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Biochemical biomarkers of knee osteoarthritis progression: Results from the FNIH biomarkers consortium progress OA study.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Collins, JE; Robinson, D; Arden, N; Bay-Jensen, AC; Deveza, LA; Karsdal, M; Ladel, C; Perry, TA; Swearingen, CJ; Hunter, DJ; Kraus, VB
Published in: Osteoarthr Cartil Open
December 2025

OBJECTIVE: The Foundation for National Institutes of Health (FNIH) OA Biomarkers Consortium aims to identify and qualify biomarkers to support drug development in knee osteoarthritis (OA). The PROGRESS OA study aims to externally validate prognostic biomarkers identified in the earlier Phase I study. DESIGN: PROGRESS OA included data from the control arms of several completed randomized controlled trials (RCTs) for knee OA. The primary outcome was medial or lateral joint space width loss (JSWL) ≥0.7 ​mm. Secondary outcomes included medial or lateral JSWL combined with symptomatic progression. Nine biochemical biomarkers identified in Phase I were included here. Logistic regression with elastic net selection examined associations between baseline biomarkers and outcomes over 12-36 months, separately for subgroups with available serum, urine, and both serum and urine biomarkers. RESULTS: In total, the study included 827 participants across three RCTs, 159 (19 ​%) with JSWL≥0.7 ​mm. In 681 participants with both serum and urine biospecimens, the combination of serum hyaluronan (HA), urinary C2C-HUSA, body mass index (BMI), and Kellgren-Lawrence grade (KLG) yielded AUC 0.627 (95 ​% CI: 0.573, 0.681) for predicting JSWL≥0.7 ​mm, compared to AUC 0.612 (95 ​% CI: 0.557, 0.667) for BMI and KLG alone. Serum (HA) and urinary C2C-HUSA were consistently selected as predictors of disease progression in elastic net models across the subgroups. CONCLUSIONS: Biomarker associations were consistent with Phase I findings, but predictive performance remained modest. Future work in the FNIH OA Biomarkers consortium project will focus on evaluating short term changes in biomarkers to assess their potential for monitoring treatment efficacy.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Osteoarthr Cartil Open

DOI

EISSN

2665-9131

Publication Date

December 2025

Volume

7

Issue

4

Start / End Page

100677

Location

England

Related Subject Headings

  • 3202 Clinical sciences
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Collins, J. E., Robinson, D., Arden, N., Bay-Jensen, A. C., Deveza, L. A., Karsdal, M., … Kraus, V. B. (2025). Biochemical biomarkers of knee osteoarthritis progression: Results from the FNIH biomarkers consortium progress OA study. Osteoarthr Cartil Open, 7(4), 100677. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ocarto.2025.100677
Collins, Jamie E., Douglas Robinson, Nigel Arden, Anne Christine Bay-Jensen, Leticia A. Deveza, Morten Karsdal, Christoph Ladel, et al. “Biochemical biomarkers of knee osteoarthritis progression: Results from the FNIH biomarkers consortium progress OA study.Osteoarthr Cartil Open 7, no. 4 (December 2025): 100677. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ocarto.2025.100677.
Collins JE, Robinson D, Arden N, Bay-Jensen AC, Deveza LA, Karsdal M, et al. Biochemical biomarkers of knee osteoarthritis progression: Results from the FNIH biomarkers consortium progress OA study. Osteoarthr Cartil Open. 2025 Dec;7(4):100677.
Collins, Jamie E., et al. “Biochemical biomarkers of knee osteoarthritis progression: Results from the FNIH biomarkers consortium progress OA study.Osteoarthr Cartil Open, vol. 7, no. 4, Dec. 2025, p. 100677. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.ocarto.2025.100677.
Collins JE, Robinson D, Arden N, Bay-Jensen AC, Deveza LA, Karsdal M, Ladel C, Perry TA, Swearingen CJ, Hunter DJ, Kraus VB. Biochemical biomarkers of knee osteoarthritis progression: Results from the FNIH biomarkers consortium progress OA study. Osteoarthr Cartil Open. 2025 Dec;7(4):100677.

Published In

Osteoarthr Cartil Open

DOI

EISSN

2665-9131

Publication Date

December 2025

Volume

7

Issue

4

Start / End Page

100677

Location

England

Related Subject Headings

  • 3202 Clinical sciences