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Do Treatment Expectations Moderate the Effect of Manual Therapy in People With Knee Osteoarthritis? A Secondary Analysis of Randomised Clinical Trials
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Do Treatment Expectations Moderate the Effect of Manual Therapy in People With Knee Osteoarthritis? A Secondary Analysis of Randomised Clinical Trials

Richelle Caya, Moody Gayed, Ross Wilson, John D. Childs, Rory McMahon Christopherson, Lívia Gaspar Fernandes, Yen Wei Lim, Andrés Pierobon, Yana Pryymachenko and Haxby Abbott
JOSPT Open, Vol.4(2), pp.232-238
16/02/2026
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10523/49791

Abstract

Objective: To investigate whether treatment expectations for joint mobilisation or massage moderated the effect of manual therapy on pain outcomes in knee osteoarthritis (OA). DESIGN: Secondary moderation analysis of two 2×2 factorial randomised controlled trials. Methods: Data were pooled from two trials that compared manual therapy and exercise to exercise alone in 375 people with knee OA. Before randomisation, expectations were measured using a questionnaire that captured patients` views about the effect of common OA treatments to reduce knee pain using a 5-point Likert scale ranging from “completely disagree” to “completely agree”. Responses regarding joint mobilisation and massage were dichotomised into high and low expectations. The primary outcome was pain intensity at 9-weeks measured by Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS). Linear regression models were used to test whether treatment expectations moderated manual therapy treatment response. Models were conducted separately for each of the two potential moderators (joint mobilisation and massage) and adjusted for the same covariates associated with the outcomes of the original trials. Results: Primary regression analysis showed no significant interaction effect between manual therapy and treatment expectations on pain outcomes at 9-weeks follow-up (mobilisation: β = −0.17, 95% CI: −0.90 to 0.56; massage: β = −0.26, 95% CI: −1.00 to 0.47). Sensitivity analyses showed similar findings. Conclusion: These exploratory findings indicated that treatment expectations did not moderate patient response to manual therapy for OA.
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caya-et-al-2026-do-treatment-expectations-moderate-the-effect-of-manual-therapy-in-people-with-knee-osteoarthritis-a151.85 kBDownloadView
Published (Version of record) Open Access CC BY V4.0
url
https://doi.org/10.2519/josptopen.2026.0180View
Published (Version of record) Open CC BY V4.0

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