Back to Search Start Over

POS1007 OPTIMIZING A REFERRAL STRATEGY FOR PATIENTS WITH A HIGH PROBABILITY OF AXIAL SPONDYLOARTHRITIS: THE ROLE OF AGE AND SYMPTOM DURATION

Authors :
B. Muche
Denis Poddubnyy
V. Rios Rodriguez
Imke Redeker
Laura Spiller
Murat Torgutalp
Fabian Proft
Mikhail Protopopov
J. Rademacher
Source :
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases. 80:771.3-772
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMJ, 2021.

Abstract

Background:One of the most important prerequisites for a timely diagnosis of axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA) is the early referral of a patient with back pain to a rheumatologist. In the past years a number of referral strategies has been proposed, most of them in line with the ASAS referral recommendations [1] and with a similar performance – about 30-40% of the referred patients can be diagnosed with axSpA after examination by a rheumatologist. In addition to physician-based strategies, an online self-referral (OSR) strategy has been recently proposed and evaluated about 20% of the patients being diagnosed with axSpA after rheumatologic evaluation [2].Objectives:The objective of the current analysis was to investigate the role of age and symptom duration for the optimization of a physician-based and an OSR strategy for axSpA.Methods:In the OptiRef study, patients with chronic back pain and suspicion of axSpA either referred by primary care physicians /orthopedists using the Berlin referral tool (=physician based) or based on a referral recommendation of an OSR were evaluated by rheumatologists in a specialized center [2]. All patients underwent a structured examination including imaging that resulted into the final diagnosis of axSpA or no axSpA. The relationship between age, symptom duration and the likelihood of axSpA diagnosis was evaluated in this analysis.Results:A total of 360 patients (180 presented via the OSR and 180 referred by the physician based referral strategy) were included in this analysis. Patient’s characteristics are shown in Table 1. A total of 71 patients (39.4%) in the physician-based group and 35 patients (19.4%) in the OSR group were finally diagnosed with axSpA. The heatmaps depicting the relationship between the proportions of patients diagnosed with axSpA and age plus symptom duration (Figure 1) showed a clear decline of the axSpA probability with increasing age. In the physician-referred group, however, axSpA was diagnosed even in patients who were above 50 years at the time-point of the examination, while there were only few patients with axSpA in the self-referred group aged 40-49 years, and none in the age group ≥50 years. Interestingly, there was no clear relationship between symptom duration and probability of the diagnosis: axSpA was diagnosed in a substantial proportion of patients even with a long history of back pain (>12 years) in both subgroups.Conclusion:The probability of axSpA is high in patients suffering from back pain and aged References:[1]Poddubnyy D, et al. Ann Rheum Dis 2015 Aug; 74(8):1483-1487.[2]Proft F, et al. Semin Arthritis Rheum. 2020; 50(5):1015-1021.Table 1.Patient characteristicsTotalN=360Berlin toolN=180Self-referralN=180p-valueDiagnosis of axial SpA, n (%)106 (29.4%)71 (39.4%)35 (19.4%)Age, years, mean (SD)36.9 (10.4)37.2 (11.5)36.6 (9.2)>0.99Male sex, n (%)177 (49.2%)100 (55.6%)77 (42.8%)0.02Back pain duration, years, mean (SD)7.9 (7.6)6.5 (6.9)9.2 (8.1)HLA-B27 positive, n (%)141 (40.9%)104 (59.8%)37 (21.6%)CRP elevation, n (%)52 (14.8%)34 (19.4%)18 (10.2%)0.02Inflammatory back pain, n (%)204 (56.7%)103 (57.2%)101 (56.1%)0.92Figure 1.Heatmaps depicting the proportions of patients diagnosed with axSpA in relation to age and symptom duration in the physician-based (A) and OSR (B) groups.Acknowledgements:We would like to thank all orthopaedists and primary care physicians who referred their patients. Further, we thank Dr. Anne-Katrin Weber and Dr. Susanne Lüders for the data collection support, Annegret Langdon for the data management support and Torsten Karge for set-up and support of the online screening tool.Funding statementThe OptiRef study was supported by an unrestricted research grant from Novartis.Disclosure of Interests:None declared.

Details

ISSN :
14682060 and 00034967
Volume :
80
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........9e0c79c9e95a6578e59ff709496ce530