# Increased medial posterior tibial slope is associated with medial compartment osteoarthritis of the knee

**Authors:** Moses K. D. El Kayali, Luis V. Bürck, Clemens Gwinner, Stephan Oehme, Alan Getgood, Lorenz Pichler

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/jeo2.70676 · Journal of Experimental Orthopaedics · 2026-02-26

## TL;DR

Higher medial posterior tibial slope is linked to medial knee osteoarthritis, suggesting a possible anatomical risk factor.

## Contribution

This study identifies increased medial posterior tibial slope as a novel morphological factor associated with medial knee osteoarthritis.

## Key findings

- OA knees had significantly higher medial posterior tibial slope compared to non-OA knees.
- Each 1° increase in slope raised the odds of medial OA by 14%.
- A slope of 12° or more increased OA odds by 7.9 times.

## Abstract

The primary aim was to assess the association between medial posterior tibial slope (MPTS) and medial knee osteoarthritis (OA), hypothesising higher MPTS values in OA knees. The secondary aim was to evaluate the prevalence of increased MPTS (≥ 12°), hypothesising a higher prevalence in the OA group compared with the non‐OA group.

Patients were retrospectively identified from an institutional database. The OA group comprised patients with isolated medial knee OA (Kellgren–Lawrence [K/L] grade ≥3), while a non‐OA group (K/L grade <1) served as controls. Patients with prior knee surgery, fracture, tumour, or radiographs unsuitable for MPTS measurement were excluded. Groups were frequency‐matched for age, sex, and body mass index (BMI). MPTS and medial proximal tibial angle (MPTA) were measured by two raters. Between‐group comparisons, multivariable logistic regression, and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis were performed (p < 0.05).

A total of 562 patients (304 OA, 258 non‐OA) were included. Groups did not differ in age (59.8 ± 7.7 vs. 59.6 ± 5.1 years), sex (50.0% vs. 56.6% female), BMI (28.5 ± 3.7 vs. 27.9 ± 3.5 kg/m²), or MPTA (86.6° ± 3.6° vs. 87.2° ± 3.4°) (all p > 0.050). Mean MPTS was higher in the OA group (7.8° ± 3.5° vs. 6.6° ± 2.4°; p < 0.001), and MPTS ≥ 12° was more frequent in OA knees (13.2% vs. 1.9%; p < 0.001). Each 1° increase in MPTS was associated with higher odds of medial OA (OR 1.14, confidence interval [CI] 1.07–1.20), while MPTS ≥ 12° increased the odds of medial OA 7.9‐fold (OR 7.9, CI 3.07–20.49). ROC analysis showed modest discriminative ability for medial OA (AUC = 0.59; optimal cutoff, 8.6°).

Increased MPTS was significantly associated with medial knee OA. These findings highlight sagittal tibial geometry as a potentially relevant morphological factor and support further longitudinal investigation.

Level III, diagnostic study.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** osteoarthritis (MONDO:0005178)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** MOCS2 (molybdenum cofactor synthesis 2) [NCBI Gene 4338] {aka MCBPE, MOCO1, MOCODB, MOCODB1, MPTS}
- **Diseases:** knee fracture (MESH:D000092443), cartilage damage (MESH:D002357), OA (MESH:D010003), metabolic bone disorders (MESH:D001851), coronal malalignment (MESH:D017760), coronal deformity (MESH:C537369), ACL graft failure (MESH:D000070598), tumour (MESH:D009369), fracture (MESH:D050723), degenerative changes (MESH:D019636), PTS (MESH:D020429), osteoarthritic remodelling (MESH:D020257), deformities (MESH:D009140), joint degeneration (MESH:D009410), malrotation (MESH:C562456), compartment (MESH:D003161), knee OA (MESH:D020370)
- **Chemicals:** unicompartmental (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

40 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12936853/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12936853