In the recent review article on management of osteoarthritis, Khan and colleagues recommended weight loss as one of the noninvasive treatment modalities.1 The text and references, however, primarily discuss the effectiveness of exercise. Although there is an association between obesity and osteoarthritis of the knee, it is difficult to find convincing evidence that weight loss itself leads to improved pain or function. The referenced study by Messier and colleagues, for example, showed that the diet plus exercise group had improvement in pain and several indicators of physical function, but the diet only group showed no improvement in any outcome compared with the control group, with both groups having a similar and substantial amount of weight loss (4.6 and 5.2 kg, respectively).2 A more recent study by the same author3 produced similar results despite even greater weight loss for both groups, suggesting that it is exercise, not weight loss that leads to improvement in pain and function.
Khan and colleagues also refer to the documented increased in biomechanical load on the knee in obesity, reinforcing our conventional, intuitive assumption that greater force equals greater pain and, therefore, less weight and less force will result in less pain. What is missing is clinical trial evidence that this is the case.
The distinction between advising weight loss and advising exercise is important. Not only is weight loss generally ineffective, as most patients will regain the weight within a few years,4 it is associated with substantial harms. The typical weight-cycling pattern is associated with higher long-term morbidity and mortality than stable obesity.5 The psychological effects of repeated “failure” to maintain lost weight are important and well documented.6 By advising weight loss, we fuel patients’ desperate attempts at weight loss by any means and add our credible voice to the weight-shaming culture of our society.
Patients expect reliable, evidence-based information from their health care professionals. If there is evidence that advising patients to lose weight will improve symptoms of osteoarthritis, it would be helpful for the authors to share this; if not, we should leave weight out of the discussion.
Footnotes
Competing interests: None declared.