4.2 Article

Radiographic progression can still occur in individual patients with low or moderate disease activity in the current treat-to-target paradigm: real-world data from the Dutch Rheumatoid Arthritis Monitoring (DREAM) registry

Journal

ARTHRITIS RESEARCH & THERAPY
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13075-019-2030-8

Keywords

Rheumatoid arthritis; Treat-to-target; Disease activity; Radiographic damage; Real-world data

Categories

Funding

  1. Eli Lilly and Company

Ask authors/readers for more resources

BackgroundThe aim of this retrospective study was to examine the longitudinal association between disease activity and radiographic damage in a cohort of patients with early RA (symptom onset <1year) treated according to treat-to-target (T2T) therapy.MethodsBaseline to 3-year follow-up data were used from patients included in the DREAM remission induction cohort. Patients received protocolized T2T treatment, aimed at 28-joint disease activity score-erythrocyte sedimentation rate (DAS28-ESR) remission. Disease activity (DAS28-ESR and C-reactive protein, CRP) were assessed at least every 3months; X-rays of the hand and feet at inclusion, 6months, and 1, 2, and 3years were scored using modified Sharp/van der Heijde scoring (SHS). Between and within-person associations between time-integrated disease activity and radiographic progression over time were examined.ResultsA subset of 229 out of 534 included patients were available for analysis. At the between-patient level, time-integrated DAS28-ESR scores were not significantly correlated with progression at the 6month and 2-year follow-up and only weakly at the 1-year (Pearson's correlation coefficient r=0.17, P<0.05) and 3-year follow-up (r=0.21, P<0.05). Individual slopes of the relationship between DAS28-ESR and progression scores in each time interval were significantly correlated over time and the slope of the first 6months was moderately associated with this slope at later time points (r between 0.39 and 0.59; P values <0.001). Between 15.9 to 22.7% and 16.7 to 38.5% of patients with low and moderate time-integrated disease activity, respectively, experienced relevant (Delta SHS >= 3) radiographic progression at the different time intervals. Analyses using CRP showed similar results.ConclusionsIn early RA patients treated according to T2T, radiographic progression appears to be an individually determined disease process, driven by factors other than consistent high disease activity. For individual patients, the intra-patient relation between disease activity and cumulative radiographic damage during the first 6months is a good indicator for this relation in later years.Trial registrationNetherlands Trial Register NTR578, 12 January 2006.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available