Intra-articular corticosteroids injections are a widely used treatment for pain from symptomatic osteoarthritis. Systematic reviews show that the treatment effect is modest compared with intra-articular saline (often considered as placebo) and lasts for 2-4 weeks on average. Potentially as a consequence of limited therapeutic duration, repeated injections are often given up to 4 injections annually. In this context of repeat injections, recent evidence has emerged that intra-articular corticosteroids might be associated with more MRI-assessed quantitative cartilage thickness loss than saline injections. Guidelines vary in the recommendation for use of intra-articular corticosteroids. Given the frequency with which intra-articular corticosteroids injections are used, the size and scale of the population with osteoarthritis, it is critical to fully understand the benefits and drawbacks of intra-articular corticosteroids injections. That is the focus of this debate article.
Keywords: Cartilage; Corticosteroids; Intra-articular; MRI; Osteoarthritis.