Comparative Effectiveness of Supervised Individualized Multimodal Physiotherapy versus Conventional Home-Based Exercise in Early Knee Osteoarthritis: A 12-Month Prospective Cohort Study
Authors
Postgraduate Student (MPT Musculoskeletal Physiotherapy) Datta Meghe College of Physiotherapy, Nagpur, Maharashtra (India)
Postgraduate Student (MPT Musculoskeletal Physiotherapy) Datta Meghe College of Physiotherapy, Nagpur, Maharashtra (India)
Postgraduate Student (MPT Musculoskeletal Physiotherapy) Datta Meghe College of Physiotherapy, Nagpur, Maharashtra (India)
Postgraduate Student (MPT Musculoskeletal Physiotherapy) Datta Meghe College of Physiotherapy, Nagpur, Maharashtra (India)
Postgraduate Student (MPT Musculoskeletal Physiotherapy) Datta Meghe College of Physiotherapy, Nagpur, Maharashtra (India)
Postgraduate Student (MPT Musculoskeletal Physiotherapy) Datta Meghe College of Physiotherapy, Nagpur, Maharashtra (India)
Article Information
DOI: 10.51584/IJRIAS.2026.110200102
Subject Category: Applied Sciences
Volume/Issue: 11/2 | Page No: 1160-1168
Publication Timeline
Submitted: 2026-02-20
Accepted: 2026-02-25
Published: 2026-03-16
Abstract
Background: Knee osteoarthritis (KOA) is a leading cause of chronic pain and disability globally. Although exercise therapy is recommended as first-line management, outcomes from unsupervised home-based programs are often inconsistent. Supervised multimodal physiotherapy may provide superior clinical benefits through individualized progression and neuromuscular retraining.
Objective: To compare the long-term effectiveness of supervised individualized multimodal physiotherapy (MPP) and conventional structured home-based exercise (SHE) in adults with early-stage knee osteoarthritis.
Methods: A 12-month prospective observational cohort study was conducted among 200 adults aged 40–70 years with radiographically confirmed Kellgren–Lawrence grade I–II KOA. Participants selected either supervised MPP (n=100) or SHE (n=100). Primary outcomes were WOMAC Pain (0–20) and WOMAC Physical Function (0–68). Secondary outcomes included adherence rate and effect size magnitude. Mixed-effects linear regression models adjusted for baseline age, sex, BMI, and baseline WOMAC scores were used. Effect sizes were calculated using Cohen’s d.
Results: At 12 months, MPP demonstrated significantly greater reduction in WOMAC Pain (adjusted mean difference −1.92; 95% CI −2.41 to −1.43; p<0.001; d=0.78) and improvement in WOMAC Function (adjusted mean difference −9.47; 95% CI −13.02 to −5.92; p<0.001; d=1.61). Improvements exceeded established MCID thresholds. Significant group × time interaction confirmed sustained superiority (p<0.001).
Conclusion: Supervised individualized multimodal physiotherapy produces clinically meaningful and statistically robust improvements compared to home-based exercise in early KOA.
Keywords
Knee osteoarthritis; Multimodal physiotherapy; Cohort study; WOMAC
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References
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