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Sex-specific differences and how to handle them in early psoriatic arthritis

Authors :
Evangelia Passia
Yvonne Ruiterman
Jolanda J. Luime
Jos H van der Kaap
Marijn Vis
Andreas H. Gerards
Ilja Tchetverikov
Anuska Soni
Lindy-Ann Korswagen
Marc R. Kok
Petra Vos
Maikel van Oosterhout
Laura C. Coates
Fouzia Fodili
Rheumatology
Source :
Arthritis Research & Therapy, Vol 24, Iss 1, Pp 1-10 (2022), Arthritis Research and Therapy, 24(1):22. BioMed Central Ltd., Arthritis Research & Therapy
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Objectives The prevalence of psoriatic arthritis (PsA) is the same in men and women; however, the latter experience a higher burden of disease and are affected more frequently by polyarthritis. Here, we performed an early PsA cohort analysis to assess sex-related differences in demographics, disease characteristics, and evolution over 1 year including applied treatment strategies. Methods Our study is embedded in the Dutch south-west Early Psoriatic Arthritis cohoRt. We described patient characteristics and treatment decisions. For the comparison across sexes and baseline and 1 year follow-up, appropriate tests depending on the distribution were used. Results Two hundred seventy-three men and 294 women with no significant differences in age and ethnicity were included. Women reported significantly longer duration of symptoms before diagnosis and significantly higher tender joint count, a higher disease activity, higher levels of pain, and lower functional capacity. Although minimal disease activity (MDA) rates increased over time for both sexes, MDA remained significantly more prevalent among men at 1 year (58.1% vs 35.7%, p ). Initially, treatment strategies were similar in both sexes with methotrexate being the most frequently used drug during the first year. Women received methotrexate for a shorter period [196 (93–364) vs 306 (157–365), p ] and therefore received a lower cumulative dose compared to men. Retention time was shorter for all DMARDs, and women had a delayed start on b-DMARDs. Conclusion After 1 year of standard-of-care treatment, women did not surpass their baseline disadvantages. Despite the overall improvement, they still presented higher disease activity, higher levels of pain, and lower functional capacity score than men. The nature of these findings may advocate a need for sex specific adjustment of treatment strategies and evaluation in early PsA patients.

Details

ISSN :
14786362 and 14786354
Volume :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Arthritis Research & Therapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....12df4a81e185450067b20eb14eefca1f