Raz next is going to talk more about the treatments available for the hip.
Speaker:So I am a founding surgeon partner at the Orthopaedic Institute at Macquarie University Hospital,
Speaker:So this is an outline of the talk So just some background
Speaker:to the evaluation of hip pain Just going to talk about a brief recap of the
Speaker:epidemiology and the causes And then some talk about the symptoms and signs
Speaker:some differential diagnoses that you may want to consider the types of imaging that we can order,
Speaker:non-surgical management so I'm going to focus a little bit on that in this talk
Speaker:and then also when to think about referring to a specialist.
Speaker:So epidemiology, I think the best way to really show this is by what happens
Speaker:to people at the end stage of their hip arthritis, right?
Speaker:So if you look at the Australian Joint Replacement Registry,
Speaker:the people that are having hip replacements for that severe end of the spectrum
Speaker:for arthritis are very much in the older age group.
Speaker:So you can see here that the older you are, the more likely it is that you'd...
Speaker:Let's see if I can get this point to working. so
Speaker:the older you are so say you know
Speaker:the younger age groups less than 55 but also
Speaker:at the other extreme end of the spectrum are less common but
Speaker:then you know the older age groups between 55 and
Speaker:75 are the ones that are having the bulk of these operations and the vast majority
Speaker:of the diagnoses are still osteoarthritis but if you do look at the younger
Speaker:age groups it's usually something else as well so still osteoarthritis is by
Speaker:far the most common even if you're young,
Speaker:but then there's other diagnoses that occur when when
Speaker:you're in the younger age group and i'll explain why that might
Speaker:be the case in a second so osteoarthritis still
Speaker:most common reason you know it's probably a combination
Speaker:of genetics lifestyle factors obesity
Speaker:has been associated with hip arthritis as well and it's probably you know those
Speaker:repetitive injuries that occur over a lifespan okay and they just haven't had
Speaker:a chance to appropriately heal
Speaker:and then just like any sort of overuse or chronic wear and tear problem.
Speaker:You have this ongoing wear and tear of the joint that results in osteoarthritis,
Speaker:Other causes of hip arthritis that we should consider are the inflammatory arthritis
Speaker:so rheumatoid seronegative disease, avascular necrosis.
Speaker:And in western society including Australia of course alcohol and corticosteroid use,
Speaker:are by far the most common causes of avascular necrosis so again a rare but
Speaker:important cause of hip pain that can then lead to secondary hip arthritis.
Speaker:And then you've got these sort of, you know, group of developmental problems.
Speaker:Okay, so I've just grouped them here as all as these developmental problems.
Speaker:And these are things that, you know, occur when you're younger in your childhood.
Speaker:So when you have developmental dysplasia, perthase disease, a slipped epiphysis.
Speaker:But essentially with all of these conditions, what's happening is
Speaker:the patient has grown or has developed some
Speaker:sort of abnormal shape to their hip and we'll
Speaker:just show a picture in a second but basically if you have an abnormally shaped
Speaker:hip it's not going to function as efficiently as normal and normally as you
Speaker:know a normal ball and socket joint and then you get your risk of getting that
Speaker:early degenerative change and then there's other causes as well so infection, trauma,
Speaker:tumor that are sort of again sort of less common causes but should be considered
Speaker:when you're thinking about hip pain so this is an MRI scan of what avascular
Speaker:necrosis looks like you know sometimes you won't see this on an x-ray so you
Speaker:know if you suspect it that's the reason for why you may want to order further imaging.
Speaker:And then you've got this condition called femoral acetabular impingement which I'm sure most of the.
Speaker:And we're not entirely sure what actually causes it, but it's probably some
Speaker:sort of developmental thing. You know, people have it when they're younger.
Speaker:You know, they've done studies where they've just done a whole bunch of x-rays
Speaker:on, you know, a cross-section of the population. And a certain proportion of,
Speaker:you know, even younger patients would have these changes.
Speaker:But you can see, as I alluded to before, that instead of having a nice smooth
Speaker:ball and socket joint, you've got this sort of like more egg-shaped sort of
Speaker:appearance of the proximal femur.
Speaker:And you can see how that sort of lump or the cam lesion what's termed the cam lesion in FAI,
Speaker:can put a lot of additional strain on the joint when that articulates with the
Speaker:socket and this is sort of you know what I said about these other conditions
Speaker:that sort of change the shape of the hip so if you have you know you know you
Speaker:have a history as a child of,
Speaker:developmental dysplasia or perthase disease it sort of results in these abnormally
Speaker:shaped you know proximal fevers or even the acetabulum and instead of that nice
Speaker:smooth ball and soccer you've got the abnormal shape that then predisposes you
Speaker:to getting those early degenerative changes.
Speaker:So a little bit about the pathophysiology, about why this happens.
Speaker:So, you know, the people who do this research would make a lot of effort to
Speaker:remind us that, no, this is not really a disease of old age.
Speaker:It's not just wear and tear, okay? because there is a pathophysiologic process that's happening,
Speaker:where they essentially get an imbalance of the factors that are regenerating
Speaker:the cartilage and doing damage to the cartilage.
Speaker:And I don't want to dwell on this too much because there's not much clinical
Speaker:implication to it at this stage.
Speaker:I'm not aware of any sort of medication
Speaker:or treatment that can change that imbalance that I'm alluding to.
Speaker:But essentially what seems to be the key is these things called matrix metalloproteinases,
Speaker:and they are responsible for sort of the upregulation of the breakdown of cartilage.
Speaker:And it's a complex interplay as you can imagine of all of these sort of like,
Speaker:you know, other factors.
Speaker:And then that leads to all of these other things. So it starts with cartilage,
Speaker:but then it leads to, you know, bone changes and osteophyte formation and the
Speaker:joint space narrowing that we would see on an X-ray.
Speaker:So let's talk about symptoms and signs. So the key, I guess,
Speaker:key cardinal symptoms would be pain and stiffness.
Speaker:That's a recurring theme in arthritis, right? Pain and stiffness of that joint.
Speaker:And then that then leads to all of these other things.
Speaker:So gait disturbance and limp is really as a result of the pain and stiffness
Speaker:that occurs in that joint.
Speaker:And then that leads to a functional deficit.
Speaker:And that's probably you know
Speaker:one of the obviously pain no one wants to be in pain but then
Speaker:the other really really important factor to consider for the patient
Speaker:is how much impact that's happening on their
Speaker:sort of you know their function now that's different
Speaker:for different people so you can imagine the function say
Speaker:of you know a little old lady in her 70s
Speaker:is quite different to a working age male
Speaker:in their 50s so just important to
Speaker:consider what that patient's functional needs are
Speaker:and what they actually want right because again
Speaker:what they need will also influence the type of management that we do from a
Speaker:non-surgical or surgical perspective and i've put up here it's hard to see sorry
Speaker:but you know it's it's the oxford hip score so have you guys heard of the oxford hip score,
Speaker:It's one of the many patient-reported outcome measures that you can find for the HIP.
Speaker:Very, very commonly used one. It is routinely used in the Australian Joint Replacement Registry.
Speaker:But if you can see some of the writing there, what it's asking about is just
Speaker:very simple questions about day-to-day activities.
Speaker:It's like, you know, in the past four weeks, have you been able to put on a pair of socks?
Speaker:How long after a meal sat at
Speaker:a table has it become too painful
Speaker:for you to stand up from a chair because of the hip so
Speaker:these are really simple day-to-day activities that the Oxford HIP score is then
Speaker:asking about and you can do an eventual score depending on their answers and
Speaker:then that then gives you an idea about how disabled they are According, you know,
Speaker:comparatively to the rest of the population And because Oxford hip scores have
Speaker:been done on millions and millions of people You've got very good sort of,
Speaker:you know, psychometric data to compare to,
Speaker:I should say metric data to compare to.
Speaker:Yeah, so that's the functional deficit And then you have deformities And they're
Speaker:things like leg length discrepancy or contracture,
Speaker:So how do we assess it? The key would be really the history, okay?
Speaker:So pain and function, I just mentioned. So a little bit about the pain,
Speaker:because I think the nature of the pain here, especially if we're talking about hip pain in general,
Speaker:and we want to try and focus on, you know, whether this is actually coming from
Speaker:hip arthritis or the hip joint itself, the nature of the pain becomes important.
Speaker:And I do see quite regularly, And I'm sure colleagues in the room,
Speaker:Mike and Raz would agree that often we get sent patients that,
Speaker:you know, with the diagnosis of hip pain or hip arthritis, but it ends up being something else.
Speaker:And I'll get to some of the differential diagnoses, but the pain from hip arthritis,
Speaker:generally speaking, is centered around the joint.
Speaker:Okay. So the groin, the buttock region, the trochanteric area,
Speaker:so sort of around that joint.
Speaker:It can be referred. So you can get referred pain down the thigh all the way to the knee.
Speaker:And there's that classic description of someone presenting with knee pain with
Speaker:hip. So you can get that. So it can go all the way down your thigh.
Speaker:But rarely does it actually go below the knee. So that's the classic teaching.
Speaker:And I think that reflects what I see in clinical practice as well.
Speaker:So if you get someone that has points to pain that sort of radiates down their
Speaker:thigh, all the way down their leg, think of an alternate reason.
Speaker:And same thing if it radiates upwards as well. So if the pain is sort of around
Speaker:the hip and it sort of radiates around from their back or radiate up their back or low back, again,
Speaker:I would definitely start thinking of an alternate reason and maybe that's the
Speaker:patient that you may want to arrange further investigations for.
Speaker:Okay I talked a little bit about
Speaker:the functional state already and I think the other
Speaker:key thing from the history is to see what for me
Speaker:anyway is to see what treatments they've had so far
Speaker:right because obviously they're in my sort of zone of influence as a surgeon
Speaker:and they're seeing me because they've been referred to me to have potentially
Speaker:have surgery and I need to know what other treatments they've exhausted first
Speaker:before we dive into doing something potentially sort of, you know,
Speaker:risky and invasive like an operation.
Speaker:And then obviously asking about comorbidities is going to be important to that.
Speaker:So examination, I actually find hip examination pretty simple.
Speaker:So first of all, look, assess their gait, walking aids, look at other joints,
Speaker:feel not so useful around the hip because it's quite a deep joint,
Speaker:so you're not going to be able to really feel the hip.
Speaker:You can feel other bony prominences, so the trochanteric bursa or the trochanter.
Speaker:You can definitely feel other joints like the knee.
Speaker:Or possibly the iliac crest or something else that might be generating the pain
Speaker:but you can't really assess the joint itself then move,
Speaker:and then moving we're looking at flexion extension abduction adduction the issue
Speaker:with those movements is that they can be,
Speaker:generated by other joints around the hip so
Speaker:the one that's pretty specific to
Speaker:the hip is rotation so if they have any restriction
Speaker:of rotation that's probably coming from the
Speaker:hip and in investigations weight-bearing x-ray
Speaker:95 of the time is going to be enough okay and then like i said if you suspect
Speaker:those other diagnoses if you suspect something else is going on you want to
Speaker:exclude that that's when you would get you know other scans ct mri please please don't do those off
Speaker:that just do the weight-bearing x-ray first and then if that doesn't really
Speaker:show anything it's very unremarkable you have got some suggestion from the history
Speaker:or their background of something else going on sure refer them for that other test okay.
Speaker:So differential diagnosis, again, I sort of alluded to these a little bit.
Speaker:I'll just skim through some of them. So it can be intra-articular.
Speaker:So intra-articular problems that are not arthritis can definitely cause some hip pain.
Speaker:So I would suspect those in someone who has a pretty normal-looking weight-bearing
Speaker:x-ray, but a history or an examination that suggests that it's emerging from
Speaker:the hip, again, that's when I would refer them for additional tests, MRI. right?
Speaker:Periarticular structures, so trochanteric pain, stappic hip syndrome.
Speaker:You know, they usually, again, from history examination.
Speaker:Referred pain, I sort of already discussed, and then other things like stress
Speaker:fractures and avascular necrosis.
Speaker:So non-operative treatment.
Speaker:So we would ideally really rely on you to, you know,
Speaker:lead some of this before they actually see
Speaker:us right and the college of gps has
Speaker:excellent guidelines for the management of um hip
Speaker:and knee osteoarthritis so i'm not sure if you guys have seen it
Speaker:it's probably too detailed if anything but there's been
Speaker:a lot of work gone into it that people have assessed all
Speaker:of the data and the evidence and they've given recommendations about you know
Speaker:about each of the different modalities that you can have and there's a there's
Speaker:you know there's you know heaps of treatments available for arthritis everyone
Speaker:wants to sell something when it comes to treatment for arthritis because it's such a common problem.
Speaker:I guess what we shouldn't lose sight of is the first-line approach, okay?
Speaker:These are the three things. So the reason I mention that is because it's amazing.
Speaker:Even us surgeons, like the first thing we do is we'd send them for an injection
Speaker:or prescribe some pain relief, right?
Speaker:And you sort of lose sight that the first-line recommendations,
Speaker:the ones that have the strongest evidence, are these three things.
Speaker:So the first thing is education and this
Speaker:is just telling them explaining what the problem is explaining the
Speaker:background of their condition and the idea behind that you know you can imagine
Speaker:you're telling someone about their condition it's not going to cure their problem
Speaker:right it's not going to regrow the cartilage by them knowing that they've got
Speaker:hip arthritis but it's just about allowing them to develop that sort of you
Speaker:know active role in their own treatment or you know self-efficacy,
Speaker:so that they can sort of take charge and sort of adapt to what they've got.
Speaker:Okay, so the idea really behind any non-surgical management,
Speaker:because we're not reversing their condition, this is a degenerative condition,
Speaker:is essentially learning to adapt and learning to live with their condition happily, right?
Speaker:It's not like we want them to struggle, but hopefully get you to a happy place with these things.
Speaker:Okay, so the first thing that we can do is educate them, Allowing them to develop
Speaker:that self-efficacy And then you've got land-based exercise.
Speaker:So that's where we can refer to physios or exercise programs And exercise definitely
Speaker:has some evidence for arthritis and weight loss,
Speaker:And then second line is everything else And then there's third line and other
Speaker:adjunct treatments And these are all of the things that we've heard about When
Speaker:we come to arthritis treatment,
Speaker:Injections, you know.
Speaker:Acupuncture and massage and hot and cold packs and all of these other things
Speaker:that you can possibly think of is everything else.
Speaker:And you can definitely try those,
Speaker:right? There's no issue, but don't lose track of the first line stuff.
Speaker:So, when to refer then. So for me, in my mind, there's three things.
Speaker:It's pain consistent with that joint that has a significant functional impact.
Speaker:Secondly, it's x-rays that show the arthritis, that confirm the diagnosis.
Speaker:And then three is failure of the non-surgical treatments. So I think that's
Speaker:when we think about now Who is a candidate for surgery They're really the basic
Speaker:criteria For having surgery So if you have those three things,
Speaker:We've made an attempt to do all of that sort of stuff In your practice That's
Speaker:I think the right time to refer.
Speaker:And then in terms of surgery I won't dwell on this But it's hip replacement
Speaker:or hip resurfacing Is essentially the arthroplasty options I will mention though
Speaker:with hip arthritis is that, yes, we should do all of this, okay,
Speaker:But in most of our experience, people, once they develop the hip arthritis,
Speaker:okay, they tend to, you know, do pretty badly, you know, once it's set in, okay?
Speaker:So unless it's like a first presentation, you know, within that first year or
Speaker:two of symptoms, and they can get some improvement with non-operative treatment,
Speaker:if they've struggled for it for a little while.
Speaker:It's likely that it's going to be pretty constant for them.
Speaker:It's a bit different to other joints I'm
Speaker:not sure if Raz or Mike would agree.
Speaker:But hips do badly once the
Speaker:symptoms settle in and they become quite
Speaker:constant and permanent so still want
Speaker:you to do all of this but unlike other
Speaker:things like with a knee for example I reckon you can definitely if
Speaker:people do some of the stuff with non-surgical management
Speaker:with knees you can absolutely get to a really good
Speaker:place okay if you lose weight and exercise absolutely
Speaker:get to a good place even if your knees like bone on bone
Speaker:right but with hips it's a little bit different and
Speaker:the reason i mentioned that is because the surgical option
Speaker:for it is really really good okay as we all know hip
Speaker:replacement is a very successful procedure um
Speaker:generally speaking um so you have headlines
Speaker:like this in the lancet and lancet wouldn't you know
Speaker:publish a paper like this um willy-nilly right
Speaker:it's um so it really is one of the best operations
Speaker:out there and the reason for that is because
Speaker:it's just got such a high satisfaction rate and in
Speaker:the rare instances where people are unsatisfied and
Speaker:this is one of the studies that we did but there's heaps and heaps of studies
Speaker:in the literature confirming this the people that are unsatisfied are probably
Speaker:in the order of about five percent or less and it's because something's gone
Speaker:bad okay and when it's gone bad hips are pretty bad So they've had a dislocation
Speaker:or some sort of other complication.
Speaker:That's rare And that's when they're unsatisfied,
Speaker:So these are some key takeaways. Hip arthritis and its impact is mostly a clinical assessment.
Speaker:Conservative treatment remains the foundation and then refer when those conservative
Speaker:treatment options are exhausted.
Speaker:Thanks so much.