Journal article

Genetic factors contribute more to hip than knee surgery due to osteoarthritis – a population-based twin registry study of joint arthroplasty

K Magnusson, K Scurrah, E Ystrom, RE Ørstavik, T Nilsen, A Steingrímsdóttir, P Ferreira, AM Fenstad, O Furnes, KB Hagen

Osteoarthritis and Cartilage | ELSEVIER SCI LTD | Published : 2017

Abstract

Objective To explore and quantify the relative strengths of the genetic contribution vs the contribution of modifiable environmental factors to severe osteoarthritis (OA) having progressed to total joint arthroplasty. Design Incident data from the Norwegian Arthroplasty Registry were linked with the Norwegian Twin Registry on the National ID-number in 2014 in a population-based prospective cohort study of same-sex twins born 1915–60 (53.4% females). Education level and height/weight were self-reported and Body Mass Index (BMI) calculated. The total follow-up time was 27 years for hip arthroplasty (1987–2014, 424,914 person-years) and 20 years for knee arthroplasty (1994–2014, 306,207 person-..

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University of Melbourne Researchers