6 results on '"Lampa, Jon"'
Search Results
2. Remaining Pain in Early Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients Treated With Methotrexate.
- Author
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Altawil, Reem, Saevarsdottir, Saedis, Wedrén, Sara, Alfredsson, Lars, Klareskog, Lars, Lampa, Jon, and Wedrén, Sara
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METHOTREXATE ,ANTIRHEUMATIC agents ,PAIN ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RHEUMATOID arthritis ,PAIN measurement ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,CASE-control method ,ODDS ratio ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Objective: To investigate the frequency of remaining pain in early rheumatoid arthritis (RA) after 3 months of treatment with methotrexate as the only disease modifying antirheumatic drug, with a special focus on patients with a good clinical response.Methods: The study base was cases reported to a population-based early RA cohort who had followup data from the Swedish Rheumatology Quality Register (n = 1,241). The Disease Activity Score in 28 joints European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) response criteria were used to evaluate clinical response to treatment as good, moderate, and no response. The primary end point was remaining pain at the 3-months followup visit, defined as pain >20 mm on a 100-mm visual analog scale (VAS).Results: Remaining pain in spite of a EULAR good response at followup was associated with higher baseline disability, using the Health Assessment Questionnaire (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 2.2 [95% confidence interval (95% CI) 1.4-3.4] per unit increase), and less baseline inflammation, using the erythrocyte sedimentation rate (adjusted OR 0.81 [95% CI 0.70-0.93] per 10-mm increase). Similar associations were detected for remaining pain at followup in spite of low inflammatory activity, defined as a C-reactive protein level <10. Increase in VAS pain during the treatment period was observed in 19% of the whole cohort, with frequencies in the EULAR response groups of 9% (good response), 15% (moderate response), and 45% (no response).Conclusion: These results are in line with the hypothesis that a subgroup of early RA patients exhibits pain that is not inflammatory mediated, where alternative treatment strategies to traditional antiinflammatory medications need to be considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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3. Physical Activity Coaching of Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis in Everyday Practice: A Long-term Follow-up.
- Author
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Sjöquist, Emma S., Brodin, Nina, Lampa, Jon, Jensen, Irene, and Opava, Christina H.
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ANALYSIS of variance ,CHI-squared test ,STATISTICAL correlation ,EXERCISE ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL cooperation ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,PHYSICAL therapy ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,RHEUMATOID arthritis ,STATISTICAL sampling ,T-test (Statistics) ,U-statistics ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,VISUAL analog scale ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,CONTROL groups - Abstract
To investigate the long-term effects on perceived general health, disease activity, pain, activity limitation and cognitive behavioural factors of a one-year coaching programme performed in ordinary physical therapy practice to promote the adoption of health-enhancing physical activity in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis (RA). A total of 228 patients with early RA, from 10 rheumatology clinics in Sweden, were randomly assigned to an intervention group (IG; n = 94) or a control group (CG; n = 134). The IG was coached by physical therapists during the first year to adopt health-enhancing levels of physical activity (30 minutes/day, moderately intensive, ≥4 days/week). No coaching was given during the subsequent year between post-intervention and follow-up. Follow-up assessment consisted of a postal questionnaire on physical activity and of visual analogue scales for ratings of general health perception and pain. The Health Assessment Questionnaire Disability Index (HAQ) and the Disease Activity Score in 28 joints (DAS 28) were collected at regular medical check-ups. Sixty-five (69%) participants in the IG and 92 (69%) in the CG completed the entire study period by filling in the follow-up questionnaire on physical activity two years after baseline. The intervention seemed to lack any significant influence on long-term outcome. However, different patterns of change in physical activity behaviour were observed in the two groups. No long-term improvement in perceived general health or other outcomes were found in the follow-up. This may partly be because the intervention lacked several important behavioural elements for physical activity maintenance. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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4. Machine-learning-based knowledge discovery in rheumatoid arthritis-related registry data to identify predictors of persistent pain.
- Author
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Lötsch, Jörn, Alfredsson, Lars, and Lampa, Jon
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PAIN diagnosis , *RESEARCH , *PAIN , *RESEARCH methodology , *ACQUISITION of data , *EVALUATION research , *MEDICAL cooperation , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RHEUMATOID arthritis , *ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Early detection of patients with chronic diseases at risk of developing persistent pain is clinically desirable for timely initiation of multimodal therapies. Quality follow-up registries may provide the necessary clinical data; however, their design is not focused on a specific research aim, which poses challenges on the data analysis strategy. Here, machine-learning was used to identify early parameters that provide information about a future development of persistent pain in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Data of 288 patients were queried from a registry based on the Swedish Epidemiological Investigation of RA. Unsupervised data analyses identified the following 3 distinct patient subgroups: low-, median-, and high-persistent pain intensity. Next, supervised machine-learning, implemented as random forests followed by computed ABC analysis-based item categorization, was used to select predictive parameters among 21 different demographic, patient-rated, and objective clinical factors. The selected parameters were used to train machine-learned algorithms to assign patients pain-related subgroups (1000 random resamplings, 2/3 training, and 1/3 test data). Algorithms trained with 3-month data of the patient global assessment and health assessment questionnaire provided pain group assignment at a balanced accuracy of 70%. When restricting the predictors to objective clinical parameters of disease severity, swollen joint count and tender joint count acquired at 3 months provided a balanced accuracy of RA of 59%. Results indicate that machine-learning is suited to extract knowledge from data queried from pain- and disease-related registries. Early functional parameters of RA are informative for the development and degree of persistent pain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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5. Pain Over Two Years After Start of Biologic Versus Conventional Combination Treatment in Early Rheumatoid Arthritis: Results From a Swedish Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Olofsson T, Wallman JK, Jöud A, Schelin MEC, Ernestam S, van Vollenhoven R, Saevarsdottir S, and Lampa J
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- Adult, Aged, Antirheumatic Agents adverse effects, Arthralgia diagnosis, Arthritis, Rheumatoid diagnosis, Biological Products adverse effects, Drug Therapy, Combination, Female, Humans, Hydroxychloroquine adverse effects, Infliximab adverse effects, Male, Middle Aged, Pain Measurement, Sulfasalazine adverse effects, Sweden, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Antirheumatic Agents therapeutic use, Arthralgia drug therapy, Arthritis, Rheumatoid drug therapy, Biological Products therapeutic use, Hydroxychloroquine therapeutic use, Infliximab therapeutic use, Pain Management adverse effects, Sulfasalazine therapeutic use
- Abstract
Objective: To compare the pain course between methotrexate (MTX)-refractory early rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients randomized to infliximab (IFX) versus sulfasalazine (SSZ) plus hydroxychloroquine (HCQ)., Methods: The randomized, controlled, open-label Swedish Pharmacotherapy (SWEFOT) trial enrolled new-onset RA patients from October 2002 to December 2005. After 3 months of receiving MTX, patients not reaching low disease activity (Disease Activity Score in 28 joints score ≤3.2) were randomized to adding IFX (n = 128) or SSZ plus HCQ (n = 130) and followed for 21 months. Here, outcomes included area under the curve (AUC) for visual analog scale (VAS) scores for pain, unacceptable pain (VAS pain score >40 mm [range 0-100]), and unacceptable pain despite inflammation control (refractory pain; VAS pain score >40 plus C-reactive protein level <10 mg/liter). Between-group differences were analyzed with multivariate regression models., Results: Overall, 50% of randomized patients (n = 258) in the crude setting reported unacceptable pain at randomization, declining to 29% at 21 months (P < 0.001), when refractory pain constituted 82% of all unacceptable pain. Comparing randomized arms (intent-to-treat analysis), the AUC for VAS pain was lower in the MTX plus IFX group (P = 0.01), and at 21 months, 32% of patients receiving MTX plus IFX and 45% receiving MTX plus SSZ plus HCQ had unacceptable pain (adjusted relative risk 0.68 [95% confidence interval 0.51, 0.90]; P = 0.008). Regarding refractory pain, no between-group differences were observed., Conclusion: Despite active combination treatment, almost one-third of new-onset RA patients reported unacceptable pain after 21 months, and refractory pain constituted more than 4/5 of this pain load. Adding IFX versus SSZ plus HCQ to MTX reduced both cumulative pain and unacceptable pain at 21 months, suggesting less long-term pain for the biologic therapy. These results display insufficient effects of current treatment strategies on inflammation-independent pain components, warranting alternative approaches in affected patients., (© 2020 The Authors. Arthritis Care & Research published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American College of Rheumatology.)
- Published
- 2021
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6. The inflammatory reflex and risk for rheumatoid arthritis: a case-control study of human vagotomy.
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Carlens C, Brandt L, Klareskog L, Lampa J, and Askling J
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Arthritis, Rheumatoid epidemiology, Case-Control Studies, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Assessment, Stomach Ulcer complications, Stomach Ulcer epidemiology, Stomach Ulcer surgery, Sweden epidemiology, Arthritis, Rheumatoid etiology, Vagotomy adverse effects
- Abstract
Recent data suggest remarkable effects of vagus stimulation (reduction) and vagotomy (exacerbation) on acute inflammation in rats, the so-called "inflammatory reflex". Its role in humans remains unknown. Therefore, the aim was to explore whether surgical vagotomy in humans would affect the risk of a prototype inflammatory disease, rheumatoid arthritis. This was a case-control study. Assessment of the relative risk (RR) of developing rheumatoid arthritis after surgical vagotomy during 1964-2001 in 63,092 prevalent rheumatoid arthritis cases versus 125,404 matched controls from the general population and in 2548 incident rheumatoid arthritis cases versus 24,357 matched controls from the general population, respectively, was done. For comparison, we assessed RRs for hospitalisation for gastric disorders not including vagotomy. Data on exposures and rheumatoid arthritis were retrieved from population-based and prospectively recorded Swedish registers. A pre-rheumatoid arthritis vagotomy was not significantly associated with an increased risk for rheumatoid arthritis (RR = 1.17, 95% CI 0.97 to 1.40). RRs in the same range were observed for several other pre-rheumatoid arthritis gastric conditions that do not include vagotomy (eg, gastric ulcer RR = 1.21, 95% 1.11 to 1.33). Vagotomy has no specific effect on the risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis in humans. Gastroduodenal ulcers occur more often than expected even before the occurrence of rheumatoid arthritis.
- Published
- 2007
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