4.7 Article

Tuberculosis risk with biologics by screening-guided preventive strategy in rheumatoid arthritis under intermediate tuberculosis burden

Journal

RHEUMATOLOGY
Volume 60, Issue 6, Pages 2755-2764

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/rheumatology/keaa702

Keywords

rheumatoid arthritis; biologic; tuberculosis; screening; chemoprophylaxis

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This study aimed to compare tuberculosis (TB) risk during biologics treatment among rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients in Korea who underwent chemoprophylaxis and those who did not after pre-biologic latent TB screening. The results showed that patients who received chemoprophylaxis had a lower TB risk compared to those who did not, indicating the importance of preventive strategies for TB in screening-negative patients receiving biologics.
Objectives. We aimed to compare tuberculosis (TB) risk during biologics treatment between patients with RA who did (prophylaxis) and did not (non-prophylaxis) undergo chemoprophylaxis following pre-biologic latent TB screening in Korea of an intermediate TB burden. Methods. Using the 2002-16 Korea National Health Insurance database, we conducted a cohort study examining TB risk, defined by International Classification of Diseases Tenth Revision codes plus anti-TB drugs, among RA patients initiating a biologic drug with and without chemoprophylaxis after screening triage for latent TB. To control baseline confounding, we used propensity score-based fine stratification (PSS) and weighting. Cox proportional hazards models estimated hazard ratios and 95% CIs comparing TB risk between the prophylaxis vs non-prophylaxis groups. Results. The PSS-weighted study cohort (mean age 57.0 years; 81.3% female) included 2249 and 7225 RA patients in the prophylaxis and non-prophylaxis groups, respectively. During 2.42 years of biologics treatment, 118 patients developed TB with the incidence rate per 100 person-years of 0.33 in the prophylaxis and 0.63 in the non-prophylaxis groups. The PSS-weighted hazard ratio (95% CI) for TB associated with the prophylaxis was 0.52 (0.32, 0.86). During the follow-up time, the incidence rate of TB remained consistently low in the prophylaxis group but it was highest in the first year, then time-dependently declined in the non-prophylaxis group. Conclusion. This population-based cohort study warns that the current screening-based preventive strategy generates a substantially higher TB risk after biologics initiation among screening-negative patients compared with screening-positive patients receiving chemoprophylaxis, when the background TB burden is not low.

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